Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-vt8vv Total loading time: 0.001 Render date: 2024-08-16T06:19:53.220Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Winged human-headed bulls of Nineveh: Genesis of an iconographic motif

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2014

Extract

More than one hundred monumental sculptures of winged human-headed bulls have been identified among the remains of Assyria's capitals, of which around forty come from Nineveh. When these ancient Mesopotamian stone giants re-emerged they became a symbol of Neo-Assyrian power. This article aims to study the genesis of these emblematic figures by looking at the earliest iconographic examples. This genealogical development will lead us to consider the etymology and iconographic transcriptions of the Akkadian terms traditionally associated with the figures of winged human-headed bulls, and to ponder their evolution in the various fields of artistic production.

Forty-three colossal sculptures of winged human-headed bulls have so far been discovered in Nineveh: two at the Nergal gate, a few fragments from the Bit Nakkapti and around forty monumental sculptures in the remains of Sennacherib's Palace. Situated on each side of the main gates, these figures guarded the city and palace entrances. They were carved from monolithic limestone blocks and completed after they had been set up either in gateways, in which case the head is in line with the body, or in the alignment of the walls flanking the entrances, with the head turned at an angle of ninety degrees. Botta suggested that these colossi had originally been surmounted by a straight lintel; however, Place's excavations in Khorsabad revealed the existence of brick arches built above some of the gates. Although they played a real functional role due to their position, their presence does not seem to have been architecturally indispensable because other entrances with similar dimensions were not strengthened in this way. Consequently, it would be better to speak of an “active façade”.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 2004 

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.)

Footnotes

*

ArchéOrient, Lyon

References

Amandry, P., 1996. A propos du trésor de Ziwiyé. Iranica Antiqua 6, 109–29.Google Scholar
Botta, P.-E. and Flandin, E., 1849–1850. Monument de Ninive. Paris.Google Scholar
Caubet, A., 1994. (ed.) De Khorsabad à Paris. Paris.Google Scholar
Collon, D., 2001. Catalogue of the Western Asiatic Seals in the British Museum V. London.Google Scholar
Danrey, V., 2004. Le taureau ailé androcéphale dans la sculpture monumentale néo-assyrienne: Réflexions sur un thème iconographique. Aegeo-Anatolica (TMO 39). Lyon (in press).Google Scholar
De Clercq, L., 1903. Collection De Clercq. Catalogue méthodique raisonné. Antiquités assyriennes II. Paris.Google Scholar
Falkenstein, A., 1943. Keilschriftforschung: Review of N. Schneider, Die Götternamen von Ur III in Orientalistische Literaturzeitung 46, cols. 350–5.Google Scholar
Finch, J. P. G., 1948. The Winged Bulls at the Nergal Gate of Nineveh. Iraq 10, 918.Google Scholar
Galter, H. D., Levine, L. D. and Reade, J., 1986. The Colossi of Sennacherib's Palace and their Inscriptions. Annual Review of the Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia Project 4, 2732.Google Scholar
Godard, A., 1950. Le trésor de Ziwiyé. Haarlem.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, E., 1938. Altpersische Inschriften (AMI ergänzungsband 1). Berlin.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, E., 1988. Iran in the Ancient Near-East. New York.Google Scholar
Kühne, H. and Kühne, A., 1988. Die Ausgrabungen auf dem Tell Agaga/Shadikanni (DaM 3). Mainz.Google Scholar
Landsberger, B. and Bauer, T., 1927. Nachträge zu dem Artikel betr. Asarhaddon, Assurbanipal usw. o. S. 61 ff. ZA 37, 217–22.Google Scholar
Layard, A. H., 1849a. Monuments of Nineveh. London.Google Scholar
Layard, A. H., 1849b. Nineveh and its Remains. London.Google Scholar
Layard, A. H., 1853a. A Second Series of the Monuments of Nineveh. London.Google Scholar
Layard, A. H., 1853b. Discoveries in the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon. London.Google Scholar
Legrain, L., 1925. The Culture of the Babylonians from their Seals in the Collection of the Museum. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Lieberman, S. J., 1977. The Sumerian Loanwords in Old-Babylonian Akkadian I (Harvard Semitic Studies 22). Missoula, Montana.Google Scholar
Madhloom, T. A., 1970. The Chronology of Neo-Assyrian Art. London.Google Scholar
Mahmoud, A., 1992. Eine neue Lamassu-Figar aus Teil Agaga/Shadikanni. Von Uruk nach Tuttul — eine Festschrift für Eva Strommenger — Studien und Aufsätze von Kollegen und Freunden. Munich, 101–2.Google Scholar
Matthews, D. M., 1992. The Kassite Glyptic of Nippur (Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 116), Freibourg (Switzerland) and Göttingen.Google Scholar
Matthiae, P., Pinnock, F. and Scandone Matthiae, G., 1995. Ebla. Alle origini della civiltà urbana — trent'anni di scavi in Siria dell'Università di Roma. Rome.Google Scholar
Offner, G., 1951. Le «GUD-AN-NA» dans l'iconographie. RA 45, 117–19.Google Scholar
Offner, G., 1954. L'épopée de Gilgamesh a-t-elle été fixée dans l'art? In Garelli, P. (ed.), Gilgameš et sa légende (Compte rendu de la VIIe Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale), Paris, 175–81.Google Scholar
Osten, H. H. von der, 1957. Altorientalische Siegelsteine der Sammlung Hans Silvius von Aulock (Studia Ethnographica Upsaliensia 13). Uppsala.Google Scholar
Pittman, H. and Aruz, J., 1987: Ancient Art in Miniature: Near Eastern Seals from the Collection of Martin and Sarah Cherkasky (Metropolitan Museum of Art), New York.Google Scholar
Place, V., 1867–1870. Ninive et l'Assyrie, avec des essais de restauration par Félix Thomas. Paris.Google Scholar
Preusser, C., 1955. Die Paläste in Assur (WVDOG 66). Berlin.Google Scholar
Russell, J. M., 1991. Sennacherib's Palace without Rival at Nineveh. Chicago/London.Google Scholar
Seidl, U., 1994. Der Thron von Toprakkale. Ein neuer Rekonstruktionsversuch. Archaeologische Mitteilungen aus Iran 27, 6784.Google Scholar
Thompson, R. C. and Hutchinson, R. W., 1929. A Century of Exploration at Nineveh. London.Google Scholar
Thureau-Dangin, F. and Dunand, M., 1936. Til Barsip. Paris.Google Scholar
Tournay, R. J. and Shaffer, A., 1994. L'épopée de Gilgamesh. Paris.Google Scholar
Von Soden, W., 1964. Die Schutzgenien Lamassu und Shedu in der babylonisch-assyrischen Literatur. BagM 3, 148–56.Google Scholar