Ancient Akkadian Cylindrical Seal Depicting Inanna and Ninshubur

Similar

Ancient Akkadian Cylindrical Seal Depicting Inanna and Ninshubur

description

Summary

This image is an accurate, photographic representation of an ancient Akkadian cylindrical seal depicting the goddess Inanna/Ishtar and her sukkal Ninshubur. The seal originates from the Akkad Period and was created sometime circa 2334-2154 B.C. This seal is currently housed in the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago.

Sumer, site of the earliest known civilization, located in the southernmost part of Mesopotamia, between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, in the area that later became Babylonia and is now southern Iraq, from around Baghdad to the Persian Gulf. The people called Sumerians, whose language became the prevailing language of the territory, probably came from around Anatolia, arriving in Sumer about 3300 BCE. By the 3rd millennium BCE the country was the site of at least 12 separate city-states: Kish, Erech (Uruk), Ur, Sippar, Akshak, Larak, Nippur, Adab, Umma, Lagash, Bad-tibira, and Larsa. Each of these states comprised a walled city and its surrounding villages and land, and each worshipped its own deity, whose temple was the central structure of the city. Political power originally belonged to the citizens, but, as rivalry between the various city-states increased, each adopted the institution of kingship. An extant document, The Sumerian King List, records that eight kings reigned before the great Flood.

date_range

Date

2016
create

Source

Wikimedia Commons
copyright

Copyright info

public domain

Explore more

akkadian cylinder seals
akkadian cylinder seals