The first reliable reference to the town is written in the book
The History of Mosul, by Abu Zakaria Azidi. The book was released in 945 AD and he wrote about the history of Mosul, in which he referenced the town of Tel Keppe. Zakaria also mentioned a different author from the year 749 AD, who also mentions the village Tel Keppe as one of the Mosul's many
suburbs. In 1508, Tel Keppe was sacked by
Mongols. In 1743, Tel Keppe was looted and burned by the armies of the
Persian leader
Nader Shah. This event took place within the context of the
siege of Mosul, in which the Persian army suffered heavy casualties and resorted to looting the surrounding towns to have some semblance of victory. In 1833, the town was once again sacked, this time by
Mohammed Pasha the
Kurdish governor of
Rawandiz who also sacked the town of
Alqosh. Upon entering the town, ISIS looted the homes and removed the crosses and other religious objects from the churches. The cemetery in the town was also later destroyed. Soon after the beginning of the
Battle of Mosul, Iraqi troops advanced on Tel Keppe, but the fighting continued into 2017. Iraqi forces recaptured the town from ISIS on 19 January 2017. In 2017, Salman Esso Habba of the "Christian Mobilization" militia – a part of the
Popular Mobilization Forces – warned the Arabs to leave, claiming that Tel Keppe's homes belonged only to
Assyrians in the town, MEMO reported Wednesday. He also said that Christians’ homes and rights could not be taken away. Five years after the liberation of Tel Keppe and most of the indigenous
Assyrian population is yet to return, mostly due to the presence of the non-local
Babylon Brigades militia. The majority of the towns inhabitants either fled to large cities, or fled Iraq as a whole. Very few Assyrians returned or had any plans to return. ==Arabization==