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Iranian Jar with a Frieze of Bulls in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, August 2007

Iranian Jar with a Frieze of Bulls in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, August 2007
Jar with a frieze of bulls, Neo-Assyrian; 8th–7th century B.C.
Iran, Kurdistan
Glazed ceramic; H. 43.5 cm
Purchase, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest, 1955 (55.121.2)

Glazing and glassmaking have a long history in the ancient Near East. A glaze is a layer of glass over a ceramic body. The first objects with a glazed surface were small beads and amulets made of faience, dating to the Ubaid period of the mid-sixth millennium B.C. While isolated examples of true glass beads have been found in contexts of the third millennium B.C., glass was produced on a large scale for the first time around 1600 B.C., perhaps in the Mitanni state of northern Mesopotamia.
This large jar—glazed in green, blue, brown, yellow, white, and black—represents an advanced glazing technique that was in widespread use during the first millennium B.C. Its shoulder is decorated with a wreath of petals, and its body by bulls kneeling before trees. It is one of three jars in the Museum's collection that reportedly were found at the early first millennium B.C. site of Ziwiye in northwestern Iran, but it is also similar in shape and decoration to examples excavated at the Assyrian city of Ashur on the Tigris River in northern Iraq.

Text from: www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_Art/viewOne.asp?dep=3&view...

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