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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— D. T. Potts —<br />

Ivory<br />

Although very few ivory objects have been excavated on archaeological sites in Mesopotamia,<br />

their presence – probably always as rarities and luxuries – is confirmed by a<br />

small but important number of cuneiform texts which refer to figurines, combs, rings<br />

and other unidentified items as well as raw (i.e. uncarved) ivory. <strong>The</strong>oretically the<br />

ivory used in Mesopotamia could have been from the tusks of either African or Indian<br />

elephants but the marked absence of evidence for close ties between Mesopotamia<br />

and Egypt (or the Horn of Africa), prior to the Kassite period, 5 combined with the<br />

far more compelling evidence of contact with the Harappan civilization during the<br />

late third and early second millennia BC, suggests that the ivory known to the<br />

Mesopotamians of the earlier periods was Indian in origin.<br />

Ivory figurines were already being imported to Lagash during the late Early Dynastic<br />

period (c.2400 BC) and in the reign of Gudea, governor of Lagash around 2100 BC,<br />

raw ivory made its first appearance. Slightly later texts from the time of the Third<br />

Dynasty of Ur (2100–2000 BC) refer to the import of about 10.58 kg of unworked<br />

ivory, and to an ivory object (unfortunately unidentifiable because of damage on the<br />

tablet to the name of the item) weighing about 19 kg, which may, in fact, have been<br />

a complete tusk (Heimpel 1987: 55). Mesopotamian woodworkers (carpenters, cabinet<br />

makers, makers of musical instruments) used ivory for inlaid decoration in a variety<br />

of settings, and carvers of figurines and statuettes fashioned objects such as goats and<br />

‘Meluhha birds’ (During Caspers 1990). Ivory objects also appear in the dowry of a<br />

Marduk priestess at Babylon during the Old <strong>Babylonian</strong> period (Dalley 1980: 66),<br />

but it is unlikely that ivory was widely available in Babylonia outside of elite circles.<br />

Very few ivory objects from this period have been recovered in excavation, though a<br />

small number of pieces were recovered at Babylon in a sixth-century context (Moorey<br />

1994: 121, 125). Certainly Babylonia never seems to have had access to nearly as<br />

much ivory as the Assyrians were able to acquire as tribute or the Persians were able<br />

to extract from their African and Asian satrapies.<br />

Shell, mother-of-pearl and tortoise shell<br />

A variety of shells coming from the Persian Gulf, the Arabian Sea and the western<br />

Indian Ocean were used in Mesopotamia for the manufacture of jewellery, cylinder<br />

seals and inlays (like ivory, on furniture and musical instruments, including the<br />

famous lyres found in the Royal Cemetery of Ur). Shell lamps made of Lambis truncata<br />

sebae, a large gastropod common along the coasts of Oman, have been excavated at<br />

Tello and Ur, while large cylinder seals made of Turbinella pyrum, a gastropod found<br />

on the coasts of India and Pakistan, were found in the Royal Cemetery at Ur<br />

(Gensheimer 1984). Many more molluscan species common in the Indo-Pacific region<br />

(Engina mendicaria, Oliva bulbosa, Strombus decorus persicus, Conus ebraeus, Dentalium sp.,<br />

Pinctada margaritifera, Chicoreus ramosus) have been found on sites in Mesopotamia and<br />

are likely to reflect trade either with the peoples of the Persian Gulf littoral (Dilmun,<br />

Magan and the Iranian side of the coast) or the Indus Valley (Meluhha).<br />

In addition, tortoise shell also appears in the cuneiform record (Leemans 1960:<br />

25). On analogy with sites in eastern Arabia, this is likely to have derived from the<br />

carapace of the green sea-turtle (Chelonia mydas) although the Mesopotamian sources<br />

are very unspecific (Farber 1974; Frazier 2003).<br />

134

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