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tRansCUltURal ROUtes
BetWeen the meDiteRRanean
anD the inDUs
W
ith the rise of complex centres of civilization – mesopotamian, egyptian
and harappan – found in the great river valleys of the tigris and eu-
phrates, the nile and the indus during the late fourth and third millennia
BC – humanity witnessed an unprecedented flowering of the arts, its emergent ico-
nography largely expressing divine power and heroic royal prowess. the
materials,
form, technique and imagery of objects such as sculpture, jewellery and both stamp
and cylinder seals, not to mention architecture, provide visual manifestations of es-
sential cultural differences that developed among these first urban societies. however,
such features also reveal interactions that extended across vast distances from the
mediterranean eastward, crossing another great river system, comprising the amu
Darya and syr Darya (Oxus and Jaxartes Rivers), which watered the oasis towns of
Central asia. Certain raw materials and artefacts demonstrate the entire breadth
of intercultural exchange; others are confined to circuits within the vast network of
cultural centres, which together formed the precursors of the overland silk Road
that linked to maritime routes from the persian Gulf to the arabian sea. Cultural
convergences within these regions have been the subject of much research, incor-
porating new archaeological discoveries with art historical interpretations, technical
analyses and studies of mesopotamian texts that reveal the
impetus to obtain exotic
materials from distant lands and identify regions such as Dilmun (Bahrain), magan
(Oman), marhashi (southeastern iran) and meluhha (the indus Valley) with coveted
materials associated with the latter three: copper, chlorite and carnelian.
at times fortunate circumstances provide an intimate glimpse of the nature of
interaction across the broad tapestry of an interconnected world during the third and
early second millennia BC. a merchant hoard, buried at ashur, includes seals and
beads that represent activities over an area extending from the indus Valley to Cen-
tral anatolia at a time when the tin and textile trade was underway. “Foreigners and
explorers who travel across the lands” deposited an impressive quantity of lapis lazuli
and silver in the form of seals and vessels in the temple of montu at tôd in egyptian
thebes, representing an area extending from Bactria-margiana in Central asia to
the levant, anatolia and minoan Crete. the “Vase a la Cachette” (
fig. 1
), discovered
at susa, bears witness to interaction from eastern iran to the Gulf and the indus,
with evidence of tin bronze metallurgy in the centuries prior to the explosion of the
long-distance tin trade in anatolia. the
copper comes from Oman, alabaster vessels
are from eastern iran and two of the cylinder seals in the hoard reveal contacts with
“oxuS lady” Seated
on a Stool
Eastern Iran, Central Asia
Oxus Culture (ca. 2200–1800 BC)
Private Collection, UK
(cat. 84, detail)
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the indus Valley and the Gulf – one depicting a lion confronting a zebu in the posture
of a short-horned bull and another, made of shell, blending mesopotamian and Gulf
stylistic and iconographic elements. these instances of travelling objects that came
together under different circumstances highlight a complexity that is difficult to grasp
in our attempt to understand the nature and significance
of cultural encounters as
manifested in the material record. patterns do emerge, however, as we briefly review
the materials and imagery of interaction, with the intensity of exchange suggested by
the inscription on an akkadian cylinder seal identifying its owner as an interpreter
of meluhha and by tantalizing references to a meluhha village in mesopotamia, sit-
uated in the vicinity of Girsu.
MaterialS of interaction
the beginnings of trade in the quest for exotic prestige materials and the transfer of
technologies, such as writing, are poetically alluded to in one of the great works of
sumerian literature,
Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta
. this mythical distant place
“in the mountains where the sun rises”, boasts fabulous wealth in precious stones
with abundant lapis lazuli and gold, silver, copper and tin – tin being a commodity
found in the “Vase a la Cachette”. the unearthing of over 22 kilograms of lapis lazuli
in the Royal palace of ebla, gathered possibly for shipment to egypt; the discovery of
a lapis lazuli figure of a nude female at hierakonpolis; the distribution of flat beads
with tubular string hole and quadruple spiral beads, both
types made of gold and
silver, as well as etched carnelian beads – extending from the indus to the aegean –
provide us with material evidence for the routes and shared values that are implied
in the impetus to acq
uire such objects. Chlorite vessels and handled weights with
relief decoration and distinctive East Iranian features – termed “intercultural” for
their widespread appeal – represent a more limited interaction zone extending across
Western, Central and South Asia. With production centres identified in Eastern Iran at
Tepe Yahya and probably on the Arabian island of Tarut, some of the most elaborate
examples were discovered in temples, palaces and burials in Southern Mesopota-
mia, which originally suggested that these works were made for export. However,
the masses of such objects, mostly looted from graves in the Halil River basin near
Jiroft, with a few excavated examples at Konur Sandal South, have
transformed our
picture of this corpus of objects, evidently also valued locally in Southeastern Iran,
an area identified by Piotr Steinkeller as the “land of Marhashi”, home to its chlorite
material, the “Duhšia stone”.
Konur Sandal South also produced stamp and cylinder seal impressions, which
have been compared by Holly Pittman to Early Dynastic examples from Southern
Mesopotamia. As in the three cases mentioned above, they highlight the importance
of glyptic – portable instruments of status and identity that were worn as jewellery,
integral to the trade process and reflecting the movements of merchants, other
travellers and also ideas. By the third millennium, the use of seals in administration
had been introduced over an area extending from the Aegean
and Eastern Mediter-
ranean to the Indus – with regionally distinctive materials, forms and imagery. The
general preference for stamp rather than cylinder seals, prevalent in the Aegean,
Egypt and Anatolia, also occurs at the other end of the geographic spectrum, in the
Indus Valley, the Gulf and the Oxus – with exceptional instances of cylinder seals
with Indus-related images found at Mohenjodaro as well as in Mesopotamia and
Eastern Iran and a Near Eastern-inspired contest scene on a cylinder from Gonur
that Pittman attributes to Southeastern Iran. These seals were created at a time
when Harappan square stamps travelled westward as far as Southern Mesopotamia,
as did circular seals of Harappan origin, depicting short-horned bulls and Indus or
rarely cuneiform inscriptions – a type that appears to have
developed in Bahrain as
a precursor to Dilmun seals, its imagery possibly a merchant’s mark. One such seal
in the Ligabue Collection has a Linear Elamite text (
fig. 2
), signifying East Iranian
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