Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-9pm4c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T02:05:40.324Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Glass inlays and Nimrud ivories

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2014

Extract

In the 1989 British Museum excavations at Nimrud four small glass plaques were found that were published in a recent volume of Iraq (Curtis, Collon and Green 1993: 15–16, Figs. 14: 5–6 and 16). They came from Room T20 in Fort Shalmaneser, and were found in a deposit that predated a reconstruction of the building probably in the reign of Esarhaddon. The plaques are almost square, measuring about 1·4 × 1·55 cm and 0·15 cm thick (Figs. 1–2). They are made of blue glass and have recessed designs showing six-petalled rosettes in glass of a different colour. Where this inlaid glass survives it is now white but may originally have been yellow. One of the plaques has a small hole right through the centre. It was suggested then that originally these glass plaques would have been mounted in bronze frames and would have been hammered on to various types of furniture as decoration. Further research, however, indicates that it may be possible to suggest a more specific use for these plaques.

A survey of glass plaques with rosettes reveals that there were two different types in circulation in the ancient Near East. First, there are large blue glass plaques where the rosette design is recessed into the surface and filled with what is now (where it survives) opaque white glass. A characteristic of plaques made in this way is that the inlaid rosettes are visible only from one side. Barag comments that “the petals were probably pressed into the blue matrix while both were in a viscous state” (1985: 72), but in the view of von Saldern (1966: 632–3) “the shallow depressions in the tiles to receive the white fillings were cut [my italics] into the blue glass.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Badisches Landesmuseum 1995. Antike Kulturen: Führer durch die Antikensammlungen des Badischen Landesmuseums, Karlsruhe.Google Scholar
Barag, D., 1983. Glass inlays and the classification and dating of ivories from the ninth–eighth centuries B.C., Anatolian Studies 33: 163–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barag, D., 1985. Catalogue of Western Asiatic Glass in the British Museum 1, London.Google Scholar
Barag, D., 1993. Glass inlays in Phoenician ivories, glass and stone vessels, Annales du 12e Congrès de l'Association pour l'Histoire du Verre, Amsterdam: 19.Google Scholar
Barnett, R. D., 19631964. A review of acquisitions 1955–62 of Western Asiatic Antiquities (II), British Museum Quarterly 27: 7988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnett, R. D., 1975. Catalogue of the Nimrud Ivories in the British Museum, 2nd edition revised and enlarged, London.Google Scholar
Crowfoot, J. W. and Crowfoot, G. M., 1938. Early Ivories from Samaria, Samaria-Sebaste 2, London.Google Scholar
Curtis, J. E., Collon, D., and Green, A. R. 1993. British Museum excavations at Nimrud and Balawat in 1989, Iraq 55: 137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herrmann, G., 1986. Ivories from Nimrud IV/1: Ivories from Room SW37 Fort Shalmaneser, London.Google Scholar
Herrmann, G., 1989. The Nimrud ivories, 1: the flame and frond school, Iraq 51: 85109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herrmann, G., 1992. Ivories from Nimrud V: The Small Collections from Fort Shalmaneser, London.Google Scholar
Loud, G., 1939. The Megiddo Ivories, OIP 52, Chicago.Google Scholar
Mallowan, M. E. L., 1952. The excavations at Nimrud (Kalhu), 1949–1950: ivories from the N.W. Palace, Iraq 14: 4553.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mallowan, M. E. L. 1966. Nimrud and its Remains, 2 vols., London.Google Scholar
Markoe, G., 1985. Phoenician Bronze and Silver Bowls from Cyprus and the Mediterranean, University of California Classical Studies 26, Berkeley and Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Mitchell, T. C., 1983. An Urartian lead figurine from Toprak Kale, Anatolian Studies 32: 157–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muscarella, O. W. (ed.), 1981. Ladders to Heaven. Art Treasures from Lands of the Bible, Toronto.Google Scholar
Orchard, J. J., 1978. Some miniature painted glass plaques from Fort Shalmaneser, Nimrud. Part 1: description and a restoration', Iraq 40: 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rehm, E., 1997. Kykladen und Alter Orient: Bestandskatalog des Badischen Landesmuseums Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe.Google Scholar
Riefstahl, E., 1968. Ancient Egyptian Glass and Glazes in the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn.Google Scholar
Safer, F., and Sa'id al-Iraqi, M., 1987. Ivories from Nimrud, Baghdad.Google Scholar
Stern, E. M., and Schlick-Nolte, B., 1994. Early Glass of the Ancient World 1600 B.C.–A.D. 50: Ernesto Wolf Collection, Ostfildern (Germany).Google Scholar
Thimme, J., 1973. Phonizische Elfenbeine: Mobelverzierungen des 9. Jahrhunderts v. Chr., Karlsruhe.Google Scholar
Thureau-Dangin, F., et al. 1931. Arslan-Tash, text and plates, Paris.Google Scholar
von Saldern, A., 1966. Glass, in Mallowan 1966: II, 623–34.Google Scholar
von Saldern, A., 1970. Other Mesopotamian glass vessels (1500–600 BC), in Oppenheim, A. L., et al., Glass and Glassmaking in Ancient Mesopotamia, Corning: 201–28.Google Scholar
Winter, I. J., 1976. Phoenician and North Syrian ivory carving in historical context: questions of style and distribution, Iraq 38: 122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winter, I. J., 1981. Is there a South Syrian style of ivory carving in the early first millennium B.C.?, Iraq 43: 101–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winter, I. J., 1992. Review of Herrmann 1986 in JNES 51: 135–41.Google Scholar