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| Leaping Stags Assyrian Relief
 Original in the collection of the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, 1250 B.C.
This Leaping Stags in a Landscape Relief is taken from a cylinder seal or roller stamp dating back to the Middle Assyrian period (ca. 13th century) from Mesopotamia. The relief is the impression one sees when the original cylinder seal is rolled across clay. Cylinder seals were engraved with visual stories about mythology, historical events and scenes from everyday life. Sometimes they were used to notarize documents. The cylinder seal was made of a hard material such as limestone, glass or ceramics. Later seals also included hieroglyphs.
Size: 9"w x 2.5"H (23 x 6cm)
Item Type: wall plaque
Material: bonded stone
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Customers Also Viewed  This zodiac plaque represents the celebration of the Jewish lunar calendar. The Hebraic script for the months (center ring) is transliterated into phonetic English (outer ring).
Size: 5.5 X 5.5 X 1
Item Type: wall plaque
Material: bonded stone $70.00 |  Louvre Museum, Paris. 2000 B.C.
So common in the Mesopotamian area were the clay figurines of Ishtar/Inanna/Ashtart in her characteristic breast-offering pose, that this has come to be known among archaeologists as "The Ishtar Pose". She was addressed as "Mother of the Fruitful Breast", Queen of Heaven, Light of the World, Creator of People, Mother of Deities, River of Life, Etc. The breast-offering pose suggested her function as the Goddess of all nourishment and fertility. Ishtar, also known as Innana in Sumeria is, above all, a lunar Goddess who gives life as the waxing moon and then withdraws it as the waning moon. The light and dark dimensions to her power, her dying and resurrected son-lover Tammuz, who annually descends to the underworld and rises again from it-all suggest a lunar mythology which revolves around the connection made between the light and dark lunar phases and rhythmic alteration of the Earth's fertility.
Size: 11.5"H (29cm)
Item Type: statue
Material: bonded stone Price: $80.00 Sale Price: $75.00 |  Oriental Institute, Chicago, Sumerian, 2010 B.C.
King Urnammu, founder of the Third Dynasty of Ur was originally a general who took the title of "king of Sumer and Akkad". Urnammu succeeded to construct a well organized empire, in which Sumer and Akkad were united. Urnammu strived to achieve the law and order of past times.
Urnammu built ziggurats with a three stage system and a temple on the highest level. Use was made of mud bricks each stamped with the name of the city, city deity and the name of the temple. His development in temple construction was an innovation used for many centuries. Urnammu rebuilt and enlarged one of the most famous temples in ancient times, the E-kur temple in the city of Nippur devoted to Enlil, the chief god in the pantheon.
This figurine statue of King Urnammu, which was buried in a foundation box beneath one of the temple towers, represents the king at the start of the building project, carrying on his head a basket of clay from which would be made the critically important first brick.
Size: 13.5"H (34.5cm)
Item Type: statue
Material: bonded stone $85.00 |
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