User:Temerarius/Galarium

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uu[edit]

pxy[edit]

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Drawing of the impression made by the onyx seal of Jaazaniah
Photograph of the face of the seal of Jaazaniah, and drawing illustrating its construction from black and white onyx.
this dolmen is quintessentially Flintstones, yet the family would never have been able to afford it.
Dolmens in Amadalavalasa, Andhra Pradesh, India



ivory[edit]

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b

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ST. CAKES st agatha - st of top surgery

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r.a. stewart macalister[edit]

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The oldest mention of the oasis city appears as "Tiamat" in Neo-Babylonian inscriptions dating as far back as the 8th century BCE. The oasis developed into a prosperous city rich in wells and handsome buildings. Tiglath-pileser III received tribute from Tayma[8] and Sennacherib (r. 705–681 BCE) named one of Nineveh's gates the Desert Gate, recording that "the gifts of the Sumu'anite and the Teymeite enter through it". It was rich and proud enough in the seventh century BC for Jeremiah to prophesy against it in Jeremiah 25:23: "Dedan, Tema, and Buz, and all those who have their hair clipped". It was ruled then by a local Arab dynasty known as the Qedarites. The names of two 8th century BCE queens, Šamši and Zabibe, are recorded.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:ListFiles/Zunkir
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Ancient_dice

q[edit]

The last page of "Decorative Patterns of the Ancient world," by Flinders Petrie, with stain.
Ancient pottery marks to compare to Egyptian and early Semitic writing
Ancient pottery marks to compare to Egyptian and early Semitic writing
Skulls and pottery Tarkhan, Petrie

f[edit]

iterum[edit]

Ernest Hebert
carrying water
Historical photo of Saforis (Sepphoris). Village girl fetching water in jars carried on donkey back
Lapland Mother and Child the breast, around under her arms and the ends are tiedunderneath the child. Thus the weight comes upon her shoul-ders, chest, back and hips, while allowing both arms free tocarry freight. This is the method usually adopted by theSlavonic and Polish mothers. I o PEDIATRICS The Lapland mother, here shown, was a member of asmall colony imported by Uncle Sam to introduce the breed-ing of reindeer in Alaska. There were about fifteen in theparty, and this woman had two children, the younger she car-ried in this queer looking combination of cradle and sled,which she could carry either across her back, after the mannerof a quiver with arrows, or else drag along over the snow asa sled. The picturesque costume was made of furs and skins,while the cap was brilliant with fancy-dyed leather; the large
god it's weird how they were so much clearer and better than the other hebrew inscriptions tel dan stele
File:A Field of Flowers and Mount Tabor (4879702948).jpg
funeraires
File:Assouan, Ruines de l'Ancienne Enciente Arabe, au Sud-Est de la Ville MET DP71394.jpg
Cassiopeia
Dèbora e Jaéle
Lovis Corinth - Selbstporträt mit seiner Frau und Sektglas (1902).jpg
there's that famous egyptian "nursery"! i should have known it'd be on here somewhere. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Breastfeeding_in_art Maler der Grabkammer des Thutmosis III. 001.jpg
Champollion - Panthéon égyptien, 1823 (page 311 crop).jpg
Head of a Cow Goddess (Hathor or Mehetweret) MET picture6.jpg
Jug Tell el-Yahudiyeh. Great early one. fertility polka dots and triangles. late Bronze age Byblos
flat, broad face of Silenus
Illustration by Wenceslas Hollar: the spirit of God (with Tetragrammaton) moves over the face of the deep. tehom
etruscan aphrodite se coiffant at the Tuscania museo - this one looks shit
aphrodite se coiffant at the Louvre - intriguing
endor museum
etruscan
etruscan
dancing girl, 30s, should be public domain...
Dancing Girl (sculpture) i think this is the real deal. landmark work.
dancing girl -- looks like a crappy reproduction.
etruscan
suez and aqoba
page with Beth-Pelet Philistine pottery portrayal by Petrie
female sphinx with Hathor-style curls
SUPPILULIUMA.jpg
nutrix
During lean times, the Phoenicians would sometimes go so far as to sacrifice needed children to their pagan gods. During times of plenty, there were more children to sacrifice. Baalshillem Temple Boy
"What we have here gentlemen is an apparent horse of the sea or perhaps, day. Given the known connection between sun gods like Helios and equine imagery, the latter is more likely."
July 9 1976 "The inscriptions at the site are unusually poetic and religious."
lachish 1933-38. tel lachish minecart track for falling off
the shredder at the bottom of the well
tel lachich falling-hole for falling into it's the curse of the well
witchcraft and satanism, descriptions she does not dispute, though she said there is nothing negative about them...
Satanic panic "Conduct more sexual than spiritual in nature..."
Christopher Rollston agreed with Ahituv's reading, in the face of some scholars who argue that the script was Phoenician.[who?] Rollston notes that in this period, the direction of writing in Northwest Semitic and Phoenician was standardized as sinistrograde (right to left), whereas the incised text is typical of Early Alphabetic, i.e., dextrograde (left to right) script. Rollston would date the text to the 11th century, which is on the early end of Ahituv's 11th–10th-century dating.[15]
vom 3. bis zum 1. Jt. v. Chr. kontinuierlich im ganzen Alten Orient zu belegen und stellt so eines der populärsten Themen der altorientalischen Kunst überhaupt dar.[16]
The "woman at the window", a woman usually wearing an Egyptian-style wig and a frontlet on her forehead, looking frontally out of a window supported on small columns, such as existed in the women's quarters on the upper floor of a Phoenician palace. The allusion is to a cult of Ashtart, common in Cyprus and probably Phoenicia, in which she or her votaress figures as a sacred prostitute. It was perhaps bedecked in this guise that Jezebel looked out of her window to ensnare the returning captain Jehu by her wiles.[16]
bacchius iudaeus coin
corinthian circle dance
Tel Arad 280321 05 Lower City gate.jpg
Arad debir
Location of Tell el-Kheleifeh
ossuary
assuary
Chalcolithic Male Figurine, 4500-3500 BC (43216509791).jpg
this chalcolithic "guitar-shaped" figure shows early pellet breast style but don't appear to be pellet constructed
wow very continuity. much Ghassulian
the famous gilat figurine, chalcolithic - such good humor
lachish tree
lachish tree
sukah
lmao this cant be
Bronze Age Europe Pottery Figure
bronze age figure from st olaf
hmph.
crete. looks like certain later more western
skullofathlete crete
greek bronzes
mycenaean snake
graep rhyton
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Smiting_weather_gods_idols
Number 12 from Lidzbarski's Handbuch der Nordsemitischen Epigraphik Table XV (cropped).jpg
A war that God waged against a multitude of challengers-the deep, the sea, Rahab the sea monster, the rivers, Leviathan the Twisting Serpent, Leviathan the Elusive Serpent, and the sea dragons-is referred to in the psalms, the prophecies, and other writings. We find, for example, in Isaiah 51:9-10: "Awake, awake, clothe yourself with splendor. O arm of the LORD! Awake as in days of old, as in former ages! It was you that hacked Rahab into pieces, that pierced the Dragon. It was you that dried up the waters of the great deep [tehom]." [17]
rhyton, louvre, from ugarit
! arslan tash
Nimrud ivory lion "eating" a man.jpg
bog roll
bog roll 2
djed, megiddo
gaudy lmao
affecting portrait of a bovine personality
does she look many-breasted?
58 holes game board
pyxis lid goddess common reference for goddess-tree fungibility
Female figurine, Megiddo, Stratum VIIA, Late Bronze IIB, 1300-1200 BC, ivory - Oriental Institute Museum, University of Chicago - DSC07728.JPG
Female figurine, Megiddo, Stratum VIIA, Late Bronze IIB, 1300-1200 BC, ivory - Oriental Institute Museum, University of Chicago - DSC07725.JPG
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Duck_shaped_box-AO_14779-IMG_1153.jpg
cypriot handbras simil
not an asherah pole but sure vaginal Finial or Decorated Tube LACMA M.76.97.85.jpg
Ta'anach cult stand
this is a pretty sick tower from Escher huh
File:Funeral pithos, Fortetsa near Knossos, 850-800 BC, AMH, 980001.jpg
Funeral pithos, Potnia theron, Fortetsa near Knossos, 850-800 BC, AMH, 980001.jpg
fertility figu
Mosaic Floor in Synagogue at Hammat Tiberias 02.JPG
aphrodite se coiffant
endor museum
Palm and ibexes jar.jpg
Hattusa Green Stone
Palm and ibex(es) pottery fragment.jpg


https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Room_230_of_the_Louvre,_display_case_2
euphrates pillar figur


pics[edit]

File:Detective Fiction Illustration Example.png
"(le'omosexuale, 1978)"
bilinugal
Seneb
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Decapitations_of_people_in_art
script comparison, gesenius


References[edit]

  1. ^ "Gang behind $55m art heist captured in FBI sting". The Independent. 2012-08-09. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
  2. ^ Steiner 2001, pp. 259–268. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFSteiner2001 (help)
  3. ^ Steiner, Richard C. (2001). "The Scorpion Spell from Wadi Hammamat: Another Aramaic Text in Demotic Script". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 60 (4): 259–268. doi:10.1086/468948. ISSN 0022-2968.
  4. ^ a b c Barlow, Jane; Diane Bolger; Barbara Kling (1991). Cypriot Ceramics: Reading the Prehistoric Record. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology. ISBN 0-924171-10-3.
  5. ^ Richards 2001. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFRichards2001 (help)
  6. ^ Richards, Fiona (2001). The Anra Scarab. Oxford: BAR International Series. ISBN 1-84171-217-5.
  7. ^ a b Andrews, Carol (2007). "Amulets" In The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. Oxford University Press.
  8. ^ a b Liszka, Kate (2015). "Scarab Amulets in the Egyptian Collection of the Princeton University Art Museum". Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University. 74: 4–19. ISSN 0032-843X. JSTOR 26388759. Cite error: The named reference ":0" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  9. ^ Taracha 2009, p. 91.
  10. ^ Goldwasser 2014. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFGoldwasser2014 (help)
  11. ^ Goldwasser, Orly (2014-03-18). "Goldwasser, O. 2006. "Canaanites Reading Hieroglyphs. Part I – Horus is Hathor? Part II – The Invention of the Alphabet in Sinai." Ägypten und Levante 16: 121-160". Academia.edu. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  12. ^ Colless, Brian Edric (2010-01-01). "Proto-alphabetic Inscriptions from the Wadi Arabah". Antiguo Oriente 8. Retrieved 2024-01-28.
  13. ^ "View of When and from Where did YHWH Emerge? Some Reflections on Early Yahwism in Israel and Judah". Entangled Religions. 2023-06-20. Retrieved 2024-01-26.
  14. ^ "Bible side-lights from the Mound of Gezer, a record of excavation and discovery in Palestine : Macalister, Robert Alexander Stewart, 1870-1950 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive". Internet Archive. 2023-03-25. Retrieved 2024-01-17.
  15. ^ Cite error: The named reference Rollston was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  16. ^ a b Museum, British; Barnett, Richard David; Davies, Leri Glynne (1975). A Catalogue of the Nimrud Ivories. London: British Museum. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-7141-1075-2. Cite error: The named reference "Museum Barnett Davies 1975 p." was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  17. ^ Zakovitch, Yair; Shinan, Avigdor (2012-12-01). From Gods to God. Lincoln, Neb: U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8276-0908-2.

External links[edit]