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Chapter 2 – Near East

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Chapter 2 – Near East
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 2 – Near East

Chapter 2 – Near East

Page 2: Chapter 2 – Near East

Neolithic Revolution

• Human, no longer a hunter gatherer

• Now a farmer and herder

• Mesopotamia – core of a region called

• Turkey, Syria & Iraq

• Humans learned how to use the plow and wheel

• Three BIG faiths emerged Judaism, Christianity & Islam

Page 3: Chapter 2 – Near East

Sumerian Gov’t Layout

• City States

• Each state is under the protection of a different Mesopotamian Deity.

• City planning and Religion- Sumerian City Plan reflected role of local god in the daily life of the occupants

Page 4: Chapter 2 – Near East

Uruk – White Temple • Sumerians built towering stepped

platforms of mud bricks called Ziggurats w/ a temple on a 50 foot man made mound with a city around it

• Could not hold many worshippers• Central hall was set for deity• The Sumerian idea that gods reside

above the world of humans is central to most of the worlds religions

Page 5: Chapter 2 – Near East

White Temple and Ziggurat – Uruk – Iraq 3200-3000BCE

Page 6: Chapter 2 – Near East

Inanna? Uruk Iraq 3200-3000 BC

Goddess of Love & War• Hard stone• Possibly attached to

wood• Probably had more

items attached to her head- a wig, jewels and fabrics

Page 7: Chapter 2 – Near East

Warka Vase – Alabaster – Hard stone 3200-3000BCE

• Depicts a religious festival to honor a goddess

• Blessing from deity• Crops, water, male,

female• Frieze ( 3 sections)• Communicates a point,

showing Conceptual Representation

Page 8: Chapter 2 – Near East

Statuettes of Two Worshippers from the Square Temple @ Eshnunna – Iraq – 2700 BCE

• Found under the floors• Praying• Man and woman• Waiting for a deity to

appear• Child like• Simple forms, cylinders,

inlaid eyes with shells • Approx 3 feet high• Eyes larger than hands

Page 9: Chapter 2 – Near East

Standard of UR- War & Peace 2600BCE

• Spoils of War and success in farming, brought considerable wealth to some of the city – states in ancient Sumer

• Historical Narrative• 3 Horizontal bands reads from left to

right

• War side – Donkeys • Stripped soldiers, prisoners• King figure centralized

• Carrying booty – victory and celebration

Page 10: Chapter 2 – Near East

Cylinder Seals

Page 11: Chapter 2 – Near East

Akkadian/ Neo Sumerian/ Babylonian & Hittite Art

• Saragon of Akkad• Copper Head – 2250-

2200BCE• Deliberate mutilation• Gouged eyes• Slashed ears• Naturalism and

abstract patterns

Page 12: Chapter 2 – Near East

Naram- Sin – 2254- 2218

• Godlike sovereignty of Akkaid – Victory stele

• Grandson of Sargon – • Grandson leads his

victorious army up the slopes of a wooded mountain

• Routed enemies fall, die and beg for mercy

• King is alone and larger• Naram -sin scaling ladder

to heavens

Page 13: Chapter 2 – Near East

Ziggurat – 2100BCELargest Ziggurat of UR-

• Mud brick solid mass• Lad in bitumen –

sticky substance binds together

• Temple stairs • Resurgence of Sumer

Page 14: Chapter 2 – Near East
Page 15: Chapter 2 – Near East

Seated – Gudea 2100BCE

• Seated or standing• Dressed in a long

garment• Diorite

Page 16: Chapter 2 – Near East

Law Code of Hammurabi- 1780BCE

• Sumer Resurgence – short lived

• Centralized gov’t formed – Mesopotamia, Babylon.

• Hammurabi, famous for his conquests and his Law code

• Penalties for everything• Black Basalt stele• Hammurabi is with

Shamash the sun god• Fore shortening- god at a

angle

Page 17: Chapter 2 – Near East

Babylon Empire sacked by Hittite

• Babylonians leave Hitties then leave behind strong city walls behind

• Very different from the brick arch that was common in Babylonian art

• Lions = guardians (7 ft)

• Trend of protecting area with a magical beast or monster( like in Egypt, Greece)

Page 18: Chapter 2 – Near East

Middle Elamite and Assyrian Art

• This city is state in the bible (Elam)

• Elamites take the Hammurabi and Naram – sins steles, re-erect them in city of Susa – King Ashurbanipal destroys Elamin 641Bce

• Elamin would rise again as Persian empire

Page 19: Chapter 2 – Near East

Statue of Queen Napir- Asu – 1350Bce

• Queen wife of powerful Elamite kings

• Cost• Bronze• Curse written on statue• Characteristics• -cylindrical• Strict frontality• Firm crossed hand • Feminine softness

Page 20: Chapter 2 – Near East

Assyrian Fortress Palaces-Citadel of Sargon II 720-705BCE

• City walls – fears of outsiders

• 25 acres- 200 courtyards• Giant figures of the king• Guard rooms, service

quarters, 7 stories?, ramp spiraled around building

• Built -2000 yrs after Temple of Uruk

Page 21: Chapter 2 – Near East

Lamassu – 720Bce

Page 22: Chapter 2 – Near East

• Winged man -headed bulls ward off kings enemies

• Monster has 5 legs• A quarter view • Conceptual not

optical• High relief, partially in

the round

Page 23: Chapter 2 – Near East
Page 24: Chapter 2 – Near East

Assyrian archers pursuing enemies – relief from the NW palace of Ashurnaisrpal II – 875 -

860bce

• Archers and hunting were depicted in art to display an important part of power and piety

• Battlefield victories and slaying of wild animals

Page 25: Chapter 2 – Near East
Page 26: Chapter 2 – Near East

Ashurbanipal Hunting lions – Iraq –@ Ashurnasirpal II Palace

645-640BCE

• Clear story telling

• King, hunting – Why?

• http://www.ancientreplicas.com/ashurbanipal-hunting.html

Page 27: Chapter 2 – Near East

Ishtar Gate

Page 28: Chapter 2 – Near East

• Glazed bricks, molded reliefs of animals

• Real and imaginary

• Nebuchadnezzar II – restored Babylon to its rank of a great city

• Hanging gardens and enormous Ziggurat ( Tower of Babel) were created

Page 29: Chapter 2 – Near East

Conclusion

• Birth of civilization/urban life

• Temples

• Monumental art, portraits of rules, etc


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