207
206
65
Standing nude “King-prieSt”
Southern
Mesopotamia
Uruk period (ca. 3300–3000 BC)
Limestone, H. 25 cm, W. 9.8 cm
Archäologische Sammlung Universität
Zürich, Zurich, inv. 1942
Antiquarische Gesellschaft in Zürich,
Ankäufe & Geschenke 1862–1874
(Staatsarchiv des Kantons Zürich W
I 3 274.4), 25 no. 20, reproduced in
Mango et al. 2008, p. 35, fig. 15); F.
Bürkli 1864,
Neunzehnter Bericht über
die Verrichtungen der Antiquarischen
Gesellschaft
(der Gesellschaft für
vaterländische Alterthümer) in
Zürich. Vom November 1862 bis
December 1863, David Bürkli, Zürich,
p. 6 sq.; R. Ulrich, A. Heizmann,
1890,
Catalog der Sammlungen der
Antiquarischen Gesellschaft in Zürich
.
Theil 2:
Griechisch-Italisch-Römische
Abtheilung; Assyrisch-Aegyptische
Abtheilung
(rothe Etiquette), Dr.
Ulrich, Zürich p. 155, no. 58; A. Boissier
1912,
Notice sur quelques monuments
assyriens à l’Université de Zürich
,
Imprimerie Atar, Genève, especially
pp. 28–30, no. 58; H. Blümner 1914,
Führer durch die archäologische
Sammlung der Universität Zürich
,
Albert Müllers Verlag, Zürich, p. 8, no.
237.
Bibliography:
Müller 1976; Aruz,
Wallenfels 2003, no. 8; Hansen 2003;
Evans 2003, p. 38, no. 8; Gambino,
Rova 2005, pp. 22–23, figs. 5, 12;
Mango et. al. 2008; Azara 2012, p. 235;
Vogel 2013, pp. 139–145, fig. 20.4 b.
Mostly intact;
surface partially
corroded; small vulnerations on the
in Paris, while the third belongs to
the Archäologische Sammlung of
Zurich University. All of them have
no known context, although they
were presumably acquired in Iraq in
the mid-nineteenth century. Their
most precise
excavated parallel is
the alabaster torso of the so-called
“Kleiner König” found in a late
fourth millennium BC context at Uruk
(present Warka in Southern Iraq),
which differs from them only in the
fact that he is not naked, but wears
a smooth, heavy belted skirt. The
attire and hairstyle of the Uruk torso
allow it to
be identified with the so-
called “king-priest”, a figure that
is often portrayed in the arts of the
Uruk period and is generally assumed
to represent the city ruler. More
generally, iconography and style of the
four statuettes find a large number of
comparisons in the small plastic, relief
and glyptic arts of the Middle/Late
Uruk and Jemdet Nasr periods (ca.
3500–2900 BC) from Mesopotamia.
Images
engraved on contemporary
cylinder seals, in particular, suggest
a date in the early Late Uruk phase
(3300–3200 BC). The Uruk “king-
priest” is generally portrayed with
the full insignia connected to his role;
the four figurines from Padua, Paris
and
Zurich being, up to date, the only
cases where he is depicted naked.
They may represent kings in “cultic
nudity” performing a ritual for the
gods, or, alternatively, they may be
images of dead, heroicised kings.
The Padua figurine was rediscovered
a few years ago in the reserve
collections
of the Museo
Archeologico. It has a very peculiar
history that well represents the
intellectual and historic climate in
which during the nineteenth-century
diplomats, intellectuals, antiquaries
and adventurers took part, in the
framework
of the decadent Ottoman
empire, in the rediscovery of ancient
Mesopotamian civilisation. The year
of donation year – 1876 – was easily
obtained from the museum’s inventory,
which also contained the epistolary
exchange between Andrea Gloria (the
museum’s director) and the statuette’s
owner, the doctor Antonio Fabris
from Padua (1809?–1877). Fabris’s
letter describes part of the events
connected
with the acquisition of
the figurine: the doctor writes that
he received it, on 6 September 1872,
from a dear friend and university
colleague of his, Sante Zennaro
(1809–1872/1876?), a doctor in
Constantinople who, at some point in
1860, got the statuette from another
doctor, “d.r Henry, Bolognese”.
Luckily, Fabris quotes integrally the
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