Where, in the Assyrian Empire, would you like to live? >> Well, as you can see, this place of Dinka, Gird-i Bazar, looks like a nice, beautiful area, so that's not too bad. But to be honest, I would probably like to live in Nineveh, only because my family was actually from the area of Nineveh recently. So maybe in some ways I feel a connection to that region. >> I love living in big cities. I love being around people, culture. So I would have to say Nineveh. Perhaps even Assur or even Calah. If I was living in the seventh century, perhaps even Babylon, except of course when it was under siege by Sennacherib or Ashurbanipal. >> I think I would want to live in the city of Amedi, that's modern Diyarbakr in eastern Turkey. It's still a very big, important city, but it already was big and important in the ninth century and onwards. And I would want to live there because I could have lots of wonderful day trips into the environment of Amedi. Including the Tigris grotto, which is to the north of Diyarbakr. And it's an open-air sanctuary where various Assyrian kings put up their reliefs and their dedicatory inscriptions. They considered it the source of the River Tigris, and in conjunction with that, an entrance to the netherworld, so a really exciting place. And I would quite like to be there when one of these royal visits happened, where lots and lots of sacrifices were brought to the Tigris and rituals, prayers were performed. It would have been a fabulous event, no doubt. And it would be in the wonderful Anatolian mountainscape. So I think that would be very, very nice to experience. >> I would like to have lived in the capital, in Nineveh. I would like to have been able to go to the royal libraries whenever I felt like it. >> I would probably like to live, if I had the choice, in the late Assyrian capital of Nineveh. At the time, the largest city in the world, with some 750 hectares, a wall some 12 kilometres long, several massive palaces on various mounds, including one, the Southwest Palace, of which the excavated reliefs alone are some three kilometres long. This was particularly exciting because in a way it was a microcosmos of the Assyrian empire. The Assyrian kings had an interest in bringing to their capital people from all over the world, so you would have all the languages spoken in the empire represented there by hostages and visitors and deportees. But they would also bring exotic plants and animals to the capital, and all of these would be gathered there. And the Assyrian kings were really not that into homogenising the civilisation that they presided over. They wanted to see in the centre how diverse this empire was. And that would certainly have made it an exciting place. The book of Jonah famously claims that the city of Nineveh, that it took you three days to cross it. That is certainly an exaggeration, but it just was really very, very huge. >> I would definitely like to be in Nineveh in the seventh century, because I believe this is the most interesting time for cultural activities, with a high level of international interaction, including Egyptian elements. >> On the northern edge of the Assyrian Empire, there's a wonderful place called Tušhan, a beautiful capital, which was the provincial capital in that region. It had a mound with villas overlooking the Tigris. And I'd like to think that one could retire to a villa there, look over the Tigris with the beautiful hills of Shubria in the background. >> I would like to live in the Nineveh plains, or in the capitals, because we are very close to the mountains. So for example, if sometimes you want to change landscape environment, you can enjoy the wonderful area of Kurdistan and then go back to the plain when it's too cold. So yes, I would say the Nineveh plain, in the centre of the empire. >> I would like to live in the Red House in Dur-Katlimmu, although the Khabur valley is nowadays a very remote region. However, the environment looked even better in Assyrian times. I spent several years in and around the building during it was excavated. And it is known to me through the evaluation work down to the smallest detail. With its 5,200 square meters of living space, numerous water installations, and colourful wall decor, it offers high comfort. I would like to experience life in this building. >> I would like to have lived in Kalhu, because I would really like to see how Ashurnasirpal realised his vision of a new Assyrian capital. I think that while living somewhere like Nineveh would also have been really interesting, what interests me about Ashurnasirpal was that he moved away from Assur, which was quite, in terms of ideology, it was quite a big break, and perhaps a surprise. And I would really like to be able to see what the domestic context was like, because so little is known about the way that citizens lived, or normal people. And I would also really like to see the infrastructure, so, canals, and also what parts of the city were accessible, and to whom they were accessible. >> I think I'd want to live more or less close to where I'm sitting right now, on the eastern or northeastern fringes in the foothills of the Zagros mountains, or after some of these areas had been annexed by the Assyrian Empire, right in the Zagros Mountains. Partly because it's cooler than many other parts of the Assyrian Empire. It's very rich and fertile. You've got apricot and pomegranate trees. You've got great horses that are renowned. And you have, I think, you're living in one of the most abundantly productive parts of the empire. >> Having seen all the capitals, Assur, perhaps, the old religious capital, still remains my favourite. It had wonderful house blocks, streets, a number of temples, the palace, the ziggurats. I'm not sure it was so much fun, but certainly, and it fell gracefully in the end. So I think Assur was a good place to stay. >> I would have lived in some city in southern Babylonia, so my actual overlord, the Assyrian king, would be far, far, far away, and the Babylonian ruler was just a puppet king installed by the Assyrians. So he had nothing to say. So I would live in some semi-independent large city, like Ur or Uruk, and enjoy my life. And any other king, overlord, or ruler would not bother me.