Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Religion - Mesopotamian
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 121    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Mesopotamian:     more books (99)
  1. Heralds of that Good Realm: Syro-Mesopotamian Gnosis and Jewish Traditions.(Review): An article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society by James C. VanderKam, 1999-01-01
  2. Politics, Religion, and Cylinder Seals: A study of Mesopotamian Symbolism in the Second Millennium B.C. (bar s) by Jeanne Nijhowne, 1999-12-31
  3. Adoption in Old Babylonian Nippur and the Archive of Mannum-Mesu-Lissur (Mesopotamian Civilizations, Vol 3) (Mesopotamian Civilizations, Vol 3) by Elizabeth Caecilia Stone, David I. Owen, et all 1991-08-01
  4. The Table-Talk of a Mesopotamian Judge by al-Muhassin ibn Ali Tanukhi, 2010-01-06
  5. Formation Processes of the First Developed Neolithic Societies in the Zagros and the Northern Mesopotamian Plain.(Book Review): An article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society by Reinhard Bernbeck, 2003-07-01
  6. Indenture at Nuzi: The Personal Tidennutu Contract and Its Mesopotamian Analogues (Near Eastern Researches Series) by Professor Barry L. Eichler, 1973-09-10
  7. Foundations in the Dust: A Story of Mesopotamian Exploration by Seton Lloyd, 1976-12
  8. Mesopotamian Furniture (bar s) by Sam Kubba, 2006-01
  9. Excavations at Tell Brak 4: Exploring an Upper Mesopotamian Regional Centre, 1994-1996 (Monograph Series) by Roger Matthews, 2001-08-15
  10. Formation Processes of the First Developed Neolithic Societies in the Zagros and the Northern Mesopotamian Plain. by Francesca Balossi. Restelli, 2001
  11. Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography.(Review): An article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society by F. S. Reynolds, 2001-01-01
  12. Mesopotamian Conceptions of Dreams and Dream Rituals by Sally A Butler, 1998-01-01
  13. Twenty-five years of Mesopotamian discovery, 1932-1956 by M. E. L Mallowan, 1956
  14. Time at Emar: The Cultic Calendar & the Rituals from the Diviner's House (Mesopotamian Civilizations 11) (Mesopotamian Civilizations 11) by Daniel E. Fleming, 2000-10-01

61. Two Odonata Citations In Ancient Mesopotamian Literature, Cultural Entomology Di
mesopotamian Literature, The greek word Mesopotamia (land between the rivers) names the territory between the Euphrates and Tigris River.
http://www.insects.org/ced1/mes_lit.html
by Dr. Carlos Betoret, Bonet
Valencia, SPAIN The greek word "Mesopotamia" (land between the rivers) names the territory between the Euphrates and Tigris River. Actually the Republic of Iraq and the eastern part of the Republic of Syria bore the site of the oldest historical civilization of Sumeria. Forming a foundation for the Babylonian and Assyrian civilizations, this area was occupied from approximately 3500 to 500 B.C. Mesopotamian civilizations are well known for their wonderful masterpieces of art; many of which can be seen in famous museums like the Louvre, the British Museum, and the Iraq Museum. Perhaps less well known is the extraordinary literary production of these people preserved on thousands of clay tablets discovered in archeological ruins including Uruk, Babylon, and Nineveh. Within this literature, citations of odonates (dragonflies) can be found in the Poem of Gilgamesh and the Poem of Atrahasis. Do we build for ever our houses,
and forever do we steal of properties?
Perhaps the brothers do divide their part for ever.
Perhaps the hate does divide for ever
Perhaps does the river always grow and make inundations.

62. Mesopotamian Art Lesson
Lesson on mesopotamian (Near Eastern) Art. L1030. mesopotamian Art Lesson. The following is a lesson on mesopotamian (Near Eastern) Art.
http://www.historylink101.com/lessons/art_history_lessons/mesopotamian_art_lesso
Mesopotamian Art Lesson
The following is a lesson on Mesopotamian (Near Eastern) Art. The lesson has follow-up questions and additional links are included for more study and illustrations.
Unlike their southern neighbors, the Mesopotamian area was in conflict between warring nations very frequently. This area also required much more maintenance of their agriculture systems. Because of these and other factors, this area had a more limited development of art as compared to Egypt. Most of the cultures in the Mesopotamian area were polytheistic. In Sumerian cities they built ziggurats for their worship. A ziggurat is a step pyramid with a temple at the top. Normally each city would have one main ziggurat dedicated to the cities special god. Rich people in the city would build small temples for worship also. Sculptures in this area often showed long beards on the peoples faces. The long beard represented power in their society. Most reliefs and paintings would tell stories of battles or proclaimed the power of the ruler. Mesopotamian sculptures also included mythical creatures at times. Some of the sculpted reliefs had cuneiform writing on the pictures.
Images which follow:
1) Standard of Ur - British Museum 2) Relief sculpture 3) Sculptures from Sargon II Palace 4) Lion leading to Ishtar's Gate
New - Ancient Rome
Other Picture Galleries
China Egyptian Greek India ... Turkey
Other New Areas
Egyptian Religion Section
Cultures - Time Periods
Prehistory
Africa China Egypt ... Home By Subject

63. Mesopotamian Art By History Link 101
mesopotamian Art. Welcome to History Link 101 s mesopotamian Art Page. mesopotamian Art Lesson Short Art lesson with follow up questions.
http://www.historylink101.com/ancient_mesopotamia/ancient_mesopotamia_art.htm
Mesopotamian Art
Welcome to History Link 101's Mesopotamian Art Page. Here you will find excellent links to Mesopotamian Art and Architecture. History Link 101 is a site developed for World History Classes, by a World History Teacher.
Mesopotamian Art Lesson - Short Art lesson with follow up questions.
Metropolitan Museum of Art 50 items from the Near East.
Visual = 5 Content = 3 M0010
Assyrian Gallery
13 Quick time panoramic pictures of Assyrian Art.
Visual = 5 Content = N/A M0020
Mesopotamia Slides
24 Images represented.
Visual = 5 Content = N/A M0030
Art Images
14 Images from the Mesopotamian area.
Visual = 5 Content = N/A M0040
Art Images
4 different galleries from Mesopotamia, Assyria, Syria, and Iran/Palestine.
Visual = 4 Content = 4 M0050
AICT
32 images free for educational uses. Each picture is indexed to Art history books. Visual = 5 Content = 3 M0060 Carlos Museum 7 Images with good explanations. Visual = 5 Content = 4 M0080 Images from the Metropolitan Museum Seven pages of Royalty Free Pictures Visual = 5 Content = N/A M0090 Other Mesopotamian Pages Biographies Daily Life Maps Pictures ... Research
New - Ancient Rome
Other Picture Galleries
China Egyptian Greek India ... Turkey
Other New Areas
Egyptian Religion Section
Cultures - Time Periods Prehistory Africa China Egypt ... Home By Subject History of Art Biographies Farming and Cities Games ... Search this site powered by FreeFind Sign and View our Guest Book Join our Mailing List Background and ClipArt graphics by Corel Family of Products for viewing only.

64. Mesopotamian Disease And Medicine
mesopotamian Disease and Medicine. Human skeletal remains may also provide valuable information on mesopotamian medicine and disease.
http://cdli.ucla.edu/edu/medicine.html
Mesopotamian Disease and Medicine Keywords
ancient, health, magic, medicine, disease CDLI Educational pages Related projects Abbreviations ... back to top INTRODUCTION
Human skeletal remains may also provide valuable information on Mesopotamian medicine and disease. Many types of diseases leave distinct and specific markers on the skeleton. In some cases diagnoses made from skeletal material may be particularly valuable as a means of corroborating diagnoses made from textual sources. This project intends to exploit these two types of evidence (the textual and the skeletal) in order to learn about the disease processes at work in ancient Mesopotamia and come to understand the medical field that was developed to combat such disease processes. For more details on the importance of textual and skeletal sources concerning disease and medicine see: The Sources. THE PROJECT
There are several specific goals that this project seeks to achieve. First, it will provide researchers, when completed, with a single, comprehensive source for disease symptoms and terminology. It will organize data on anatomical and disease terminology as well as disease symptoms implied in the textual record with the goal of creating a differential diagnosis for given symptoms. A differential diagnosis is a list of potential diagnoses that may explain a given set of symptoms, from which a more secure diagnosis may be established after further examination.

65. Mesopotamian Year Names
mesopotamian Year Names. NeoSumerian and Old Babylonian Date Formulae. prepared by. Collecting mesopotamian year names is an ongoing project.
http://cdli.ucla.edu/dl/yearnames/yn_index.htm
Mesopotamian Year Names
Neo-Sumerian and Old Babylonian Date Formulae
prepared by Marcel Sigrist and Peter Damerow
LIST OF KINGS
The list of more than 2,000 year names which is made accessible here has been compiled as a tool for the dating of cuneiform tablets as well as for supporting historical studies on early bookkeeping techniques. This tool essentially consists of a collection of date formulae in administrative documents as they were used by the scribes in ancient Mesopotamia, and of computer generated indices for a quick identification of incomplete date formulae on damaged cuneiform tablets and of issues and events mentioned in these formulae. The collection covers presently the time period
  • from the time of the empire of Sargon
  • to the end of the dynasty of Babylon.
Access is provided through According to the pupose of this compilation the data formulae as they are presented here do not quote specific texts but are often composite formulae based on several sources. Furthermore it was impossible to give always the numerous variants of some of the year names. In cases of doubt whether the given version adequately represents the textual evidence users should consult the references and the relevant publications on Mesopotamian year names. (A bibliography is currently in preparation and will soon be accessible here.)
History of the project
The preparation of this electronic tool is an outcome of an unusual and long-lasting cooperation between an assyiologist and an historian of science at intervals over a period of more than 10 years. The data are kept in a database. Originally it was planned to prepare a computer generated publication of these data. Some seven years ago, a preprint of this publication was made available to a small group of interested scholars, including at that time only the year names of the Ur III period and Old Babylonian period.

66. MEDICINE IN ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA
mesopotamian civilizations. mesopotamian Medicine The Sources. mesopotamian Concepts of Disease and Healing. mesopotamian diseases
http://www.indiana.edu/~ancmed/meso.HTM
MEDICINE IN ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA
Historical Background
Mesopotamian Medicine: The Sources
Mesopotamian Concepts of Disease and Healing
Mesopotamian Medical Practitioners
Regardless of the risks associated with performing surgery, at least four clay tablets have survived that describe a specific surgical procedure. Unfortunately, one of the four tablets is too fragmentary to be deciphered. Of the remaining three, one seems to describe a procedure in which the asu cuts into the chest of the patient in order to drain pus from the pleura. The other two surgical texts belong to the collection of tablets entitled "Prescriptions for Diseases of the Head." One of these texts mentions the knife of the asu scraping the skull of the patient. The final surgical tablet mentions the postoperative care of a surgical wound. This tablet recommends the application of a dressing consisting mainly of sesame oil, which acted as an anti-bacterial agent.
Other Sources of Health Care
Beyond the role of the ashipu and the asu, there were other means of procuring health care in ancient Mesopotamia. One of these alternative sources was the Temple of Gula. Gula, often envisioned in canine form, was one of the more significant gods of healing. While excavations of temples dedicated to Gula have not revealed signs that patients were housed at the temple while they were treated (as was the case with the later temples of Asclepius in Greece), these temples may have been sites for the diagnosis of illness. In his book Illness and Health Care in the Ancient Near East: the Role of the Temple in Greece, Mesopotamia, and Israel, Hector Avalos states that not only were the temples of Gula sites for the diagnosis of illness (Gula was consulted as to which god was responsible for a given illness), but that these temples were also libraries that held many useful medical texts.

67. Mesopotamian
. Name Description. Name Description. Name Description. Name Description. Name Description. Name Description. Name Description.......mesopotamian. Name
http://www.katyberry.com/Goddesses/Mesopotamian.html
Mesopotamian
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Poem
Author, Title
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Name
Description
Home

68. Land Of Sumer And Akkad - Mesopotamian Archaeology
History and Environment of the mesopotamian Plain. Selected Links mesopotamian Archaeology. The Land of Sumer and Akkad. mesopotamian Archaeology General.
http://allserv.rug.ac.be/~kverhoef/owa.html
History and Environment of the Mesopotamian Plain
Selected Links Mesopotamian Archaeology
The Land of Sumer and Akkad
Mesopotamian Archaeology General
Mesopotamian Archaeological Sites
Mesopotamian Languages
Search Engines Near East ...
Link to (Mesopotamian) Links
Mesopotamian Archaeology General Links
Oriental Institute
Assyria On-Line
Ex Oriente Lux (in Dutch)
Netherlands Institute of the Near East - University Leiden - Netherlands ...
Mesopotamia in the Era of State Formation
Archaeological Sites
Tell Ed-Der Iraq
Tell Beydar North Syria
Tell Beydar North Syria General Overview
Haradum ...
Tell es-Sweyhat Syria
Search Engines Near East
ABZU - Oriental Institute
ARGOS Ancient and Medieval Internet Search - University Evansville
Assyria On-Line
Mediterranean Archaeology - University Michigan ...
ARGOS Limited Area Search of the Ancient World
Journals on Middle and Near Eastern Archaeology
Journal Guide by S. Blaschke - excellent index
Zeit. für Assyriologie
Am. Journal of Archaeology
Arabian archaeology and epigraphy ...
Journal of Cuneiform Studies
Journals on Archaeology
Archaeology Journal Guide
Journal of Archaeological Science
World Archaeology
American Antiquity ...
Journal of World System Research
Book Sellers on Archaeology
OXBOW-BOOKS
EISENBRAUNS
OXFORD UP
CAMBRIDGE UP ...
ABZU Publisher and Book Dealer Index
Mesopotamian Languages
Arabic Links
The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project
Links relevant to the Akkadian language
Gilgamesh ...
LibInfo Univ. Chicago Ancient Near Eastern Languages

69. Land Of Sumer And Akkad - Mesopotamian Archaeology

http://allserv.rug.ac.be/~kverhoef/

70. Mesopotamian Temperament
Where did the specific ratios in the mesopotamian tunings come from? Why these numbers and no others? After notes. mesopotamian Temperament.
http://www.lightbridgemusic.com/mohmt.htm
Memories of Home
Listen to Excerpts

Read the Reviews

Buy the Album

Hear the Tunings
...
Mesopotamian Tempr

Where did the specific ratios in the Mesopotamian tunings come from? Why these numbers and no others? After playing with these numbers for a while, I realized that all the ratios in all seven of the tunings are based on just one initial ratio: three over two, or 1.5. This is called a fifth interval, and is the entire basis for the seven Mesopotamian tunings. How could this be? Can the simple fifth account for the ratios 729/512 and 1024/729? It turns out that it can, and that’s what we’ll discuss here. ( How the Sumerians, a supposedly primitive people, came up with this scheme is discussed elsewhere.) We will start arbitrarily with a frequency of 400 Hertz. If this is done in a spreadsheet, any starting frequency can be used. We use a nice round number to illustrate how quickly this roundness disappears. And we will also arbitrarily call this note C, since on a modern piano, the major scale in C can be played on the white keys, thus starting as simply as possible. But again, this is an arbitrary selection; any note name could be used. The idea is to multiply each frequency by 3/2 or 1.500, thus determining another note of a scale. Since there are seven white notes in an octave (before then next C is reached), we will repeat this multiplication seven times.

71. Mesopotamian Protohistory
mesopotamian protohistory. Attempts have been made by philologists to reach conclusions about the origin of the flowering of civilization
http://www.angelfire.com/nt/Gilgamesh/proto.html
var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
Mesopotamian protohistory Attempts have been made by philologists to reach conclusions about the origin of the flowering of civilization in southern Mesopotamia by the analysis of Sumerian words. It has been thought possible to isolate an earlier, non-Sumerian substratum from the Sumerian vocabulary by assigning certain words on the basis of their endings to either a Neolithic or a Chalcolithic language stratum. These attempts are based on the phonetic character of Sumerian at the beginning of the 2nd millennium BC, which is at least 1,000 years later than the invention of writing . Quite apart, therefore, from the fact that the structure of Sumerian words themselves is far from adequately investigated, the enormous gap in time casts grave doubt on the criteria used to distinguish between Sumerian and " pre-Sumerian " vocabulary. The earliest peoples of Mesopotamia who can be identified from inscribed monuments and written tradition[ people in the sense of speakers of a common language ]are, apart from the

72. The Emergence Of Mesopotamian Civilization
The emergence of mesopotamian civilization. The Late Neolithic Period and the Chalcolithic Period. Between about 10,000 BC and the
http://www.angelfire.com/nt/Gilgamesh/emergenc.html
var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
The emergence of Mesopotamian civilization The Late Neolithic Period and the Chalcolithic Period . Between about 10,000 BC and the genesis of large permanent settlements, the following stages of development are distinguishable, some of which run parallel The change to sedentary life , or the transition from continual or seasonal change of abode, characteristic of hunter-gatherers and the earliest cattle breeders, to life in one place over a period of several years or even permanently. The transition from experimental plant cultivation to the deliberate and calculated farming of grains and leguminous plants. The erection of houses and the associated " settlement " of the gods in temples The burial of the dead in cemeteries The invention of clay vessels , made at first by hand, then turned on the wheel and fired to ever greater degrees of hardness, at the same time receiving almost invariably decoration of incised designs or painted patterns, The development of specialized crafts and the distribution of labour Metal production (the first use of metalcoppermarks the transition from the Late Neolithic to the Chalcolithic Period).

73. UN Chronicle | The Demise Of Mesopotamian Marshlands
The Demise of mesopotamian Marshlands. mesopotamian marshlands have effectively been relegated to the history books, a landscape of the past.
http://www.un.org/Pubs/chronicle/2002/issue2/0202p44_mesopotamian_marshlands.htm
The Demise of Mesopotamian Marshlands
UN Photo Around 85 per cent of the Mesopotamian marshlands - the largest wetland in the Middle East and one of the most outstanding freshwater ecosystems in the world - have been lost mainly as a result of drainage and damming, according to a report released by the United Nations Environment Programme.
The cause of the decline is mainly as a result of damming upstream, as well as drainage schemes since the 1970s. The Tigris and the Euphrates are among the most intensively dammed rivers in the world. In the past forty years, the two rivers have been fragmented by the construction of more than 30 large dams, whose storage capacity is several times greater than the volume of both rivers. By turning off the tap, dams have substantially reduced the water available for downstream ecosystems and eliminated the floodwaters that nourished the marshlands.
The immediate cause of marshland loss, however, has been the massive drainage works implemented in southern Iraq in the early 1990s, following the second Gulf War.
Recent satellite images provide hard evidence that the once extensive marshlands have dried up and regressed into desert, with vast stretches salt encrusted. Furthermore, satellite imagery shows only a limited area of the marshlands having been reclaimed for agricultural purposes.

74. A Mesopotamian Pantheon
A mesopotamian Pantheon Buriash (Kassite) Apparently a God of storm and weather, and as such equated by mesopotamian people with Iskur. Cf.
http://web.raex.com/~obsidian/MesoPan.html
A Mesopotamian Pantheon The people of the two rivers are responsible for the worlds oldest civilization, if writing is taken as the measure of culture: that art first appears here around 3200 BCE or a little earlier. Mesopotamia has been the homeland for a bewildering variety of peoples and nations, and the following archive reflects that. It should be kept in mind that the various divinities mentioned below came not only from different City-States, but even different ethnic groups: a brief reference to the various ethnic groups and city-states follows the main section. This page is intended as a reference guide for students of Mesopotamian mythology, and is a catalogue, hopefully reasonably complete, of known Mesopotamian God-forms. The information here is necessarily brief; a full accounting of all these entities would be a massive book in its own right. What is included here is: a Name, ( Nationality or City-State ), any important epithets or sobriquets that are associated with the Name, and a basic description of spheres of influence, attributes, and/or descriptive stories. Adad ( Akkadian/Babylonian The later, Babylonian version of the Sumerian

75. ASTR 228: Chapter 3 - Mesopotamian And Egyptian Cosmology
Chapter 3. mesopotamian and Egyptian Cosmology. Latest Modification November 6, 1995. 3.1. BabylonianEgyptian Civilizations. Stable
http://www.physics.gmu.edu/classinfo/astr228/CourseNotes/ln_ch03.htm
Chapter 3.
Mesopotamian and Egyptian Cosmology
Latest Modification: November 6, 1995
3.1. Babylonian-Egyptian Civilizations
  • Stable village communities involved in agriculture, artistic, administrative, and trade activities developed around
    • 6000 B.C. in Tigris-Euphrates valley in fertile crescent
    • 4500 B.C. in Nile valley in Egypt
    • 3000 B.C. in Indus valley in India
  • Urban centers followed rapidly; organized for
    • Agriculture and market distribution
    • Defense
    • Community projects, such as dikes, canals for irrigation
  • Nile communities more stable than fertile crescent or Indus
3.2. Babylonian-Egyptian Astronomy
  • Babylonians-Egyptians, 5000 years ago, identified groupings of stars, constellations
    • Purpose: calendars, navigation
    • As possibly memory aid: imagined likenesses of mythological beings or animals (asterisms)
    • Greeks inherited constellations from Babylonians-Egyptians
      • Greeks identified 48 constellations
      • Remaining 40 (present 88) added by Europeans
      • Constellations (asterism) today, 88 areas with north-south and east-west boundaries covering entire sky
    • Babylonians, 2000 B.C., recorded motions of planets

76. NM's Creative Impulse..Mesopotamia
Introduction. The mesopotamian plain was part of the Fertile Crescent. Sargon Nice bio of the man who established the first empire in the mesopotamian area;
http://history.evansville.net/meso.html
NM's Creative Impulse
Development of Western Civilization I
World History I
Mesopotamia
Contents
Introduction
The Mesopotamian plain was part of the Fertile Crescent. Situated between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, the area was the birth place of the varied civilizations that developed writing, schools, libraries, written law codes and moved us from prehistory to history. The Sumerians, Akkadians, Chaldeans, Hittites, Babylonians, Israelites, Phoenicians, Lydians, Assyrians and Persians established the foundations for future Civilizations. Their contributions include: the wheel, glass, the sail, coinage, mathematics, the alphabet, calendars, bronze, iron, monotheism, epic poetry, farming and irrigation. The art of Mesopotamia is as diverse as the civilizations that inhabited the area. Art became decorative, stylized and conventionalized at different times and places in the area. Gods took on human forms and humans were combined with animals to make fantastic creatures. Art commemorated the accomplishments of great men and intimidated the lowly. Skills improved and new media was developed. Large temples and imposing palaces dotted the landscape. Man recorded his history and poetry for the first time and set them down to music. Lyres, pipes, harps and drums accompanied their songs and dances.
History
People

77. Mesopotamian Art
mesopotamian art. A Babylonian relief sculpture of a bull made of brightly glazed tiles on the restored Ishtar Gate. The original
http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0039818.html
Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently configured not to display inline frames. // Show bread crumbs navigation path. breadcrumbs('four'); //> ENCYCLOPAEDIA Hutchinson's
Encyclopaedia
Men's Health ... Wildlife Frames not supported
Frames not supported Encyclopaedia Search Click a letter for the index
A
B C D ... Z
Or search the encyclopaedia: Mesopotamian art A Babylonian relief sculpture of a bull made of brightly glazed tiles on the restored Ishtar Gate. The original sculpture dates from around 575 BC and stood on the gate of the Temple of Bel, the biblical Tower of Babel in Babylon.
A Babylonian relief sculpture of a lion made of brightly coloured tiles on the restored Ishtar Gate. The sculpture dates from around 575 BC and stood on the gate of the Temple of Bel, the biblical Tower of Babel in Babylon.
An alabaster statuette from the far northern Mesopotamian kingdom of Kish, dating from early in the 3rd millennium BC , which was found at Tell Chuera, Syria. This was a culture so ancient that the invading Semitic tribes of successive centuries believed it to have appeared immediately following the great flood.
Art of the ancient civilizations that grew up in the area around the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, now in Iraq. Mesopotamian art was largely used to glorify powerful dynasties, and often reflected the belief that kingship and the divine were closely interlocked.

78. Talaria Enterprises Museum Store Mesopotamian Assyrian
Museum store with mesopotamian Assyrian Ashumasirpal II Winged Guardian Bull Lion bookends, Assyrian Ashurbanipal Horse, Gilgamesh, Seated Lion, and Sargon
http://www.talariaenterprises.com/product_lists/mesopotamian.html
Home View Cart About Us FAQ ...
FAQ

SCULPTURE

Mixed: Many!

Family

Cartoon

Historic Figures
...
Religion

DESK
Bookends

Desk Art
Lamps Mouse Pads HOUSE DECOR Greek Vases Porcelain-Goebel Teapots Table Bases WALL DECOR Frescoes Wall Hangings Tapestries Stained Glass WEARABLE Watches Jewelry MORE Games,Puzzles Garden Art Displaying Art Sale / Clearance EARLY Ancient Goddesses Egyptian Mesopotamian Minoan ... Prehistoric WESTERN COUNTRIES Assorted Art Deco Art Nouveau Baroque ... Surrealism WORLD CULTURES African Asian/Oriental Byzantine Icons Precolumbian ... Van Gogh Receive Updates! Subscribe to our mailing list Mesopotamian Collection: Page 1 Page 2 Read our TEACH Newsletter on Mesopotamian Art Ashunasirpal II Assyrian King Gilgamesh Sargon Bust of Akkad Babylonian King Hammurabi Winged Guardian Bookends Assyrian Human-Headed Winged Lion AVAILABLE LATE 2004 Assyrian Human-Headed Winged Bull Winged Lion and Book as a Set The Winged Bull at right and the Winged Lion left, make a great set of decorative bookends, approx. 13 lbs total. (2) Winged Bulls as a Pair.

79. NMNH Virtual Tour - Origins Of Western Cultures
mesopotamian Writing. mesopotamian Writing. This early mesopotamian writing system, known as cuneiform, was remarkably complex with more then 3,000 characters.
http://www.si.edu/harcourt/nmnh/origin/origins1.html
Mesopotamian Writing
Ancient Mesopotamians inscribed this figurine with Sumerian script, offering a prayer to the goddess Inanna. This early Mesopotamian writing system, known as cuneiform, was remarkably complex with more then 3,000 characters. Some represent whole ideas and others only syllables. The figure represents Rim-Sin, king of the city of Larsa, ca. 1800 B.C.
Origins of Western
Culture Main Page Egyptian Mummy
Coffins Greek
Athletics
Last Modified: Tuesday, 14-Oct-97 14:42:07 EDT

80. Mesopotamian Art
Home The Collection , Small collection that includes an outstanding Assyrian low relief from the palace of Assumazirpal. Assyrian low relief,
http://museu.gulbenkian.pt/nucleos.asp?nuc=a3&lang=en

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 121    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | Next 20

free hit counter