File:Syrian - Slab with Six-Winged Goddess - Walters 2116.jpg
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Captions
Summary
[edit]Slab with Six-Winged Goddess ( ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Artist | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title |
Slab with Six-Winged Goddess |
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Description |
English: This relief was excavated in northern Syria at the site of Tell Halaf, the capital of a small independent city-state known as Guzana to the Assyrians, who conquered it in the late 9th century BC. More than two hundred such stone reliefs decorated the façade of a temple-palace built in the 10th-9th centuries BC by a local ruler named Kapara. He reused the blocks from one or more pre-existing structures and carved an inscription in cuneiform on each one that states, "Palace of Kapara, son of Hadianu." The blocks were placed so that limestone ones painted red alternated with others of black basalt. While the human images have been depicted in the less sophisticated, local style, many of the animal reliefs, such as the goat, may have been modeled on finely carved ivories imported from northern Syria and Phoenicia that were found at the site.
A goddess in a plumed headdress grasps waving tendrils. Two wings sprout from her shoulders and four more are attached to her long skirt. This unusual being has been associated with the biblical seraph because of Isaiah's description (6:2) of these celestial beings: "each had six wings: with two they covered their faces, and with two they covered their feet, and with two they flew." Kapara's inscription is to the right of her face. |
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Date |
10th century BC date QS:P571,-950-00-00T00:00:00Z/7 (Aramaic) |
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Medium |
basalt medium QS:P186,Q43338 |
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Dimensions | 68 × 37 × 21.5 cm (26.7 × 14.5 × 8.4 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Collection |
institution QS:P195,Q210081 |
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Accession number |
21.16 |
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Place of creation | Tell Halaf (in present-day Syria) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Object history |
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Exhibition history | In Search of Ancient Treasure: 40 Years of Collecting. The Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore. 1978. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Credit line | Museum purchase with funds provided by the S. & A. P. Fund, 1944 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Inscriptions | [Translation] Palace of Kapara, son of Hadianu | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Source | Walters Art Museum: Home page Info about artwork | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Permission (Reusing this file) |
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Licensing
[edit]This file was provided to Wikimedia Commons by the Walters Art Museum as part of a cooperation project. All artworks in the photographs are in public domain due to age. The photographs of two-dimensional objects are also in the public domain. Photographs of three-dimensional objects and all descriptions have been released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License and the GNU Free Documentation License.
In the case of the text descriptions, copyright restrictions only apply to longer descriptions which cross the threshold of originality.
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Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled GNU Free Documentation License.http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.htmlGFDLGNU Free Documentation Licensetruetrue |
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current | 14:53, 25 March 2012 | 1,252 × 1,800 (1.33 MB) | File Upload Bot (Kaldari) (talk | contribs) | == {{int:filedesc}} == {{Walters Art Museum artwork |artist = Syrian |title = ''Slab with Six-Winged Goddess'' |description = {{en|This relief was excavated in northern Syria at the site of Tell Halaf, the capital of a small ... |
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