Ur Online A collaboration between the British Museum and the Penn Museum made possible with the lead support of the Leon Levy Foundation.
  • Explore the Collection
  • Search All Objects
  • About
    • The UrOnline Project
    • Ancient Ur
    • Excavations at Ur
    • Woolley's Excavations
    • Cast of Characters
    • For Developers
  • News

Full Name

Full Name of the Person

Person Properties

Property

Count

Yahia ibn Hamoudi: 1
Thomas Edward Lawrence: 1
Thomas Athol Joyce: 1
Sidney Smith: 1
Sheikh Hamoudi Ibn Ibrahim : 1
Richard S. Cooke: 1
R.P. Ross-Williamson: 1
R. W. Bullard: 1
Peter D. Murray Thriepland: 1
Paul Reeves Howard Hunter: 1
P.J. Railton: 1
Max Edgar Lucien Mallowan: 1
Mary Louise Baker: 1
Leon Legrain: 1
Khalil of Jerablus: 1
Katharine Elizabeth (Menke) (Keeling) Woolley: 1
Julius Jordan: 1
John Cruikshank Rose: 1
Jane M. McHugh: 1
J. Linnell: 1
Iraqi Workers: 1
Ibrahim ibn Hamoudi: 1
Howard Horace Jayne: 1
Henry Reginald Holland Hall: 1
Gertrude Lowthian Bell: 1
George Francis Hill: 1
George Byron Gordon: 1
G. M. FitzGerald: 1
Frederick Leopold William Richardson: 1
Frederic George Kenyon: 1
F. G. Newton: 1
Eric R. Burrows: 1
Emory McMichaels: 1
Cyrus Herzl Gordon: 1
Cyril John Gadd: 1
Chauncey Percy Tietjens Winckworth: 1
Charles Leonard Woolley: 1
Charles Custis Harrison: 1
C. J. Curtis: 1
Arundell James Kennedy Esdaile: 1
Arthur F .E. Gott: 1
Arnold Walter Lawrence: 1
Algernon Stuart Whitburn: 1
Alawi ibn Hamoudi: 1
Agatha Mary Clarissa (Miller) Christie Mallowan: 1
Abd es Salaam: 1

Share

Email | Edit

  • Property(Asc)
  • Property(Desc)
  • Count(Asc)
  • Count(Desc)
Export this Property

Ur Online

Ur Online offers an insight into the unique site of Ur, near Nasiriyah in southern Iraq, and one of the largest and most important cities of ancient Mesopotamia. Excavations at Ur between 1922 and 1934 by Sir Leonard Woolley, jointly sponsored by the British Museum and the Penn Museum, uncovered Ur’s famous ziggurat complex, densely packed private houses, and the spectacular Royal Graves. Half the finds from Woolley’s excavations are housed in the Iraq Museum in Baghdad, with the other half shared equally between the British Museum and the Penn Museum. Through the generosity of the Leon Levy Foundation, lead underwriter, the Kowalski Family Foundation and the Hagop Kevorkian Fund, Ur Online preserves digitally and invites in-depth exploration of the finds and records from this remarkable site. Learn more about the project.

Creative Commons License
  • For Developers
  • Licensing
  • Contact
  • Login/Register