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The British Institute for the Study of Iraq
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BISI & Other EventsMembers of the public are very welcome to attend all BISI events. For further information on BISI lectures and events, or to provide links to related events and conferences, please contact the BISI Administrator via email or to the address at the bottom of this page. A full listing of events related to the Ancient Near East in London is available via the London Diary of the Ancient Near East. A lists of past BISI and affiliated events are given below. Please click for the individual year. [2012 / 2011 / 2010 / 2009 / 2008 / 2007 / 2006 / 2005 / 2004] BISI & Other Events and Notices 2012 BISI Events - save the dates Thursday, 23 February 2012 — BISI Annual Mallowan Lecture & AGM - Lecture by Professor Roger Matthews, Department of Archaeology, University of Reading and BISI Chairman in memoriam of Rachel Maxwell-Hyslop entitled ‘For Posterity: Hoards and Hoarding in the Ancient Near East' The lecture is held in conjunction with the Institute of Archaeology, University College London and with the involvement of the family of Rachel Maxwell-Hyslop FBA, FSA. This special Lecture is free but tickets will be required and should be applied to by email with your name and mailing address or by post to The BISI, 10 Cartlon House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH by the 20th of February 2012. We will maintain a waiting list as it is likely that the event will be full. Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH Saturday, 3 March 2012 10am-4.30pm ‘May your city drink water aplenty’*
A Free BISI Study Day on Water in
Ancient, Medieval and Modern Iraq Over six thousand years the history of Iraq has been shaped by fresh water. The rivers Tigris and Euphrates irrigated the fields of the world’s first cities and the capitals of some of the greatest empires. Their waters have been managed and mismanaged, used as weapons, poured as libations, and inspired some of the finest poetry, literature and art. This study day will explore the role of water in the story of Iraq, ranging from the Sumerians and Babylonians through the golden age of Islam to the oil-rich nation of today. (*From the Sumerian myth of Enki and Ninhursag ) Speakers: Attendance is free, but prior registration is required for this event on a first come first served basis. Please email the BISI or call 020 7969 5274 to register, providing your name and contact details. A flyer is available here. Saturday 17 March 2012 10.00-16.00 Glasgow Study Day 10.00-16.00 Mesopotamia: the Sumerians of ancient Iraq - a day school in association with the British Institute for the Study of Iraq organised by Frances Reynolds BA PhD Venue: University of Glasgow Campus Ticket cost £23 To register, please go to University of Glasgow's DACE website Saturday, 5 May 2012 — The Christianity in Iraq IX Seminar Day - details to be provided. Thursday, 26 April 2012 — BISI Appeal Event with Xavier Pick, peace and war artist. Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH (Details to be arranged.). Thursday, 14 June 2012 — BISI Bonham Carter Lecture - Lecture by Jack Fairweather on A War of Choice: Lessons from Britain's war in Iraq 2003-9 (details to be announced) Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH Sunday, 26 August 2012 — National Youth Orchestra of Iraq (NYOI) performance at Greyfriars Kirk , Edinburgh. NYOI London performances to be arranged thereafter and details will be posted on the BISI web-site. Thursday, 22 November 2012 - Lecture by Dr John Curtis FBA OBE - details to be announced. Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH Back to the top. Previous BISI & Affiliated 2012 Events Tuesday, 10 January 2012, 6 p.m. —Resonance/Dissonance & Sound of Iraq by Khyam Allami for the BISI Appeal at the British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH. A flyer and reply form are available here. Previous BISI & Affiliated 2011 Events 24 February 2011 6 p.m. BISI Appeal Talk, Dr Azzam Alwash, Director of Eden Again/Nature Iraq, on ‘The marshes of southern Mesopotamia, Past, Present, and Future' This event has been generously sponsored by HE Sheikh Hamed Bin Ahmed Al Hamed Venue: The British Academy, Wolfson Auditorium, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH Tickets will be required and a reply form is available here [Word File 35.5 KB] and invitations have been sent to members and donors. Replies have been dealt with on a first come first served basis and the event is now full. We are keeping a waiting list if you wish to be on it, please email the BISI Administrator. The introduction Thursday, 17 March 2011 BISI AGM at 5.30 p.m. followed by a Lecture with Professor Clive Holes FBA - 'Iraqi voices from the margins: ‘Abbud al-Karkhi, ‘Aziz ‘Ali and ‘Abbas Jijan'. A handout for the event is available here. Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH - Members of the public are welcome to attend. Kindly confirm your acceptance to the BISI. Friday, 18 March 2011 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. ‘Eight Years in Babylon: The Iraq war and the classics eight years on' One-Day Conference organised by the Centre for the Reception of Greece and Rome, Royal Holloway, University of London. For further details, please contact Katie Billotte. For a flyer with details of confirmed speakers, please click here. Venue: 2 Gower Street, London WC1E 6DP. This conference is sponsored by a BISI Development Grant and a BISI Visiting Scholars Grant to support the travel of Professor Najm Kadhim of the University of Baghdad.
Professor Kadhim speaking at the 'Eight Years in Babylon' conference - drawing by the artist Xavier Pick (reproduced with kind permission of the artist). Saturday, 19 March 2011 ‘Mesopotamia: highlights of ancient Iraq' - a day school in association with the Department of Adult and Continuing Education (DACE) of the University of Glasgow, organised by Dr Fran Reynolds of the University of Oxford. (Details to be confirmed and further details can be obtained from DACE directly.) Thursday, 31 March 2011 at 9. a.m. ‘Iraq: Archaeology, Cultural Heritage and Conflict', Durham University One Day Conference (free) & Film Event (tickets required) - click here for a flyer with more details of the conference. For further details, please contact Michelle de Gruchy. (Venue: Elvet Riverside, Room 142) 8 p.m. - Screening of Son of Babylon by Iraqi writer/director Mohamed Al Daradji at The Gala Theatre.This conference is sponsored by a BISI Development Grant. Saturday, 2 April 2011 at 9. a.m. ZIPANG Day Out - The Mesopotamian story of the day is The Matter of Aratta. Click here to find out when and where to meet. It's free and all are welcome. Wednesday 4 May 2011 - 19:00 – 21:00 Khyam Allami - Resonance/Dissonance Album launch, as part of the SOAS Concert Series. For more information on the artist, please click here. FREE | Arrive early Saturday, 7 May 2011. The next ZIPANG Day Out - The Mesopotamian story of the day is Humbaba. The storyteller is June Peters. It's free and all are welcome. Details available on this flyer with future dates. Saturday, 28 May 2011 Christianity in Iraq VIII Seminar Day - 'The Christian Library from Turfan', focussing on this Church of the East monastery and its links with Mesopotamia. Venue: Khalili Lecture Theatre, SOAS. Any queries can be directed to the seminar day organiser, Dr. Erica C D Hunter. A flyer is available here [Adobe PDF KB 100} 9 June 2011 BISI Bonham Carter Lecture at 6 p.m. - Dr Georgina Herrmann OBE FBA on 'The Nimrud Ivories, 1845-2011'. Venue: Royal College of Pathologists, 2 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AF (Note different venue.) The event is free but ticket reservations are required - please apply for tickets by sending a request to the BISI Administrator for your ticket(s) and provide your name and mailing address. BISI members will receive an invitation flyer in May for the event. Tickets will be sent out on a first come first served basis. 1 September 2011at 6 p.m. BISI Appeal Talk with Neil MacGregor, Director of the British Museum, on 'Objects of History'. An invitation flyer is available here. (Adobe PDF 67KB) Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH. 18 October 2011 ‘The Conflicted Planet: where conflict meets protection of biodiversity’ organised by the Marjan Centre for the Study of Conflict and Conservation at King’s College, London. Time: 9.30-2.00pm; Venue: The Great Hall, the Strand Buildings; Entry: free. 10.45 - 11.15 Dr Azzam Alwash is participating in the conference at will speak on 'War and water: the legacy of Saddam Hussein and beyond'. For the full programme, please click here. The Marjan Centre is hosting this ‘open’ conference entitled ‘Conflict and Conservation’ at King’s College. Speakers include environmentalist Sir Crispin Tickell, Iraqi conservationist Dr Azzam Alwash and specialists from King’s College and outside. Contact Jasper Humphreys to reserve a seat. 17 November 2011 BISI Lecture at 6 p.m. - Michael Seymour and Alessandra Peruzzetto on 'Current work at Babylon' Venue: The British Academy, 10-11 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH. RSVP is essential in case of acceptance either via email to the BISI or by post to BISI, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH. Babylon is a site of special importance for the Iraq State Board of Antiquities (SBAH) and a priority for work in conservation and site management. The SBAH is currently working in collaboration with the World Monuments Fund (WMF) to address a range of issues at the site, most pressingly in the documentation and conservation of mud-brick architecture but also including establishment of site boundaries, treatment of modern structures and reconstructions, scope for education and training, provision for future research, local economic impact and site presentation. This lecture will discuss the project, its aims and some of the challenges faced. Speakers: Michael Seymour is Project Curator for Early Mesopotamia, British Museum, and was co-curator of the Museum’s 2008-9 Babylon exhibition. He is Archaeological Consultant to the World Monuments Fund at Babylon, advising particularly on the history of excavation and social history relating to the site. World Monuments Fund Archaeology Advisor for the Middle East, Alessandra Peruzzetto studied in Torino and Paris and specializes in Middle Eastern archaeology. She has excavated in Iraq and Turkmenistan. In Jordan she worked for the Institut Français du Proche Orient and the Petra National Trust to coordinate a conservation strategy training project for Petra. Friday, 2 Dec 2011, 6.30-7.30 p.m. — Khyam Allami performing Resonance/Dissonance in its entirety with Vasilis Sarikis on percussion. Venue: National Portrait Gallery, London. Free entry. Monday, 19 December, 2011, 2 - 5.30 p.m. — Exploring the Shahrizor Plain – New research in Iraqi Kurdistan. Venue: University College London, Institute of Archaeology, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY, Room 612 (6th floor). A flyer is available here. The conference is organised by Mark Altaweel, Karen Radner and David Wengrow as part of UCL’s Grand Challenge of Intercultural Interaction (www.soas.ac.uk/nme/ane/lcane).
Previous BISI & Affiliated 2010 Events Thursday 4 February 2010 at 6.30 p.m. BISI Appeal Talk with Dr Saad Eskander, Director of the Iraq National Library and Archive. 'INLA at a time of National Crisis: Difficult Choices and Unanticipated Challenges'. Co-hosted by the Department of the Middle East at the British Museum. Venue: BP Lecture Theatre at The British Museum. Tickets required and a form is available here. Tickets are available and you will be able to pay at the door for entry (not by credit card - cheque and cash only). For late applications we may hold tickets at the door but will advise you at your contact details provided. Saturday 6 February 2010 Seven Years On: The Iraq National Museum, Iraq National Library and Archive & Cultural Heritage in Iraq Fifth Birkbeck College & British Institute for the Study of Iraq Mesopotamian Archaeology Study Day & Co-sponsored with Ancient Egypt & Middle East Society (AEMES). Tickets will be required and a flyer and application form are available here. Time: 10.00-5.00 pm The 2003 US/UK invasion unleashed destructive forces on past, present and future Iraq. How do we now account for the looting, theft and destruction of Iraq's museums, archaeological sites and libraries? Expert speakers will investigate this question from a variety of angles including the current state of Iraq's cultural institutions, and our attitudes towards the preservation of antiquities as well as heritage sites and institutions. Speakers: Dr Saad Eskander, Director, Iraq National Library & Archive; Dr Lamia al-Gailani Werr, Honorary Research Fellow, Institute of Archaeology, University College London; Professor Peter Stone, Director, International Centre for Cultural and Heritage Studies Newcastle University; Dr Eleanor Robson, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge; and Khyam Allami, 'Ud soloist. Tea and coffee are provided during the morning and afternoon breaks. Places are limited so early enrolment is advised. To enrol by telephone or to ask about concessions, please ring 020 7631 6627 or 020 7631 6631, quoting course code: FFAR160N0ACS. Fee: £42 (£21 concessions). Saturday 13 February 2010 - The next ZIPANG Day Out. It is on the eve of St Valentine's Day and the Mesopotamian story of the day is the romantic comedy - 'The Marriage of Martu' - told by June Peters. Follow this link for an outline of the day's activities in English and this link in Arabic. Meet the ZIPANG team any time between 10.30 a.m. and 12.30 p.m. on the seats near the information desk in the Great Court of the British Museum for the morning Heritage Trail. Or come directly to the afternoon storytelling workshop at 3 p.m. in the Poetry Café, 22 Betterton Street, Covent Garden. The ZIPANG Discover Mesopotamia through Storytelling project team looks forward to welcoming you. Thursday 11 March 2010 5.30 p.m. BISI Lecture Dr Priya Satia of Stanford University - 'The Defense of Inhumanity: Air Control and the British Idea of Arabia' Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH. Please confirm your attendance at the event by sending an email to the BISI Administrator and your name will be put on a list. The space is limited and those who have sent a confirmation will have priority for seating. PLEASE NOTE THERE IS STILL SPACE FOR THIS EVENT SO PLEASE COME EVEN IF YOU HAVE NOT BEEN ABLE TO CONFIRM YOUR ATTENDANCE. 17-19 March 2010 Rethinking the Middle East? Values, Interests, and Security Concerns in Western Policies toward Iraq and the Wider Region, 1918-2010 at the British Academy, London Those interested in attending are kindly advised to register for the conference by contacting Dr Lars Berger (Salford University) and a brief description of the conference is available here. [30KB Word File} Further details are available on the British Academy's Events page. Saturday 20 March 2010 10 am - 4 pm BISI and the Department of Adult and Continuing Education (DACE) of the University of Glasgow Day School: Mesopotamia: Exploring Ancient Iraq, Lectures by Dr Frances Reynolds, University of Oxford. (Fee £15) A flyer with further details is available here or contact DACE directly. Saturday 24 April 2010 - Christianity in Iraq VII Seminar Day Further details are available on the application form available here [100KB PDF]. Tuesday 11 May 2010 BISI Appeal Lecture at 6 p.m. with Vernon Rapley, Detective Sergent of the Art & Antiquities Unit New Scotland Yard London, 'Iraq and Afghanistan: Criminal Benefit from Cultural Loss' An application for tickets is required and can be obtained here [78 KB PDF]. There are some tickets still available and you may come on the night and pay at the door. Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH. Details regarding the speaker: Detective Sergeant Vernon Rapley has led London’s Metropolitan Police Art & Antiques Unit, for the last 8 years. His 23-year diverse police career has included: murder and paedophile investigations, work on child abuse and covert surveillance teams. With a team of just three full time police officers, Vernon is dedicated to the policing of the world’s second largest art market. With his team he recovers an average of 7 millions pounds of stolen and laundered art each year. The recovered property ranges from items looted from Iraq to fake Victorian Paintings from illegally excavated underwater cultural heritage to forged silverware. Vernon has fostered a spirit of working together with the London art community, to reduce and detect art crime. He also represents the police during International Working Groups, for South America, Eastern Europe Iraq and Afghanistan. His ongoing dedication to prevent the illicit traffic of cultural goods is evidenced in his being a founding member of The Interpol Task Force for Iraq and his support of I.C.O.M.’s Red Lists. Vernon has taken crime prevention and detection into un-charted waters. The introduction of schemes such as ‘ArtBEAT’, the London Museum Security Group and the recruitment of art professionals into the Police as volunteers have significantly reduced crime in London. His contributions to books and publications together with extensive lecturing world-wide has provided a valuable up-to-date commentary on the investigative methods and issues surrounding the protection and detection of cultural property today. He has been awarded The 2009 A.R.C.A. Award for Art Policing and Recovery. 22 May 2010 at 6 p.m. The Association of Iraqi Academics Meeting & Lecture 'Water Problems in Iraq and the Middle East' by Professor Adel Sharif (Surrey University) Venue: University College London, Cruciform Building, (lecture room 2), Gower Street, London WC1 6BT. All welcome to attend. 22nd May: Classsic Voices of Baghdad at 7.30 pm in the Queen Elizabeth Hall. For further information and to book on line click here. Tuesday, 25 May 2010, 5.30pm CBRL Lecture, 5.30pm "Dispossession and Displacement: Forced Migration in the Middle East and North Africa. Is the Past Prologue?" by Dr Dawn Chatty Deputy Director of the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford The Middle East and North Africa has become both a major refugee producing area as well as host for more than a quarter of the world’s forced migrants. This lecture will reflect on the earliest wave of forced migrants into region, the Circassians, and ask whether there is anything to be learned from their experiences.
Download full details here. Thursday 17 June 2010 at 5.30 p.m. - BISI Bonham Carter Lecture with Professor Nadje Al-Ali of SOAS on Women and Gender in Iraq: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH. To confirm your acceptance, please contact Joan Porter MacIver, BISI Administrator (Tel. 020 7969 5274). Members of the public are welcome to attend. 16 April – 20 June 2010 Contemporary Art Iraq Events at Cornerhouse, Manchester - a report of the exhibition is available here. Venue: Cornerhouse,
70 Oxford Street,
Manchester
M1 5NH
Direct tel: +44 (0)161 200 1545 BISI has provided a Development Grant to support this Contemporary Art Iraq Festival. 9th August 2010 Ilham Al Madfai and Khyam Allami - Congratulations to Khyam on his wonderful performance with Ilham Al Madfai at the Albert Hall - You can listen for a certain period of time to this performance on the BBC3 Link. Come and hear Khyam talk and perform about his work at special BISI Appeal Event on 16 September at SOAS. 18 May - 31 August 2010 Arabic Calligraphy Exhibit - the Iraqi calligrapher, Mr Bihnam Al-Agzeer at the Arthur Probsthain Bookshop/Gallery, 41 Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3PE. For further information contact Mr Saad Tokatly. Saturday 4 September 2010, 09:55 - 16:30 Digitising Cultural Heritage in the Stevenson Lecture Theatre, British Museum, London - Free . Digital technology has revolutionised modern work- and social life. It is also transforming cultural heritage management. The power to store, organise and distribute vast quantities of complex data makes possible today things that only 20 years ago were dreams. This study day brings together a selection of projects that embrace the potential of the digital world to broaden and enrich access to mankind's shared cultural heritage. Further details will appear at available soon on the British Museum website and tickets will be required on a first come first served basis. Please contact Jon Taylor with any enquiries and the details of the programme are available here. Thursday 16 September 2010 at 6.30 pm in the Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre, SOAS, Thornhaugh Street, London WC1H 0XG - BISI Appeal event in conjunction with The SOAS Music Department, School of African and Oriental Studies, University of London - lecture and performance in aid of the BISI Appeal for Iraqi Scholars with Khyam Allami on 'The Iraqi ‘Ūd School, its Influences'. The programme of the evening is available here. [1.12 MB PDF] The flyer for the evening flyer is available here [144 KB PDF file]. Tickets cost £7.50 for BISI, BIFS and BISI Donors with one guest; £10 for non-members & £5 for current students - additional donations are gratefully received. For more details on Khyam go to his website Return to the top. 23-24 September 2010. The LSE International History Department, LSE IDEAS, and LSE Global Governance are soliciting abstracts for a conference entitled 'Reappraising the Iran-Iraq War Thirty Years Later'. Most of the recent scholarship on the Iran-Iraq War has either focused on the war itself or specific issues such as Iraq’s use of chemical weapons and the Kurdish genocide. By contrast, relatively little has been written on important issues including: American, Soviet, European or Arab policies towards the war; the role played by third-party mediators such as the Islamic Conference, the Arab League, and the United Nations in ending the war; the international arms trade and the war; the treatment of prisoners-of-war; and the role of opposition groups like the KDP, PUK, Mujahedin e-Khalq, SAIRI, and the Islamic Dawa Party. How have perceptions of the Iran-Iraq War changed in the thirty years that have passed since the war began? Who were the war’s victors: Iraq, Iran, Israel, the Gulf States, or even the United States? How has the war affected the regional dynamics of the Persian Gulf? To address these gaps in the current scholarly understanding of the subject, this conference will bring together policy practitioners, leading academics, and promising young scholars who are working on the various aspects of the Iran-Iraq War. Papers submitted to and accepted by the conference will subsequently be published in an edited volume. If you are interested in attending this academic conference, please contact one of the conference organisers Bryan Gibson to find out if there is any space. The British Institute for the Study of Iraq provided partially funding for this conference through a BISI Conference Grant. Tuesday 26 October, 6 p.m. – Dr Karen Radner ‘Working on Iraq, working in Iraq: studying the
Ancient Near East in the Kurdish Autonomous Region’ Wednesday 27 October, 3.30 pm – Talk by Jessica Johnson - The Iraqi Institute for the Conservation of Antiquities and Heritage Collections Jessica Johnson, Programme Director of the Iraqi Institute’s Collection Conservation and November 17, 2010 7:00 for 7:30pm - British Iraqi Friendship Society Gala Dinner kindly Sponsored by RPS Energy, Guest Speaker: to be confirmed Saturday 20 November 2010 'The Ancient near East: Power and Propaganda' at the Department of Continuing Education, University of Oxford in association with BISI - details are available with this flyer available here and on the Department's website. 9 December 2010 - BISI Lecture 6 p.m. Dr Augusta McMahon of the University of Cambridge on 'A Grave Situation: Mass Graves and Early Urbanism at Tell Brak, Syria' Venue: J.Z. Young Lecture Theatre, Anatomy Building, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT - Members of the public are very welcome to attend - if possible kindly advise the BISI Administrator that you are attending but please come in any case. For a map of UCL please click here. Thursday 16 December 2010 6. 30 p.m. A lecture in memory of RAYMOND WESTBROOK given by PROFESSOR PIOTR MICHALOWSKI ‘LAW, LITERATURE AND MURDER IN THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST' Professor Piotr Michalowski's work on a cuneiform document recording a murder trail, c.1800BCE was also to have a legal commentary by his old friend, colleague and New London Synagogue member Professor Raymond Westbrook, the leading authority on ancient Near Eastern law. Prof. British born, Piotr Michalowski grew up in Poland and received his doctorate from Yale University where he and Raymond Westbrook were students together. He is the George G. Cameron Professor of Ancient Near Eastern Civilizations at the University of Michigan specializing in the Sumerian and Babylonian literature, languages, history, economics and poetics. He is also is the editor of the Journal of Cuneiform Studies and President of the International Association of Assyriologists. The lecture takes place at the New London Synagogue, 33 Abbey Road London NW8 OAT Admission to the lecture is free but please indicate your attendance to the organisers.
Saturday 7 February 2009 – From Babylon to Amarna: Ancient Middle Eastern Interactions in the Days of Akhenaten (See Newsletter 23 a report on the study day [NL 23]) The 14th century BC was a period of vibrant cultural relations throughout the Middle East when the Mesopotamian cuneiform writing system was adopted to write local languages. Babylonian, which was the international language of the age, was also the language of the Amarna letters of Pharaoh Akhenaten. These letters have been the most famous witness of this dynamic time since their discovery in the late 1880s. Important new discoveries in Middle Eastern archaeology allow us to bring this fascinating international age into sharper focus. This joint Birkbeck and British Institute for the Study of Iraq study day is the fourth in the Mesopotamia series. The Egypt Exploration Society has also joined us as a co-sponsor for the day. Organised and chaired by Mariana Giovino and Frans van Koppen, Birkbeck College, Faculty of Lifelong Learning. Speakers: Dr Paul Collins, Dr Jack Green, Dr Frances Reynolds, Dr Daniel Schwemer, Dr Kate Spence. ZIPANG performance: Nergal & Ereshkigal and The Ballad of the Former Heroes. Enrolment opens at Birkbeck in April 2008. Places are limited so early enrolment is recommended and a form can be obtained by clicking here. Enquires about these courses are welcome. Please contact the Archaeology Desk on: FLL Archaeology, Birkbeck College, 26 Russell Square, London WC1B 5DQ; tel: 020 7631 6627; e-mail: archaeology@fce.bbk.ac.uk. To order your FLL prospectus which will confirm times, fees, venues and details about how to enrol, please ring 0845 601 0174 or email info@bbk.ac.uk. Please make sure you ask for a FLL pre-degree/short course prospectus for 2007/8. The flyer is available by clicking here. 12 March 2009 5.30 P.M. BISI Lecture "The question of hellenisation: the case of the city of Babylon" by Professor Amélie Kuhrt FBA Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrrace, London SW1Y 5 AH. If possible, please confirm your attention to the BISI Administrator. Members of the public are very welcome to attend. A reception will follow the lecture. 25 April 2009 Chrisitianity in Iraq VI - A Seminar day on Christian education in Iraq. To be held at The Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre, London WC1H 0XG 10.30 A.M. - 4.30 P.M. Organised by Dr Erica Hunter with the Centre of Eastern and Orthodox Christianity, Department for the Study of Religions, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London in conjunction with the British Institute for the Study of Iraq and the Anglican and Eastern Churches Association. For a copy of the programme and an application form please click here. 18 May 2009 6 P.M. BISI Appeal Lecture "Iraq: is the age of wars over?" with Patrick Cockburn, Middle East correspondent of The Independent, and author of The Occupation: War, Resistance and Daily Life in Iraq. Tickets will be required and and can be obtained with this application form. Reel Iraq - Non BISI event - May - July 2009 Reel Festivals is proud to present Reel Iraq, a festival of Iraqi Music, Cinema and Art to commence in Edinburgh in May, 2009. The festival is scheduled with films screening from the 14th to the 24th of May, along with a variety of other events during the course of the month. The British Institute for the Study of Iraq has provided a Development Grant to support the participation of Iraqi writers at this festival. 17 June 2009 5.30 P.M. BISI Bonham-Carter Forum and Lecture - Dr Eleanor Wilkinson & Professor Tony Wilkinson FBA "Archaeology in Iraq: Preservation, Visualisation and Access". (Dr Wilkinson talk primarily was on 'DNA' - Digital Nineveh Archive - for more details see our Newsletter No. 21 [NL 21].) Venue: The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrrace, London SW1Y 5 AH 17 September 2009 6.00 P.M. BISI Appeal Talk with Professor Jim Khalili "Science and Rationalism in 9th Century Baghdad" This event and the appeal are being generously sponsored by HE Sheikh Hamed Ahmed Al Hamed. Our distinguished guest speaker, Iraqi born scientist, author and broadcaster Professor Jim Al-Khalili OBE, is professor of physics at the University of Surrey where he also holds a chair in the Public Engagement in Science. He is also a Trustee and Vice President of the British Science Association. He was awarded the Royal Society Michael Faraday Prize for science communication for 2007 and elected an Honorary Fellow of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. He is a best-selling author of popular science books and appears regularly on television. He presented the BBC4 three part series Science and Islam about the leap in scientific knowledge that took place in the Islamic world between the 8th and 14th centuries and has contributed to many radio programmes. He co-presented the Channel 4 documentary “The Riddle of Einstein's Brain” (2004) and presented “Atom” (2007), a three-part series about the history of atomic physics. Next year he presents a BBC series on chemistry and a Channel 4 series on the history of British science with Professor Stephen Hawking. His latest book, “The House of Wisdom” is published by Penguin Press next Spring. For more details please see his personal website. The ticket cost is £15 per person for BISI members and one guest at the reduced rate and £20 per person for non-members and other guests. If you wish to apply late for tickets (as of 10 September), we suggest you do so via email (pdf of the form) or by telephone to 020 7969 5274 or 01440 785 244. Tickets will be required and further details are available on this invitation form. 10 December 2009 6 p.m. BISI Lecture - Dr Karen Radner "The Neo-Assyrian imperial project: mechanisms of coherence" Venue: J.Z. Young Lecture Theatre, Anatomy Building, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT - Members of the public are welcome to attend - kindly advise the BISI Administrator if you are attending. For a map of UCL please click here. The AGM and a special Medal Presentation commence at 6 p.m. and will be followed by Dr Radner's lecture. A reception will follow the lecture in Wilkins North Cloisters.
Return to the top. BISI 2008 EventsSaturday 2 February 2008 10.00 am - 5.00 pmThe Sumerians: Iraq’s First Civilization
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