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Taha Baqir

Taha Baqir (Arabic: طه باقر Taha Baqir) (born 1912 in Babylon, Ottoman Iraq – 28 February 1984) was an Iraqi Assyriologist, author, cuneiformist, linguist, historian, and former curator of the National Museum of Iraq.[1][2]

Baqir is considered one of Iraq's most eminent archaeologists. Among the works he is remembered for are his Akkadian to Arabic translation of the Epic of Gilgamesh, his decipherment of Babylonian mathematical tablets,[1] his Akkadian law code discoveries, and his excavations of ancient Babylonian and Sumerian sites; including the ancient Sumerian city of Shaduppum in Baghdad.[3][4]

Baqir was proficient in the four historical Iraqi languages (Arabic, Aramaic, Akkadian, Sumerian), as well as English, French and German.

Career

Iraqi Department of Antiquities and Heritage

In Libya

University of Baghdad

Iraqi Academy of Sciences

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Robson, Eleanor (2008). Mathematics in Ancient Iraq: A Social History. Princeton University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-691-09182-2.
  2. ^ Saudi Aramco World, Volume 30, Number 5, September/October 1979.
  3. ^ Taha Baqir, Excavations at Harmal, Sumer 4, pp 137-39, 1948.
  4. ^ Taha Baqir, Tell Harmal, The Republic of Iraq Directorate of Antiquities, 1959.