205
204
symbols of inanna, who receives the offers and is identified either with the goddess
herself or with her priestess. this scene is considered to represent a precursor of
the so-called “sacred marriage”, a ritual apparently taking place between a deified
human king and inanna, seen as a symbolic counterpart to the mythical union be-
tween this and the god dumuzi on the occasion of the new year festival, whose aim
was to propitiate the fertility of crops and animals.
the couple formed by the heroic ruler and the goddess
thus represents the core
of a new “iconography of power”, where the main characters are joined by a number
of recurring symbols (weapons, vanquished enemies, lions and other wild beasts,
rosettes, etc.). this new iconography obviously had a strong appeal on contemporary
societies which were on the way toward increasing social complexity, as it spread,
during the second half of the fourth millennium Bc, over a vast geographical area
encompassing the whole of Greater mesopotamia (mesopotamia proper and the
neighbouring regions of Western iran and northern Syria) and even reaching egypt.
the four stone statuettes from the louvre and from the museums in Zurich and
padua, which are exhibited together for the first time in Venice, are almost exact
replicas of the same figure, who shows the same features as the uruk “king-priest”,
except for the fact that he is naked and lacks the typical skirt. unfortunately, all of
them are devoid of context, as they reached europe after having been acquired, in
unclear
circumstances, between the late 1850s and the early 1860s by different in-
dividuals who were based in the territory of present-day iraq. it would be therefore
vain to speculate too much about their original place(s) of discovery and their specific
function, and even on the intriguing possibility that they might have originally formed
a group. Stylistic analysis and comparison with excavated materials led to exclude
that they might be forgeries and suggested that they should date to the earlier phase
of the late uruk period (possibly around 3300–3200 Bc).
even though attributes of masculinity, such as a beard, a muscular body and so
forth are often emphasised in later representations of mesopotamian kings, as bodily
perfection and male vigour were inextricably connected with concepts of dominance
and rulership, in later times these always wear the full
insignia connected to their
role and are never portrayed naked. in mesopotamian art, nudity tends to be reserved
for the following categories of figures: heroes of supernatural nature (“heroic nudi-
ty”); deceased persons, prisoners and dead enemies; worshippers and particularly
libators (“cultic” or “ritual nudity”). All of these possibilities have been considered
for the paris, Zurich and padua statuettes by earlier scholars, most of whom came
to the conclusion that they probably portrayed the “king-priest” performing a ritual
in cultic nudity. Alternatively, the figurines may portray dead rulers in heroic nudity,
similar to other superhuman figures and hybrid beings, which
are often portrayed,
e.g. in a “master of animal” attitude, in contemporary glyptic and relief. Such hero-
icised ancestors of the ruling dynast would very appropriately represent the male
counterpart of the female goddess in this most ancient elaboration of the iconographic
expression of the ideology of mesopotamian kingship.
R.E.
4
Cylinder seal and modern impression:
cultic scene with “king-priest” and
attendant
Uruk, Southern Iraq
Ca. 3300–3000 BC
Shell and copper alloy (the bull figure)
National Museum of Iraq, Baghdad
OR British Museum????
(after Crüsemann, Van Ess, Hilgert,
Salje 2013, figs 20.5, 24.6, 24.1)
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