Royal Statuary of Early Dynastic Mesopotamia

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781575061733

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By Gianni Marchesi, Nicolo Marchetti
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EISENBRAUNS
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HARDBACK
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Pages:
448

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Description

Preface

Introduction

Chapter 1. Archaeological Contexts and Chronology of Early Dynastic Statuary

1.1. The Main Contexts of Stratified Early Dynastic Statues and Other Visual Material

1.1.1. Tell Asmar (Ešnunak), Khafajah (Tutub), and Tell Agrab (PA.GAR)

1.1.2. Nuffar (Nippur)

1.1.3. Tello (Girsu)

1.1.4. Bismaya (Adab)

1.1.5. Tell al-Muqayyar (Ur)

1.1.6. Tell al-ʿUbaid (Nūtur)

1.1.7. Tell Hariri (Mari)

1.1.8. Qalºat Shergat (Aššur)

1.1.9. Tell Ingharra (Kiš)

1.1.10. Shush (Susa)

1.1.11. Some Groups of Sculpted Artifacts from Other Mesopotamian Sites

1.2. Early Dynastic Chronology and the Development of Visual and Epigraphic Artifacts

Chapter 2. Historical Framework

2.1. Political Development in Early Dynastic Mesopotamia: An Outline

2.2. Royal Titles and Ideology of Kingship

2.3. The Sumerian King List

2.4. Early Dynastic Rulers

Chapter 3. Early Dynastic Royal Statuary

3.1. Royal Statues Identified on Epigraphic Grounds

3.2. Uninscribed Statues Presumably Commissioned by Rulers

3.3. The Development and Meaning of Royal Statuary

3.4. Catalogue of Early Dynastic Royal Statuary

Chapter 4. The Inscriptions on Royal Statues

4.1. Preliminary Observations

4.2. Definition of the Corpus

4.3. Statue Inscriptions (Cat. 1–12)

Chapter 5. Kingship and Visual Communication in the Early Dynastic Period

5.1. The Protohistoric Era and the Problem of Identifying the “Priest-King”

5.2. The Iconography and Themes of Early Dynastic Art

5.3. Ebla and Early Syrian Culture

Chapter 6. Conclusions

6.1 Iconographic Details and Visual Significance: The Ruler and the Early State Administration

6.2. From Participation to Individualism: The Development of Royal Visual Propaganda in Early Dynastic IIIa–b

Appendix A. Remarks on Early Dynastic Temples

A.1. Characteristics of Early Dynastic Sanctuaries

A.2. Temple Names and Titular Deities

Appendix B. Royal Statues in Administrative Texts

Appendix C. Notes on the Transliteration of Texts and the Transcription of Proper Names

I. Personal Names

II. Divine Names

III. Geographical and Topographical Names

Abbreviations

Bibliography

Philological Index

Sources of Illustrations

Plates

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