Glazed brick wall relief of lion
Gallery Location
Not on View
Medium
Ceramic (earthenware), glazed decoration
Geography
Babylon, Mesopotamia (Iraq)
Date
605-562 BC
Period
Reign of Nebuchadnezzar II, year unknown, Neo Babylonian Period
Dimensions
122 x 183 x 8 cm
Object number
937.14.1
Collection
Department
Art & Culture: Ancient Near East
Bibliography
This relief of a striding lion originally adorned the façade of the palace of king Nebuchadnezzar II (604-562 BC) at Babylon. Made of moulded bricks that were both painted and glazed, it was part of magnificent rows of striding animals that also included bulls and snake dragons and most famously adorned Babylon’s Ishtar Gate and its Procession Street.
Since the reliefs were assembled in place, the position of each brick had to be planned ahead carefully. Each brick had to be fired before applying paint - black for outlines, white for the body, ochre for the mane, blue for the background - and subsequently be re-fired for glazing.
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