In this contribution, I discuss the textual sources for Ashurbanipal’s „Garden Party“ and its implications for Assyrian narrative art in general. The Garden Party consists of a series of stone reliefs found at Nineveh and now on exhibit at the British Museum. I argue that this scene is replete with references to literary motifs, which I discuss as emblematic of the entanglement between narrative art and royal inscriptions in Assyria. I suggest that the master sculptors were educated in the scribal milieu of the royal court and worked in close contact with its master scholars. In this view, Assyrian narrative art is a direct product of the scribal schools and scholarly circles active at the Assyrian capitals. This proposition has direct cons...
Neo-Assyrian letters are a broad and interesting corpus of data to investigate how ancient Assyrians...
Analysis of the images of the Assyrian sieges as they are depicted on the wall palace reliefs of the...
A few images of queens are preserved from the Neo-Assyrian period, and they all wear a peculiar crow...
In this contribution, I discuss the textual sources for Ashurbanipal’s „Garden Party“ and its implic...
This dissertation examines the representation of enemy punishment in prisms, reliefs, epigraphs, and...
The mutual dialogue(s) between Archaeology and Bildwissenschaften has often been avoided as an issue...
Bas-reliefs are undoubtedly an important source for the reconstruction and evaluation of the Neo-Ass...
It has long been mantained that the Neo-Assyrian cycles of wall reliefs had their origins in the mon...
The essays collected in this volume (two previously unpublished) examine ways in which the kings of ...
As an art historian with training in ancient Near Eastern philology, archaeology, and history, I try...
The present analysis reconsiders Ashurbanipal's representations of his Elamite campaigns in the Nort...
Extended review-article of two books on Assyrian art, from which methodological considerations and c...
Warfare is a significant theme in Neo-Assyrian art but it is limited to specific media and contexts,...
As one of the prominent civilizations of northern Mesopotamia (now Iraq), Assyrian civilization enjo...
From the 9th to the 7th century BC, Assyrian kings launched a programme of visualization of their mi...
Neo-Assyrian letters are a broad and interesting corpus of data to investigate how ancient Assyrians...
Analysis of the images of the Assyrian sieges as they are depicted on the wall palace reliefs of the...
A few images of queens are preserved from the Neo-Assyrian period, and they all wear a peculiar crow...
In this contribution, I discuss the textual sources for Ashurbanipal’s „Garden Party“ and its implic...
This dissertation examines the representation of enemy punishment in prisms, reliefs, epigraphs, and...
The mutual dialogue(s) between Archaeology and Bildwissenschaften has often been avoided as an issue...
Bas-reliefs are undoubtedly an important source for the reconstruction and evaluation of the Neo-Ass...
It has long been mantained that the Neo-Assyrian cycles of wall reliefs had their origins in the mon...
The essays collected in this volume (two previously unpublished) examine ways in which the kings of ...
As an art historian with training in ancient Near Eastern philology, archaeology, and history, I try...
The present analysis reconsiders Ashurbanipal's representations of his Elamite campaigns in the Nort...
Extended review-article of two books on Assyrian art, from which methodological considerations and c...
Warfare is a significant theme in Neo-Assyrian art but it is limited to specific media and contexts,...
As one of the prominent civilizations of northern Mesopotamia (now Iraq), Assyrian civilization enjo...
From the 9th to the 7th century BC, Assyrian kings launched a programme of visualization of their mi...
Neo-Assyrian letters are a broad and interesting corpus of data to investigate how ancient Assyrians...
Analysis of the images of the Assyrian sieges as they are depicted on the wall palace reliefs of the...
A few images of queens are preserved from the Neo-Assyrian period, and they all wear a peculiar crow...