197
196
53
eye idol WitH inner
SMall idol
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Gypsum alabaster, H. 4.2 cm
Ligabue
Collection, Venice
Bibliography:
Ligabue,
Rossi Osmida
2006, pp. 122–123.
54
eye idol WitH inner
SMall idol
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Gypsum alabaster, black paint,
H. 6.6 cm, W. 4.5 cm
Private Collection, Paris
55
eye idol
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Bone, black paint, H. 4.2 cm, W. 1.7 cm
Ligabue Collection, Venice
56
eye idol WitH pointed Head
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Bone, H. 8 cm, W. 3.5 cm
Private Collection, Paris
57
eye idol WitH tWo HeadS
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Gypsum alabaster, black paint,
H. 5 cm, W. 4 cm
Private Collection, Paris
199
198
58
Spectacle idol,
gloBular Body
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Gypsum alabaster, H. 8 cm, W. 6 cm
Private Collection, Paris
59
Spectacle idol,
convex Body
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Gypsum alabaster, H. 9 cm, W. 7.8 cm
Ligabue Collection, Venice
60
Spectacle idol,
quadrangular Body
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Obsidian, H. 7.2 cm, W. 5 cm
Private Collection, Germany
61
Spectacle idol,
HigH cylindrical Body
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Rock crystal, H. 3 cm, W. 1.5 cm
Private Collection, Paris
62
Spectacle idol,
rectangular Body,
HigH necK
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Basalt, H. 20 cm, W. 10
Private Collection, Paris
63
Spectacle idol
WitH concave Body
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Grey
limestone, H.
18 cm, W. 14 cm
Private Collection, Paris
64
quadruple Spectacle idol
Western Asia
3300–3000 BC
Greenish stone (steatite?), H. 2 cm
Private Collection, Paris
201
200
the GoddeSS
And the ruler
Standing nude “King-prieSt”
Southern Mesopotamia
Uruk period (ca. 3300–3200 BC)
Musei Civici agli Eremitani – Museo
Archeologico, Padua
(cat. 66, detail)
T
he fourth millennium Bc is a pivotal age in the history of human civilisation,
when a number of institutions which have been part of the way of life of
the Western world for the following millennia, some of which are still part,
in modified shapes, of our modern way of life, appeared for the first time. in fact,
it witnessed the emergence of the first urban centres
and of complex political or-
ganisations (so-called proto-states) based on the concentration and redistribution
of agricultural products and on the control of manpower by a central authority.
these ancient city-states were ruled by a dynast (the “king”) and managed by
a hierarchy of officials by the help of complex procedures of accountancy and
control, the final outcome of which was the invention of writing at the end of the
millennium. Southern mesopotamia is traditionally considered the cradle of these
innovations. they, however, did not occur in isolation, but in the framework of a
wide-ranging network of long-distance connections, which span from egypt to the
whole of the near east and, beyond this, possibly even to central Asia and the
eastern mediterranean.
the city of uruk (Warka) in Southern iraq is the most impressive example of an
early urban centre: by the end of the fourth millennium it reached a size of over 200
hectares, and was the seat of a richly equipped ceremonial quarter of monumental
buildings. from uruk come, as well, the earliest written texts known so far. uruk
gave its name to a culture,
which spread its influence over vast sectors of the near
east, from southeastern turkey to northern syria, northern
iraq and Western iran,
possibly through the foundation of “colonies” located along the main communication
routes.
these radical changes in the social and political organisation were matched by
equally radical changes in the spiritual life of the mesopotamian populations. By
means of what must have been a considerable intellectual and creative effort, a new
system of values was elaborated, which ideologically supported the hierarchical
order of the centrally administered city-states. this was expressed and propagated
through a system of visual symbols, some of which have come down to the present
day. narrative art makes its first appearance, in the form of complex images carved
on stone stelae or around the surface of cylindrical objects: stone vessels (like the
famous “Warka vase”) (
fig. 1)
and especially cylinder seals (miniature stone cylin-
ders used for rolling on wet clay in order to leave a mark indicating ownership of
or authority on sealed goods).
203
202
1
Monumental vase with cultic scenes
in relief
Uruk, Southern Iraq
Ca. 3300 BC
Gypsum
alabaster
National Museum of Iraq, Baghdad
(after Crüsemann, Van Ess, Hilgert,
Salje 2013, figs 9.1, 9.9)
old conceptions of the divine take for the first time clearly anthropomorphic shapes
in this period. different personalities of deities thus start to emerge, which will later be
organised in a proper
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