Thread: "Bactrian silver cylindrical cup, late 3rd to early 2nd Millennium BC. The hammered vessel...has four goats in relief in profile with projecting heads framed by great curving horns"...From: thecityreview.com/f00cant.html
Except these are not goats. These are sheep. Wild Sheep. Moufloons...
Left: Ibex goat. See the bumps on the horns?
Right: Moufloon sheep. See the lines on the horns?
Compare the curves...
The same animal (Mouflon sheep) is depicted on this Bactrian gold stamp seal being held by an eagle dude...
Another object from the same auction, also misinterpreted as depicting Ibex goats, when it actually depicts mouflon sheep. "Iranian bronze ornament with gold ibex appliqués, circa 1500-1200 B.C"...Beautiful nevertheless...
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Thread: Tărtăria tablets are three clay tablets discovered in a Vinča-Turdaș culture (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vin%C4%8D…) settlement near the village of Tărtăria in Romania...
The tablets were discovered in a sacrificial pit with many other clay objects and human bones. The radio carbon dating of the bones produced the dates 6310 ± 65 yr BP (calibrated 5370-5140 BC) academia.edu/2365429/SETTLI…
The reason why these tablets are so important is that they contain the Vinča (Old European) symbols.
Thread: This is a wall painting from the 3rd century BC tomb of Si-Amun at Gebel al-Mawta in the Siwa Oasis in Egypt...It depicts seated Si-Amun, and his son, standing before him and touching his father's knee... touregypt.net/featurestories…
Now have a look at this: "Seal depicting...Queen Uqnitum & King Tupkish of the Hurrian kingdom of Urkesh (late 3rd millennium BC) with...the young prince touching his father's knee" oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/09/queen-…
What's with touching the knee? Remember the article about the Serbian expression "From knee to knee" meaning "From generation to generation", "From father to son" oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2015/11/from-k…
Thread: This is a seal from the Sumerian city of Adab, dated to "after 2350 BCE". Official interpretation is: "Gilgamesh, fighting a lion and a buffalo. Dragon, unrelated to the other figures in the scene, is depicted under the inscription: "Urdumu, Governor of Adab"...
Of course, the dragon is very much central to the scene 🙂which is why it is in the center...And very much related to the other figures...But to understand how and why, you need to first forget about Gilgamesh (this has nothing to do with him)...
And you need to know about the existence of animal calendar markers, animal symbols of the seasons, like summer=bull and autumn=lion, and that dragon is the symbol of destructive sun's heat at the end of summer and beginning of autumn...
Thread: Ok how cool is this? Bronze top for a standard. ca. 8th–7th century BC. Luristan, Iran...A female and male (judging by the sticky-outy bits 🙂 but I am not sure, more later) human figures with Ibex goat ears and horns holding hands...Met Museum. metmuseum.org/art/collection…
Ibex is the most depicted thing on ancient artifacts in Iran from Neolithic until the arrival of Islam.
And the 1st millennium BC Luristan is no exception. Ibex is everywhere...As a matter of fact some of the most amazing bronze Ibexes I have seen were made in Luristan at that time.
#FolkloreThursday Thread: A man, facing left, his long hair drawn back into a ponytail, makes love to a woman sitting in his lap, her face turned towards him. Behind her back, another woman holds a vessel with drink and what is that thing??? Thracian, 4th c. BC, Bulgaria...
Officially, this plaque depicts "hierogamy, the sacred marriage between the Thracian king and the Great Mother Goddess"....Hmmm
One of many Thracian metal plaques, mostly depicting horsemen in heavy ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cataphract ???) cavalry armor...
No one really knows what these things represent...
In 2011, during the archaeological excavations conducted on site 3 in Koszyce, Poland, a grave was discovered, dated to the turn of the Late and Final Neolithic, 2875–2670 BC...pnas.org/content/116/22…
The grave is believed to belong to the Globular Amphora Culture (3400–2800 BC), which got its name from the characteristic vessels found in their graves...
The first grave contained the remains of 15 individuals of various ages and both sexes. Plague victims? Like the people from the grave from the same time period from Sweden?