The copper head of a sovereign found by the archaeologists of the British Museum during the excavation of the Temple of Ishtar on the citadel of Quyunjik at Nineveh in 1931, and now kept in the Iraq Museum at Baghdad (I.M. 11331), was immediately recognized as a masterpiece of Akkadian art. Countless studies have described its stylistic and iconographic characteristics. This article, through a complete analysis of the context of discovery, of iconographic and stylistic comparisons and also of the technological aspects of the work, proposes its attribution to the Akkadian royal workshops during the reign of the second successor and son of Sargon, Manishtusu, and identifies with the same sovereign, founder of the Akkadian dynasty and i...
The Trialeti Culture of brilliant kurgans, spread in the South Caucasus region in the time interval ...
This paper contains information about the reign of king Tutankhamun, with particular emphasis on the...
In search of understanding the behavior of the Mesopotamian kings, a natural starting point would be...
The copper head of a sovereign found by the archaeologists of the British Museum during the excavat...
Both ears cut off, left eye damaged, lower part of beard knocked off, etc., all damage apparently do...
Stele of Assurnasirpal II ( Reign: 883-859 B. C.). In: Layard, A. H., Discoveries in the ruins of Ni...
This dissertation examines the development and use of the imagery of the contest scene depicted on c...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 83-86)In this thesis, examination of the art of the Amama...
The Institute of Egyptian Art and Archaeology at the University of Memphis houses a copper-alloy sta...
The archaeology and history of the Parthian period (c. 150 B.C. – A.D. 250) in Iraq has received lit...
mature Akkadian period, South-Mesopotamian statuary underwent an unprecedented evolution. Through th...
Summary in EnglishThis research was inspired by the rich examples of the treasure of the 18th Dynast...
During the reign of the Amarna spouses, giving gold necklaces to royal officials took place (almost ...
The transition between Early Dynastic and Akkadian Periods brought deep changes to the Ancient Near ...
his grandson Narām-Sîn (ca. 2260-2223 B.C.), two of the greatest of Mesopotamian monarchs, and their...
The Trialeti Culture of brilliant kurgans, spread in the South Caucasus region in the time interval ...
This paper contains information about the reign of king Tutankhamun, with particular emphasis on the...
In search of understanding the behavior of the Mesopotamian kings, a natural starting point would be...
The copper head of a sovereign found by the archaeologists of the British Museum during the excavat...
Both ears cut off, left eye damaged, lower part of beard knocked off, etc., all damage apparently do...
Stele of Assurnasirpal II ( Reign: 883-859 B. C.). In: Layard, A. H., Discoveries in the ruins of Ni...
This dissertation examines the development and use of the imagery of the contest scene depicted on c...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 83-86)In this thesis, examination of the art of the Amama...
The Institute of Egyptian Art and Archaeology at the University of Memphis houses a copper-alloy sta...
The archaeology and history of the Parthian period (c. 150 B.C. – A.D. 250) in Iraq has received lit...
mature Akkadian period, South-Mesopotamian statuary underwent an unprecedented evolution. Through th...
Summary in EnglishThis research was inspired by the rich examples of the treasure of the 18th Dynast...
During the reign of the Amarna spouses, giving gold necklaces to royal officials took place (almost ...
The transition between Early Dynastic and Akkadian Periods brought deep changes to the Ancient Near ...
his grandson Narām-Sîn (ca. 2260-2223 B.C.), two of the greatest of Mesopotamian monarchs, and their...
The Trialeti Culture of brilliant kurgans, spread in the South Caucasus region in the time interval ...
This paper contains information about the reign of king Tutankhamun, with particular emphasis on the...
In search of understanding the behavior of the Mesopotamian kings, a natural starting point would be...