Légende
Pendant, unknown Northern Mesopotamian workshop, Early Jazira III period ca. 2600–ca. 2350 BC. Pendant or pin finial in the shape of a standing quadruped sheep?, head missing, plastically separated, straight hanging tail. On both sides of the animal, halfway up, there are two circular recesses drilled. A vertical hole is drilled through the centre of the torso. Material/decoration, height 1.8 cm, width 2 cm, depth 0.6 cm. Origin: Northern Mesopotamia Khabur basin, Tell Rad Shakra, Syria. Function: jewellery; associated with children's graves; Early Dynastic III period., A small elongated stone-like object suspended against a flat gray background, with a rounded hole through its center; the object shows a rough, pitted surface with mottled colors including beige, tan, brown, black, and off-white, and has irregular darker speckles and lighter patches across its surface, tapering to a slightly pointed end on one side and a more blunt, uneven end on the other.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A05_392
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
28.5Mo (1.5Mo) / 29.5cm x 24.3cm / 3481 x 2866 (300dpi)