Statue of Iddi-Ilum
Statue of Iddi-Ilum | |
---|---|
Material | Soapstone |
Height | 41.5 centimetres (16.3 in) |
Created | c. 2090 BCE |
Discovered | 1936–1937 |
Place | Royal Palace, Mari, Syria |
Present location | Musée du Louvre, Paris |
Identification | AO 19486 |
The Statue of Iddi-Ilum is a 21st-century BCE statue of the praying figure of Iddi-Ilum, the military governor, or shakkanakku, of the ancient city-state of Mari in eastern Syria. The headless statue was discovered at the Royal Palace of Mari during excavations directed by French archaeologist André Parrot. The statue was made of soapstone and bears an inscription identifying the figure and dedicating it to the goddess Ishtar or Inanna. The statue is now displayed at the Musée du Louvre in Paris.[1]
Overview
The soapstone statue depicts the standing figure in a traditional prayer posture with the hands clasped against the chest.[1] The figure's head is lost, but his beard is still visible. The beard is sculpted in eight symmetrical braids that are curled at the end.[2] The statue's right arm and elbow are also lost.[3] The figure is dressed in a long robe made of a single piece of fine-weave cloth that is draped around the body. The robe's borders are richly decorated with fringes and tassels. In a departure from Mesopotamian tradition regarding these garments, the robe covers both shoulders and is bound at the waist with a belt.[1]
Inscription
The bottom of the robe bears a cuneiform inscription[3] in Akkadian stating the name and position of the figure, and the deity the statue was dedicated to. The goddess has been interpreted as either Ishtar,[2] or its Sumerian equivalent, Inanna.[1] The inscription, engraved in ten columns,[3] reads: "Iddi-Ilum, shakkanakku of Mari, has dedicated his statue to Inanna. Whosoever erases this inscription will have his line wiped out by Inanna."[1]
Significance
The statue is one of three known statues of the shakkanakku of Mari, including that of Ishtup-Ilum and the horned statue of Puzur-Ishtar. During the reign of Mari's last king, Zimrilim, these ancestral rulers were actively promoted through honorific rituals known as "kispum." The statues were also prominently displayed in the throne room of the royal palace.[1] The horns in the similar statue of Puzur-Ishtar suggest that he was deified but the same can not be verified in the case of Iddi-Ilum and Ishtup-Ilum.[4]
Excavation
The statue was found during the fourth excavation season at Mari (Winter 1936–1937) by the French excavation team under André Parrot.[3] The two pieces of the statue were found in courtyard 148 of the royal palace.[1]
Gallery
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The inscription on the bottom of the statue (front).
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The inscription on the bottom of the statue (back).
See also
References
Citations
Bibliography
- Aruz, Joan; Benzel, Kim; Evans, Jean M. (2008). Beyond Babylon: Art, Trade, and Diplomacy in the Second Millennium B.C. Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 9781588392954.
- Parrot, André (1938). "Les fouilles de Mari" (PDF). Syria (in French). 19 (1). Institut français du Proche-Orient: 1–29. doi:10.3406/syria.1938.4034.