57
56
a dinner entertained by four musicians. Besides the arched harp player, there is a
drummer, a player of animal horns.
6
The fourth musician holds his right hand on
the cheek, a posture well known from singers in ancient and modern Near East. In
a nutshell, the little dinner ensemble looks universal: there is a string, a percussion
and a wind instrument. T
he ensemble is the first known representation of a union
of music and feasting. But there seems to be no
religious objects on display, but, of
course, one cannot know if the feast had a hidden religious purpose. At any rate, it
is no ordinary meal. the presence of music elevates its purpose.
the angular harps appeared in elam, simultaneously with mesopotamia (ca.
1900–1600 BC), and there are many examples.
the oxus civilization, or Bactria-margiana Archaeological Complex (BmAC), a
Bronze Age civilization in Central Asia, developed around 2200–1800 BC and cov-
ered n
orthern Afghanistan, eastern turkmenistan, Southern uzbekistan, Western
tajikistan and the upper Amu darya (oxus river). there was also substantial bor-
rowing from iran.
there were no arched harps in BmAc. the oxus harp is a horizontal angular
model, similar to horizontal models in mesopotamia (
fig. d2
). it looks like a vertical
harp turned 90
o
. Both orientations were present already during the old Babylonian
period, and the strings can easily be counted on the madaktu
orchestra shown on an
Assyrian wall relief in the British museum.
7
this is clearly countable on the madaktu
orchestra shown on an Assyrian wall relief in the British museum. At the front end
the strings were tied to the vertical rod and allowed to hang down freely as “tassels”
in front of the harp (
fig. d2
). however, the oxus harp differs: its tassels cling to the
front and follow tightly the bottom of the front.
2
Harp players of the royal court of
Elam (Southwest Iran) – part of an
Assyrian wall relief from the palace of
Ashurbanipal II depicting his conquest
of Elam
Southwest Palace, Kouyunjik, Nineveh,
Northern Iraq
660–650 BC
Gypsum alabaster
British Museum,
London
trumpets were common in the oxus civilization. these were not used as musi-
cal or signal instruments, but could imitate animal sounds, especially that of deer.
the hunter used his trumpet to call the female deer during rut. the animal would
approach and be quickly killed.
in the indus valley, at a time when arched harps were well attested in mesopota-
mia, the situation is less clear during the development of the harappan civilization.
only one representation is known (
fig. h
). it is on a square seal from
mohenjo-daro
,
with an upper and lower part. the former shows a row of three symbols, and the
latter an image of a zebu animal. the rightmost symbol looks like a pictograph of
an arched harp with three vertical strings.
however, the writing from the indus civilization has not yet been deciphered,
and we do not know the pronunciation of the harp symbol, as we do in mesopota-
mia (
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