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Biblical Collection/ HK : Phoenician Votive Figure
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Phoenician Votive Figure - DV.520
Origin: Lebanon
Circa: 600
BC
to 500
BC
Dimensions:
13.5" (34.3cm) high
Collection: Biblical
Medium: Terracotta
Condition: Restored
Additional Information: SOLD
£6,600.00
Location: Great Britain
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Description |
This very detailed and superbly
preserved
ceramic sculpture is a votive figure
from the
middle of the first millennium BC, and
represents a deity in the Phoenician
pantheon.
Unusually for the Phoenicians – who seem
to
have had more goddesses than gods – it
represents a male. The figure halts at
about
the level of the knees, and has been
slightly
restored so it stands correctly. The
figure is
dressed in what resembles a tunic and
toga.
The former drapes the individual from
shoulder
to base, and is denoted with vertically-
oriented textile ripples. The latter
seems to be
draped around the figure, then pulled
from the
right side of the waist to under the
left arm,
passing over the shoulder and tucked
back
under itself to secure it in position.
This is the
only piece we have seen that preserved
such
details. The head is commensurately
well-
preserved, showing superb rendering of a
covered hairstyle which frames a serene
face
with a long nose, high brows, almond
eyes
and a pursed mouth. The cheeks are full,
the
jaw is long and the ears break with the
profile
of the coiffure. The pose is very
upright, with
the right hand flexed upwards and the
left
resting on the hip. Unusually, the left
hand
appears to have originally had a hollow
in the
clenched fingers (since filled with
calcareous
matter) which implies that he might once
have
held a perishable item. Judging from its
size
and orientation, it was some sort of
staff/weapon, which would have crossed
his
body at about 45 degrees. The face is
supremely naturalistic and more
sophisticated
than most of the Greek Archaic Period
sculptures that the Phoenicians
inspired. The
back of the piece is almost completely
plain,
implying that it was always meant to be
viewed from the front rather than in the
round,
which is appropriate for figures
destined for
shrines. The piece retains some
calcareous
concretions from its long interment in
the
Mediterranean.
The Phoenicians were one of the most
important civilisations of the ancient
world,
and flourished from around 1500 to 300
BC.
Their world was centred on Northern
Israel,
Lebanon and Syria, while their sphere of
conquest and influence extended
throughout
the Mediterranean and even beyond the
Pillars
of Hercules (the Straits of Gibraltar)
and into
the Mediterranean-Atlantic. Their power
was
due primarily to their mastery of
seamanship –
which they developed to a whole new
level
during their pre-eminence – and
extremely
well-organised administration which was
strengthened by extensive use of the
alphabet.
Indeed, it was the Phoenicians who
introduced
the alphabet to the Greeks, who in turn
passed it onto the rest of the Western
World.
They were essentially Canaanites, to
whom
they were identical in sociocultural and
material terms, the only difference
being the
massive range over which their cultural
remains and heritage can be found.
Phoenician society was comparatively
stable
when compared to the changeable fortunes
of
other Eastern Mediterranean cultures,
primarily due to its broad royal,
political and
religious foundations. The town of
Byblos
became a major hub for trade all over
the
Fertile Crescent, followed by Tyre and
Sidon;
overseas territories notably included
Carthage
(founded 814 BC), but they either took
over or
culturally dominated trading ports from
Cyprus
to Malta, Spain, Portugal and Sardinia.
They
traded in purple dye (“Tyrian Purple”),
textiles,
luxury ceramics, silver, tin (with
England) and
glass, explored down the west coast of
Africa
as far as the Gulf of Guinea, and may
even
have circumnavigated Africa in around
600
BC.
Their artistic output is usually on a
small scale
– enabling it to be easily transported
and
traded – and made of high-value
materials
such as glass and precious metal.
Phoenician
styles are largely derivative, being
informed by
sources as varied as Cyprus, Egypt,
Assyria
and Greece, and has been described as an
amalgam of pre-classic models and
perspectives, often with regionalised
local
stylistic variants. The use of ceramic
figures
seems to have been religious in origin,
with
shrine figures (or baetyls) depicting a
wide
range of the deities and legendary
figures from
Mediterranean mythology. Clay tableaux
show
these figures being displayed in niches,
worshipped at a familial or group level,
and
they were also sometimes interred with
the
dead. Depictions range from the
classical-
naturalistic to the schematic or even
grotesque. Specific members of the
pantheon
include Baal (or Baal-Hammon, to whom
children were sacrificed), Eshmun (god
of
healing and the arts), Melqart (the
Phoenician
equivalent of Poseidon/Neptune) Bes (an
Egyptian household god resembling an
ugly
dwarf), Tanit (the patron goddess of
Carthage)
and Astarte (an indigenous Phoenician
goddess). Various other deities cannot
be
specifically identified. It is notable
that the
gender bias is very strong towards
goddesses.
Hand positions are believed to reflect
different
moods or intentions. The significance of
individual gods or figures cannot be
ascertained in most cases. As with most
societies, any figure with greatly
exaggerated
sexual characteristics (or if pregnant,
or
carrying a child) is usually associated
with
fertility, although most figures are
likely to
represent personages whose significance
has
been lost to us.
The current piece was recovered from the
floor
of the Mediterranean; the manner in
which it
and associated pieces were found
suggests
that it might have been part of a naval
shrine
aboard the doomed vessel, although it is
also
possible that it was being taken to a
Phoenician outpost in order to form part
of a
shrine for a prosperous household. It is
a
superb example, and will be the star
attraction
of any serious collection of the genre.
Moscati, S. (ed.). 1988. The
Phoenicians. John
Murray Publishers, London.
- (DV.520)
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