The commemorative stelae of Nahr el-Kalb are a group of over 20 inscriptions and rock reliefs carved into the limestone rocks around the estuary of the Nahr al-Kalb (Dog River) in Lebanon, just north of Beirut. The earliest European to identify the site was the 17th-century traveller Henry Maundrell in 1697, and was the first editor of the inscriptions in 1922. In 2005, the stelae at the river were listed in the UNESCO Memory of the World initiative.