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Ancient Mesopotamia

Sumerian

Uruk (Warka) Vase

  • Made of alabaster

  • Found in the temple of Inanna, goddess of love, fertility, and war

  • First (from bottom to top): grain and reeds → Two most important agricultural harvests

  • Second: rams and ewes → Being herded → Agrarian economy

  • Third: blank, might have been painting faded away

  • Fourth: carrying products of the Mesopotamian agricultural system (fruits, grains, wine, and mead)

    • Naked and muscular → Humble and low status → Servants or enslaved individuals (the band above, displays the owners of the enslaved figures).

  • Fifth: A man and a woman face each other, a smaller naked male stands between them holding agricultural produce which he offers to the woman. The woman had an elaborate crown on her head at one point.

    • Two reed bundles → symbols of the goddess Inanna

    • Two-horned and bearded rams carrying statues

      • One statue is carrying a cuneiform

      • The other statue is carrying a reed bundle

      • Rams carrying vases like the Uruk Vase

  • King celebrating Inanna

    • Sacred marriage between the king and the goddess

Votive Statues

  • Iraq

  • Found below the temple

  • Deeply focused, staring straightforward, some with very large eyes, most with hands clasped, some holding cups.

  • Adorants, mortals worshiping the god of the temple

  • Inscribed on the back or bottom with a personal name and prayer or “one who offers prayers.”

  • Represents elite people, both men and women

  • One that stands out

    • Tallest one

    • Rough image carved at the base

      • Anzu bird holding two horned animals → associated with Ninurta (god of thunder) and Abu (god of vegetation)

Bull-Headed Lyre

  • One of the oldest string instruments discovered

  • Iraq

  • Found in “The King’s Grave”

  • Made of wood, lapis lazuli, gold, silver, shell, and bitumen.

  • Soundbox, a quadripartite panel, and a sculpted bull’s head.

  • Bull’s beard represents the power of the king and Shamash (god of the sun)

  • May have been used to provide music for the ruler in the afterlife

Akkadian

Victory Stele of Naram-Sin

  • Akkadian victory over the Lullibi Mountain people

    • Mountain people being thrown off the mountain

    • Someone under Naram-Sin’s foot with a spear in his neck

    • Someone running away

  • New composition

    • Normally shown in registers

    • Still clear separation of status and hierarchy scale

      • Naram-Sin is “greater” in appearance and is associated with the gods.

        • Everyone in the stele is looking at him

        • Wearing the horned helmet → symbol of divinity

        • Rising into the realm of the heavenly

  • Symbolic image that tells a story through symbols of the event

Babylonian

Stele of Hammurabi

  • Carved in relief at the top

  • Inscribed cuneiform at the bottom

    • Written in the language of Akkadian

      • Used for official government decrees

  • Prologue

    • Describing the scene at the top

    • King (smaller) facing Shamash (god of the sun and justice)

      • Shamash is wearing a special horned crown

      • Flames or light that emanate from his shoulders (divine light like a halo)

      • Giving a scepter and ring to the king → sign of power

        • Hammurabi demonstrates that these are divine laws and his authority comes from Shamash

  • Twisted perspective

  • More than 300 laws

    • If you do X, Y is the consequence.

    • “An eye for an eye” or “A tooth for a tooth”

    • Shows what’s important to them

      • Agriculture, irrigation, family life, and points of tension in society.

  • Epliogue

    • The prosperity of the king, the importance of his rule, and the idea that he will be remembered for all time.

Neo-Assyrian

“Garden Party” Relief

  • Carved in alabaster

  • Rare depiction of leisure in royal life

    • Often focuses on kings, war, and hunting.

    • A celebratory or relaxed moment after a victorious battle

      • Reminder of the king’s military conquests

    • King and queen are shown lounging in a lush garden

      • King reclines on a couch under a canopy, drinking wine, while his queen sits beside him.

      • Elaborate garments and headdresses → highlighting status

      • Surrounding them are servants, musicians, and attendants. → wealth and splendor of the royal court

  • Trees, plants, and vines → Royal garden, relaxed atmosphere

    • Head of a defeated enemy king hanging from a nearby tree → power and ruthlessness of Assyrian rule.

Vocabulary

  • Fertile Crescent

    • The boomerang-shaped region in the Middle East

    • Sumer, Akkad, Assyria, and Babylonia.

    • Named for its rich soils and was fertile due to its location between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and the Mediterranean Sea

    • Mesopotamia → "the land between the rivers"

    • Major crossroads for the exchange of goods and ideas

    • Birthplace of many technological innovations

      • Writing, the wheel, agriculture, and the use of irrigation.

  • Tigris and Euphrates Rivers

    • Modern cities were built along their banks for transportation and water

    • Sacred and perform baptisms in its waters

    • A vital source of water, food, and transportation for the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia

    • Often flooded over onto the land → fertile land

  • Uruk Period

    • First-state societies emerged and urban life began to develop

    • Development of large settlements with writing systems, administrative systems, ritual centers, and art.

      • The emergence of the cuneiform script, the decline of pottery painting, and the popularity of copper and cylinder seals.

    • Marked the beginning of the Sumerian civilization and the first great blossoming of civilization in the Fertile Crescent

  • Shamash

    • Sun god and a primary deity who represented the power of light and good over evil and darkness

    • God of justice, truth, and equity, and was the judge of both gods and mortals.

    • Responsible for protecting travelers and ensuring that justice was served fairly

    • Associated with divination, often alongside the weather god Adad.

    • Believed to emerge from his underground chamber at sunrise and travel across the sky

  • Cuneiform

    • “Wedge-shaped”

    • Ancient writing systems

    • Used for recording information such as business, trade, temple activities, stories, myths, and personal letters.

  • Register/Frieze

    • Decorative band or panel

  • Ziggurat

    • Ancient Mesopotamian temple tower consisting of a lofty pyramidal structure built in successive stages with outside staircases and a shrine at the top

  • Frontal Eye

    • Associated with both good and evil, divine and devilish, and protective and destructive.

    • The major symbol in Mesopotamian art, religion, and spiritual beliefs

      • Wide eyes often represent attentiveness to the gods

      • Evil eyes could cause diseases, famines, disasters, and other damage to human lives and livelihoods.

  • Twisted Perspective

    • The figure is shown mostly in profile, but a part of the figure is drawn facing the viewer.

    • Used to add energy, drama, and emphasis to a scene.

    • Allowed artists to be more descriptive in their illustrations of animal anatomy

  • Polytheistic

    • Belief in many gods and goddesses

    • "Poly" means "many" and "theism" means "god or gods"

  • Pictorial Narrative

    • Visual language that told stories about gods, rulers, and cosmic order.

    • Reflected Mesopotamian beliefs, myths, and social structures.

    • Proclaiming power, deterring war, and indicating that a battle and its outcome were justified.

  • Votive

    • Objects given to a sacred place as a way to express gratitude or fulfill a vow

    • Paintings, sculptures, or figurines.

  • Stele

    • Monuments made of stone or wood were used in ancient cultures to convey information through images, text, or both.

  • Epic of Gilgamesh

    • The poem explores themes of the human condition, mortality, and the search for meaning in life.

    • Gilgamesh's journey from an arrogant king to a noble leader through self-discovery and pain

    • Deals with fundamental questions about human existence

    • Deals with values such as friendship, humbleness, and acceptance of weaknesses.

    • A timeless classic that laid the foundation for many Western heroic epics

  • Hierarchy of Scale

    • Artistic technique that uses scale and proportion to indicate the significance of figures or objects in a composition

    • More important figures are depicted as larger than others

    • Emphasize certain elements and create a visual hierarchy

  • Low Relief

    • Carving technique that depicts figures or scenes that project slightly from a background surface

    • Used to convey cultural and religious stories, and to represent important figures, deities, and events.

    • Common in ancient monuments and temples

    • Serve both aesthetic and symbolic purposes

    • Allows for intricate designs while conserving material and labor compared to fully three-dimensional sculptures

  • Divine Kingship

    • The idea that a king was a sacred figure and a representative of the gods on earth

      • Descended from the gods

      • Divine favor

      • Superhuman abilities

      • Married a goddess

    • The concept of divine kingship was reflected in art and architecture and played a significant role in how rulers were depicted

  • Aniconic

    • Absence of artistic representations of the natural and supernatural worlds, or certain figures in religions.

    • Cultural taboos that are often codified by religious traditions

    • When aniconism is enforced by the physical destruction of images, it becomes iconoclasm.

    • Played a significant role in shaping religious aesthetics and beliefs from ancient civilizations to modern religious practices

  • Apotropaic

    • Type of protective magic that was used to ward off evil or misfortune.

    • “To ward off"

SY

Ancient Mesopotamia

Sumerian

Uruk (Warka) Vase

  • Made of alabaster

  • Found in the temple of Inanna, goddess of love, fertility, and war

  • First (from bottom to top): grain and reeds → Two most important agricultural harvests

  • Second: rams and ewes → Being herded → Agrarian economy

  • Third: blank, might have been painting faded away

  • Fourth: carrying products of the Mesopotamian agricultural system (fruits, grains, wine, and mead)

    • Naked and muscular → Humble and low status → Servants or enslaved individuals (the band above, displays the owners of the enslaved figures).

  • Fifth: A man and a woman face each other, a smaller naked male stands between them holding agricultural produce which he offers to the woman. The woman had an elaborate crown on her head at one point.

    • Two reed bundles → symbols of the goddess Inanna

    • Two-horned and bearded rams carrying statues

      • One statue is carrying a cuneiform

      • The other statue is carrying a reed bundle

      • Rams carrying vases like the Uruk Vase

  • King celebrating Inanna

    • Sacred marriage between the king and the goddess

Votive Statues

  • Iraq

  • Found below the temple

  • Deeply focused, staring straightforward, some with very large eyes, most with hands clasped, some holding cups.

  • Adorants, mortals worshiping the god of the temple

  • Inscribed on the back or bottom with a personal name and prayer or “one who offers prayers.”

  • Represents elite people, both men and women

  • One that stands out

    • Tallest one

    • Rough image carved at the base

      • Anzu bird holding two horned animals → associated with Ninurta (god of thunder) and Abu (god of vegetation)

Bull-Headed Lyre

  • One of the oldest string instruments discovered

  • Iraq

  • Found in “The King’s Grave”

  • Made of wood, lapis lazuli, gold, silver, shell, and bitumen.

  • Soundbox, a quadripartite panel, and a sculpted bull’s head.

  • Bull’s beard represents the power of the king and Shamash (god of the sun)

  • May have been used to provide music for the ruler in the afterlife

Akkadian

Victory Stele of Naram-Sin

  • Akkadian victory over the Lullibi Mountain people

    • Mountain people being thrown off the mountain

    • Someone under Naram-Sin’s foot with a spear in his neck

    • Someone running away

  • New composition

    • Normally shown in registers

    • Still clear separation of status and hierarchy scale

      • Naram-Sin is “greater” in appearance and is associated with the gods.

        • Everyone in the stele is looking at him

        • Wearing the horned helmet → symbol of divinity

        • Rising into the realm of the heavenly

  • Symbolic image that tells a story through symbols of the event

Babylonian

Stele of Hammurabi

  • Carved in relief at the top

  • Inscribed cuneiform at the bottom

    • Written in the language of Akkadian

      • Used for official government decrees

  • Prologue

    • Describing the scene at the top

    • King (smaller) facing Shamash (god of the sun and justice)

      • Shamash is wearing a special horned crown

      • Flames or light that emanate from his shoulders (divine light like a halo)

      • Giving a scepter and ring to the king → sign of power

        • Hammurabi demonstrates that these are divine laws and his authority comes from Shamash

  • Twisted perspective

  • More than 300 laws

    • If you do X, Y is the consequence.

    • “An eye for an eye” or “A tooth for a tooth”

    • Shows what’s important to them

      • Agriculture, irrigation, family life, and points of tension in society.

  • Epliogue

    • The prosperity of the king, the importance of his rule, and the idea that he will be remembered for all time.

Neo-Assyrian

“Garden Party” Relief

  • Carved in alabaster

  • Rare depiction of leisure in royal life

    • Often focuses on kings, war, and hunting.

    • A celebratory or relaxed moment after a victorious battle

      • Reminder of the king’s military conquests

    • King and queen are shown lounging in a lush garden

      • King reclines on a couch under a canopy, drinking wine, while his queen sits beside him.

      • Elaborate garments and headdresses → highlighting status

      • Surrounding them are servants, musicians, and attendants. → wealth and splendor of the royal court

  • Trees, plants, and vines → Royal garden, relaxed atmosphere

    • Head of a defeated enemy king hanging from a nearby tree → power and ruthlessness of Assyrian rule.

Vocabulary

  • Fertile Crescent

    • The boomerang-shaped region in the Middle East

    • Sumer, Akkad, Assyria, and Babylonia.

    • Named for its rich soils and was fertile due to its location between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and the Mediterranean Sea

    • Mesopotamia → "the land between the rivers"

    • Major crossroads for the exchange of goods and ideas

    • Birthplace of many technological innovations

      • Writing, the wheel, agriculture, and the use of irrigation.

  • Tigris and Euphrates Rivers

    • Modern cities were built along their banks for transportation and water

    • Sacred and perform baptisms in its waters

    • A vital source of water, food, and transportation for the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia

    • Often flooded over onto the land → fertile land

  • Uruk Period

    • First-state societies emerged and urban life began to develop

    • Development of large settlements with writing systems, administrative systems, ritual centers, and art.

      • The emergence of the cuneiform script, the decline of pottery painting, and the popularity of copper and cylinder seals.

    • Marked the beginning of the Sumerian civilization and the first great blossoming of civilization in the Fertile Crescent

  • Shamash

    • Sun god and a primary deity who represented the power of light and good over evil and darkness

    • God of justice, truth, and equity, and was the judge of both gods and mortals.

    • Responsible for protecting travelers and ensuring that justice was served fairly

    • Associated with divination, often alongside the weather god Adad.

    • Believed to emerge from his underground chamber at sunrise and travel across the sky

  • Cuneiform

    • “Wedge-shaped”

    • Ancient writing systems

    • Used for recording information such as business, trade, temple activities, stories, myths, and personal letters.

  • Register/Frieze

    • Decorative band or panel

  • Ziggurat

    • Ancient Mesopotamian temple tower consisting of a lofty pyramidal structure built in successive stages with outside staircases and a shrine at the top

  • Frontal Eye

    • Associated with both good and evil, divine and devilish, and protective and destructive.

    • The major symbol in Mesopotamian art, religion, and spiritual beliefs

      • Wide eyes often represent attentiveness to the gods

      • Evil eyes could cause diseases, famines, disasters, and other damage to human lives and livelihoods.

  • Twisted Perspective

    • The figure is shown mostly in profile, but a part of the figure is drawn facing the viewer.

    • Used to add energy, drama, and emphasis to a scene.

    • Allowed artists to be more descriptive in their illustrations of animal anatomy

  • Polytheistic

    • Belief in many gods and goddesses

    • "Poly" means "many" and "theism" means "god or gods"

  • Pictorial Narrative

    • Visual language that told stories about gods, rulers, and cosmic order.

    • Reflected Mesopotamian beliefs, myths, and social structures.

    • Proclaiming power, deterring war, and indicating that a battle and its outcome were justified.

  • Votive

    • Objects given to a sacred place as a way to express gratitude or fulfill a vow

    • Paintings, sculptures, or figurines.

  • Stele

    • Monuments made of stone or wood were used in ancient cultures to convey information through images, text, or both.

  • Epic of Gilgamesh

    • The poem explores themes of the human condition, mortality, and the search for meaning in life.

    • Gilgamesh's journey from an arrogant king to a noble leader through self-discovery and pain

    • Deals with fundamental questions about human existence

    • Deals with values such as friendship, humbleness, and acceptance of weaknesses.

    • A timeless classic that laid the foundation for many Western heroic epics

  • Hierarchy of Scale

    • Artistic technique that uses scale and proportion to indicate the significance of figures or objects in a composition

    • More important figures are depicted as larger than others

    • Emphasize certain elements and create a visual hierarchy

  • Low Relief

    • Carving technique that depicts figures or scenes that project slightly from a background surface

    • Used to convey cultural and religious stories, and to represent important figures, deities, and events.

    • Common in ancient monuments and temples

    • Serve both aesthetic and symbolic purposes

    • Allows for intricate designs while conserving material and labor compared to fully three-dimensional sculptures

  • Divine Kingship

    • The idea that a king was a sacred figure and a representative of the gods on earth

      • Descended from the gods

      • Divine favor

      • Superhuman abilities

      • Married a goddess

    • The concept of divine kingship was reflected in art and architecture and played a significant role in how rulers were depicted

  • Aniconic

    • Absence of artistic representations of the natural and supernatural worlds, or certain figures in religions.

    • Cultural taboos that are often codified by religious traditions

    • When aniconism is enforced by the physical destruction of images, it becomes iconoclasm.

    • Played a significant role in shaping religious aesthetics and beliefs from ancient civilizations to modern religious practices

  • Apotropaic

    • Type of protective magic that was used to ward off evil or misfortune.

    • “To ward off"

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