Plaque with elephant-headed warriors
Pegu, c. 1479.University of Oxford - Ashmolean Museum
Drinking vessel: Date: ca. 4th century BCE – 2nd century CE Medium: Gold Uranium, Thorium—4Helium dating, Asia.
Siren:Date: c. 5th Century BCE Medium: Gold Size: 6 1/8” h, Asia.
Bracket with a woman riding a fantastic creature, made in Begram, Afghanistan, 1st-2nd century
Furniture element
Near Eastern, Mesopotamian, Assyrian. 10th–9th century B.C.
Legacy dimension: H: 5.3 cm W: 1.9 cm x D: .8 cm
Silver
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston The Babylonians believed that the demoness Lamashtu was responsible for still births and cot-deaths. A woman would have worn this quartzite stone amulet (now broken) during pregnancy and labour so that the fierce demons on it, and the incantation on the back, would scare Lamashtu away A Lamassu (Sumerian: dlamma; Akkadian: lamassu), is a protective deity, often depicted with a bull or lion’s body, eagle’s wings, and human’s head. In some writings, it is portrayed to represent a female deity. A less frequently used name is shedu (Sumerian: dalad; Akkadian, šēdu; Hebrew: שד) which refers to the male counterpart of a lamassu. MUSHUSSU - Babylon dragon of Chaos. Figure of a Recumbent Lamassu
Neo-Sumerian
Musée du Louvre
Assyrian, 883-859. The Brooklyn Museum Breastplate
Neo-Assyrian, 800-500 BC
The National Museum of Asian Art
Statuette of Pazuzu
Assyrian, beginning of the 1st millennium BC
Musée du Louvre
Cheekpiece in the form of a winged human-headed bull
ca. 800 – 600 B.C.Iranian
Princeton University Art Museum
Cheekpiece in the form of a winged mouflon
ca. 1000 – 750 B.C.Iranian
Princeton University Art Museum
Molded plaque of a griffin genie (apkallu)
late 9th – 7th century B.C. Neo- Assyrian
Princeton University Art Museum
Amulet of a winged goddess
Nubian, Napatan Period, reign of Piankhy (Piye), 743–712 B.C.
Findspot: El-Kurru, Nubia (Sudan)
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Amulet of a winged goddess
Nubian, Napatan Period, reign of Piankhy (Piye), 743–712 B.C.
Findspot: el-Kurru, Nubia(Sudan)
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Striding figure with ibex horns, a raptor skin draped around the shoulders, and upturned boots
Period: Proto-Elamite Date: ca. 3000 B.C. Geography: Mesopotamia or Iran
This solid-cast sculpture is one of a pair of nearly identical images of a hero or a demon wearing the upturned boots associated with highland regions, his power enhanced by the mighty horns of the ibex on his head and the body and wings of a bird of prey draped around his shoulders. It was created at the time the first cities emerged in ancient Sumer. A new world view conceived of human figures in realistic terms, through accurate proportions and highly modelled forms with distinctive features - here, the triple belt and beard that define divine beings and royalty. The blending of human and animal forms to visualize the supernatural world and perhaps to express shamanistic beliefs, however, is more characteristic of the contemporary arts of Proto-Elamite Iran, where a remarkable tradition of metalworking developed during this period.
Source: Metropolitan Museum
Mushussu (also known as Mushhushshu or Sirrush) is the Dragon of Babylon and one of two animals depicted on the Ishtar Gate. Лилит. На веревке аннунаки привели монстра к Эа.Нечем тут хвастаться,опять урод получился,не способный к продолжению рода,а оно,пожалуй,и к лучшему. Человекоподобный монстр охотиться за звероподобным монстром.
Megiddo. An applique (12th Century BCE) showing a winged sphinx .
Кормящая мама-сфинкс)) В руках настольная лампа))
Стамбульский археологический музей
Berner Münster, Bern
Bronze and Silver. 1st-3rd Century AD
Roman Imperial Period
Bronze decorative fitting, perhaps for a carriage or a boat: figure of Cupid emerging from a plant; his eyes and inside feathers are silver.
Source: British Museum
Stone plaque of Narasimha slaying the demon Hiranyakashipu
Kashmir, late 6th century - early 7th century AD
Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford
Leonine headed spirit votive figure. 700-600 BC
Made in Mesopotamia. Late Babylonian
The British Museum