A footprint left in a piece of wet mud brick in Ur 4,000 years ago. Ancient Mesopotamia
https://bit.ly/32p1ADr

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A footprint left in a piece of wet mud brick in Ur 4,000 years ago. Ancient Mesopotamia
https://bit.ly/32p1ADr
Alabaster heads from statues with shell and lapis lazuli inlay Khafaje, Iraq, Nintu Temple level VI ca. 2475-2300 BCE
Penn Museum, 38-10-51 and 38-10-52
GILGAMESH LAMENT FOR ENKIDU
From Standard Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh
Tablet VIII, lines 42 - 49; 52-56; 59
--
We all lament for Enkidu, great friend of Gilgamesh
Abdulameer al-Hamdani | Iraq's Heritage: An Update
Update on archaeological and heritage situation in Iraq presented by Iraqi Minister of Culture.
Western Asiatic Stone Eye Idol, Ca.4000 BC.
Attractive brown stone Tell Brak Eye Idol consisting of a square body with slight shoulders, a short neck and two incised eyes.
Size: L: 120mm / W: 100mm
Courtesy: Pax Romana
Seal of King Ur-Nammu; Cylinder seal (c. 2100 BCE) depicting goddesses conducting mortal males through a religious rite, Sumerian
This is my rendition of a letter from the Neo-Assyrian period of one Aššur-reṣiwa to his superior, memorably asking who he doesn’t respond to his messages–“why is my master silent while I shake and roam around like a dog?” https://www.instagram.com/p/CHYX3DwrosO/?igshid=1alh90qrtmt9
Gudea of Lagash
Paragonite
Mesopotamia (Iraq), city-state of Lagash
Neo-Sumerian period, Lagash II dynasty 2150-2125 BCE
Detroit Institute of Arts, 82.64
Cosmetic box with handle Ivory Excavated at Ur (Tell al-Muqayyar) Neo-Assyrian/Late Babylonian period, ca. 700-600 BCE
British Museum, 116544
Statue of Gudea of Lagash
Diorite
Mesopotamia (Iraq), probably Tello/Girsu, ca. 2125 BCE
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH
Priestess/Queen Puabi’s gold earrings
2600 B.C.E.
Royal Cemetery of Ur
Mesopotamia
(via Pinterest)
Sumerian Temple Hymn, baked clay, circa between 1800 and 1600 BCE (Old Babylonian), currently located at the Walters Art Museum.
This tablet, inscribed on all four sides, is one of the best preserved copies of the Sumerian hymn to the temple at Kesh.
The popular hymn, written in praise of the temple built for the mother-goddess Nintu in the city of Kesh in southern Mesopotamia, describes the temple in both physical and heavenly terms.
Bilingual Sumerian-Akkadian Hymn to Ishtar
This tablet from the Library of Ashurbanipal at Nineveh is a hymn to Ishtar, goddess of love, fertility, and war. While the prayer is originally in Sumerian, every other line gives an Akkadian translation (visible in the placement of line dividers after every group of two lines), which suggests that even in antiquity, Sumerian may have begun to be difficult to understand. It is likely that Sumerian was no longer spoken after about 2000 BCE, but it was preserved in sacred and scholarly texts in Mesopotamia for the next two millennia, analogously to the way Latin is preserved in certain genres and scholarly contexts alongside modern languages today. (Source)
Nineveh, Neo-Assyrian, c. 911-612 BCE.
British Museum.
Two winged apkallu figures from Room T of the Northwest Palace, Nimrud Gypsum alabaster (”Mosul marble”) Neo-Assyrian period, reign of Ashurnasirpal II (883-859 BCE)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Inscribed brick in Akkadian from Ešnunna, Iraq which a dog once walked over, leaving behind their paw prints. Circa 2000-1900 BCE.
hmmm how could i best articulate my love for this ancient literary work...
shitposting it is
Not a standard content for this blog,but... I simply had to.
Thanks so much @enkidusbi for providing me with lots of historicaly accurate laughs.
Eye Inlay (doubled) - Sumerian or Elamite - lapis lazuli, marble - c.2nd half of the 3rd Millennium BCE
Eye inlay - lapis lazuli, limestone and black stone - Syrian, Early Dynastic Mesopotamian - c.2550-2250 BCE
Child’s left eye inlay - glass - Late Period, Egypt - c.664-332 BCE
A pair of child’s eye inlays - glass - Late Period, Egypt - c.664-332 BCE
A pair of eye inlays - glass - Late Period, Egypt - c.664-332 BCE