In Kassite times the area was defined by a wall that enclosed about . The wall, originally built by Kurigalzu I, was later rebuilt by
Kurigalzu II (c. 1332—1308 BC). The site has several defined areas, Mound A (100 meters south of the ziggurat), Tell Ahmar, Tell Abu Shijar, Tell al-Abyadh, and a private housing area. The main elements, ziggurat, palaces, etc. are all within the city wall. The currently known structures of the site consist of nine temples (T1 to T9), with T1 being the ziggurat and associated temple to Enlil, three palaces (P1 to T3), and five housing areas (H1 to H5) The site was visited by
Bengt Bengtsson Oxenstierna in 1616. Agar Quf first appeared on a modern map by Edward Ives in 1773. The site was then described by
Claudius James Rich in 1811. Aqar Quf (referred to then as Akerkuf, Agger Koof, or Akar-kuf) was visited and examined in 1837 by
Francis Rawdon Chesney. The name of Dur-Kurigalzu was identified by
Henry Rawlinson in the mid-19th century. .
Iraq Museum. Excavations were conducted from 1942 through 1945, by
Taha Baqir and
Seton Lloyd in a joint excavation by the Iraqi Directorate-General of Antiquities and the
British School of Archaeology in Iraq. Over 100 cuneiform tablets of the Kassite period were recovered, now in the
Iraq Museum. Some were date-able to the reigns of
Burna-Buriash II and
Kashtiliash IV. They also showed that two of the palaces were named the Palace of the Mountain Sheep and the Palace of the Stag. A
kudurru (IM 49991) dated to year five of Kassite ruler Nazi-Maruttash was also found. During the excavation, 5 fragments of a larger-than-life-size statue were discovered. They contain the longest yet found Kassite Sumerian inscriptions. A baked brick pavement (T5) around two kilometers northwest of Tell al-Abyadh was found to be covered with hundreds of broken terracotta figurines dedicated to the god Gula. Bricks found in situ were dated to the reign of Kassite ruler Nazi-Maruttash. The excavations included the ziggurat, three temples, and part of the palace of Dur-Kurigalzu II. In the early 1960s and from 1968 to 1975 the Iraqi Directorate-General of Antiquities continued to do some excavation around the ziggurat as part of a restoration project under
Saddam Hussein The three excavated areas are the mound of Aqar Quf (including the ziggurat and large temple), a public building (approximately to the west), and Tell al-Abyadh where a large palace was partially uncovered (about to the south-west). Several burned cuneiform tablets dated to the reign of
Marduk-apla-iddina I were found there. As part of a temple restoration a pottery jar was found containing 220 Islamic silver
dirhem coins from the Ilkhanid period. Excavations continued between 1977 and 1980, led by Suphi Anwar Rashid and Amire al-Khayyat, in the temple area. Paving and wall bricks dedicated to Enlil and
Ninlil were found as well as a Kassite double
jar burial, an inscribed eyestone for Enlil dedicated by Kurigalzu, and two female figurines in ivory. Another area within Dur-Kurigalzu, Tell Abu Shijar, was excavated by Iraqi archaeologists in 1992, 1993, and 2001 finding mainly late Kassite and lesser Parthian/Sassanian remains. Painted plaster wall fragments, similar to those found at Tell al-Abyadh, were recovered as well as a worn cylinder seal and thirteen cuneiform clay tablets. The tablets were unread (and may be lost) but 3 were noted to have dates of the Kassite king
Nazi-Maruttash (1307—1282 BC). The site lies 1 kilometer west of the ziggurat and 500 meters southwest of Tell al-Abyadh being about 6 meters in height with only the central 120-meter by 150-meter mound undisturbed by modern activity. In the late-1960s an Italian team conducted a photogrammatic survey of the ziggurat. == Wall paintings at
Tell al-Abyadh ==