ClassificationsAncient Near Eastern Art
Cultic Bull Altar
Place CreatedTurkey, Asia
CultureHittite
PeriodNeo-Hittite Kingdom
Dateearly 1st Millennium BCE
MediumStone, probably basalt
Credit LineGift of the Georges Ricard Foundation
Dimensions2 3/4 x 3 15/16 x 6 7/8 in., 1400 g (7 x 10 x 17.5 cm, 3 lb. 1 3/8 oz.)
Object number2018.010.066
Label TextSmall portable stone altars were found in cult corners in many domestic structures. A cult corner was a small area or part of an area in a larger building or courtyard that contained ritual objects such as stands for vessels and offerings, small altars, standing stones, anthropomorphic and zoomorphic figurines. In cult corners, one paid reverence to the ancestors and sought the favor of usually capricious household gods. This rectangular stone altar is recessed to form a shallow basin. The altar rests on four legs and two roughly hewn bull heads are carved on one side.
Published ReferencesHotel des Ventes du Prado, Marseille, Objets de Fouille et de Haute Curiosite Monnaies Antiques de Bronze, Argent et or (1er Decembre 1973), lot 13.
ProvenancePurchased by Georges Ricard (1921-2012) from Hotel des Ventes du Prado, Marseille, France, December 1, 1973, lot 13. Ex coll. Musée de l'Égypte et le Monde Antique, Collection Sanousrit, Monaco, 1975-1982. Ex coll. Georges Ricard Foundation, Santa Barbara, California.
Status
Not on viewCollections
- Ancient Egyptian, Nubian, and Near Eastern Art
mid 2nd Century CE
ca. 16th Century
1680-1450 BCE
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
1776
20th Century
2000-1600 BCE
1st Century CE
1st Century BCE
early 20th Century
early 20th Century
Ibuke School
20th Century
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
1756