photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Dick Osseman | all galleries >> Ankara pictures >> Ankara Anatolian Civilizations Museum >> Urartian objects > Lion Statuette
previous | next
27-Mar-2017

Lion Statuette

view map

This ivory lion dates from the eighth century BC, it is Urartian from Altintepe (Gold Hill). It was fitted on one of three legs of a small bronze table on a tripod. Each leg had a lion, according to the reconstruction.

Dimensions: 6,4 cm height – 9,3 cm length.

In antiquity ivory was a very precious material, which is often mentioned in Assyrian annals as tribute or booty. The Urartu kingdom imported ivory (from elephants and hippopotamuses) from India, Nubia and Egypt, but most of all from Nothern Syria (where elephants were living at the time), together with artisans able to work it. It was used to produce decorative elements inserted in furniture, luxury objects (such as combs, seals and perfume boxes) and ritual offerings to temples (such as thrones, daggers and swords). The artisans worked in royal workshops, established in the palaces; their production followed the Urartian iconography, with plenty North-Syrian stylistic influence (more than in e.g. metalworking, which was fully indigenous).

Correspondent: J.M.Criel, Antwerpen
Source: ‘Urartu, vergeten cultuur uit het bergland Armenië’ – Cataloog Tentoonstelling Gent okt ’82-jan ’83.


other sizes: small medium large original auto
comment | share