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Old Babylonian Cylinder Seal for Aham-arshi

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Object number
AR2448-12
Object: Old Babylonian Cylinder Seal for Aham-arshi

Material: Black stone, possibly serpentinite.

Period: 1900 BC to 1600 BC,
old babylonian period.

Description:    Cylindrical seal with drill hole along the central axis. A mythological scene is carved into the mantle of the seal. The seal impression shows two standing figures and the symbols of the god Amurru. One of the figures is a god with a mace the other is the goddess Lama. The god Amurru is represented by a goat with two shepherd's crooks rising from its back, resting on an elaborate pedestal. Next to the scene are three columns of cuneiform inscription translated by Professor Lambert as follows.

« Aham-arshi,
son of Abi-ara,
servant of Amurru. »


So it was a seal made specifically for its original owner by the name of Aham-arshi. The piece is a fantastic impression of the early private seals.
The god Amurru was brought to the religions of Mesopotamia by western semitic nomadic peoples. The depiction on this seal is a very rare representation of that god. The goddess Lama on the other hand is common for old babylonian cylinder seals. She was shown in the context of worshipping other gods.

Background: Cylinder seals have been invented by the early civilizations of Mesopotamia. From the 4th Millenium BC onwards they conquered the whole Near East and beyond. The emergence of this type of seal coincides with the first abundant use of scripture to manage the young highly organized city states. Such early seals are therefore a glimpse at the beginnings of civilization in Mesopotamia. Later seals broaden the view to all areas of administration, but also to trade and even personal matters. Many officials, traders and private persons must have possessed cylinder seals during the Bronze Age of Mesopotamia.
What a happy instance for today's historians. Cylinder seals were made of durable materials and survived the millenia nearly unchanged. A treasury of images and inscriptions is reaching out to us from the Bronze Age. Thanks to the diverse original owners many stray finds have been made in the Near and Middle East. After the interest in antiquity has been reborn in Europe such finds have been preserved and valued. Many pieces could be attended to in private and public collections. And because of academic excavations with documented find contexts a chronology could be worked out. Today, also the stray pieces on the art market and in collections can be dated by iconographic means.
For us it is a very special sensation to hold such seals in our hands and reflect the rise and fall of civilizations.

Dimensions: 29.5mm length, 15.5mm diameter.

Preservation: Superb condition. Surface slightly worn with small chips and cracks but barely effecting the overall impression. Inlcuding seal impression.

Provenance: Acquired 2018 on the British art market. Previously in an important London private collection containing several hundred ancient seals. The piece was acquired for the collection between 1970 and 1988, collection no. PL12. While in the London collection the cylinder seal was inspected and described by Professor Lambert. A copy of his notes is available.
Wilfred George Lambert (1926 to 2011), a British archeologist specialized on Western Asia, was a professor at the University of Birmingham. After his retirement he was active in the ancient near eastern department of the British Museum.

Authenticity: We guarantee the authenticity of this object and all works of ancient art sold by us for life.