Légende
Votive obelisk with an inscription of King Ashurbanipal forgery with a copy of an ancient text, cuneiform writing, Ashurbanipal king of Assyria; ca. 668–ca. 631 BC, votive offerings, obelisks, inscriptions, forgeries. Clay votive obelisk of King Ashurbanipal. The obelisk tapers towards the top. Cuneiform text inscribed on all four faces of the object. Dating of copied inscriptions: c. 668–c. 631 BC Neo-Assyrian period; forgery dated to 2nd half 19th century–1st half 20th century. Inscription based on texts from Iraq Quyunjik, Nineveh. Forgery probably from the Middle East. Document; dedication. Height 13.1 cm, width 3.7 cm, thickness 4.2 cm., A tall, tapered stone object with an uneven, pyramidal shape stands upright against a plain light gray background, showing a rough, weathered surface with visible carved impressions across its faces. The stone displays a range of earthy colors including beige, tan, brown, and rusty orange, with some darker brown and charcoal spots and patches. The surface texture varies from smoother worn areas to rougher, pitted sections and small cracks, and the base appears slightly wider and irregular, resting on a flat light surface.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A04_284
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
33.7Mo (2.8Mo) / 21.9cm x 38.6cm / 2583 x 4559 (300dpi)