|alt=An entrance to a cave in a wooded hillside Evidence for human occupation of the Zagros reaches back into the Lower Palaeolithic, as evidenced by the discovery of many cave-sites dating to that period in the Iranian part of the mountain range.
Middle Palaeolithic stone tool assemblages are known from Barda Balka, a cave-site south of the Little Zab; and from the Iranian Zagros. A
Mousterian stone tool assemblage – produced by either Neanderthals or
anatomically modern humans – was recently excavated in
Erbil. Neanderthals also occupied the site of Shanidar. This cave-site, located in the Sapna Valley, has yielded a settlement sequence stretching from the Middle Palaeolithic up to the
Epipalaeolithic period. The site is particularly well known for its Neanderthal burials. The Epipalaeolithic occupation of Shanidar, contemporary with the use of the
Kebaran stone tool assemblage, is the oldest evidence for anatomically modern human occupation of the Great Zab basin. The following Protoneolithic, or
Natufian, occupation is contemporary with the oldest occupation of the nearby open-air site Zawi Chemi Shanidar.
M'lefaat on the
Khazir River (a tributary to the Great Zab) was a small village of
hunter-gatherers dating to the 10th millennium BCE that was contemporary with the
Pre-Pottery Neolithic A in the
Levant. An archaeological survey of the
Citadel of Erbil, in the plain south of the lower course of the Great Zab, has shown that this site was continuously occupied at least from the 6th millennium BCE upward. The earliest historical reference to the region dates to the
Ur III dynasty, when king
Shulgi mentioned the city of Urbilum – the ancient name of modern-day Erbil. The great
Assyrian capitals of
Assur,
Nineveh, Nimrud and
Dur-Sharrukin were all located in the foothill zone where the Great Zab flows into the Tigris, and the Great Zab basin became increasingly integrated into the
Middle Assyrian and Neo-Assyrian empires. Nimrud, the capital of the empire until 706 BCE, was located only away from the confluence of the Great Zab with the Tigris. The Assyrian king
Ashurnasirpal II constructed a canal called
Patti-Hegalli that tapped water from the Great Zab to irrigate the land around Nimrud, and this canal was restored by his successors
Tiglath-Pileser III and
Esarhaddon. This canal ran along the right bank of the Great Zab and cut through a rock bluff by means of a tunnel and is still visible today. After the fall of the Neo-Assyrian empire, the
Medes gained control of the area, followed by the
Achaemenids in 550 BCE. The
Battle of Gaugamela in 331 BCE – one of the decisive battles leading to the fall of the Achaemenid empire at the hands of
Alexander the Great – supposedly took place north of the Great Zab in the vicinity of Mosul. After Alexander's death in 323 BCE, control of the area shifted to the
Seleucids. In 750 CE, the last Umayyad caliph
Marwan II was defeated by the
Abbasid As-Saffah in the Battle of the Zab on the banks of the Khazir River, a tributary to the Great Zab. When the Mongols swept over Iraq in the 13th century and sacked Erbil, many survivors sought a refuge in the inaccessible valleys of the Great Zab. The Sapna Valley was home to both
Christian and
Muslim communities, as evidenced by Christian
artefacts found at Zawi Chemi Shanidar. During the 19th century, the area was controlled by local Kurdish leaders. During
World War I, heavy fighting took place in the area, and
Rowanduz was pillaged by
Russian soldiers in 1916. Following World War I, episodes of heavy fighting took place between the
Barzani tribe – striving for the establishment of an independent Kurdish polity – and several other Kurdish tribes, and between the Barzanis and the Iraqi Government. The last of these uprisings started in 1974 and led to heavy bombardments of towns and villages in the Great Zab basin. == See also ==