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Ur: The Royal Graves
In 1922, C. Leonard Woolley began to excavate the ancient city of Ur in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq). By the following year, he had finished his initial survey and dug a trench near the ruined ziggurat. His team of workmen found evidence of burials and jewelry made of gold and precious stones. They called this the "gold trench." Woolley recognized, however, that he and his workforce had insufficient experience to excavate burials. He therefore concentrated on excavating buildings and it wasn't until 1926 that the team returned to the gold trench. Woolley began to reveal an extensive cemetery and gradually uncovered some 1,800 graves. Most of the graves consisted of simple pits with the body laid in a clay coffin or wrapped in reed matting. Vessels, jewelry, and personal items surrounded the body. However, sixteen of the graves were unusual. These were not just simple pits but stone tombs, often with several rooms. There were many bodies buried in the graves, surrounded by spectacular objects. Woolley called these the "Royal Tombs." From his finds he attempted to reconstruct the burials. One tomb possibly belonged to the queen Pu-abi. Her title and name are written in cuneiform on a cylinder seal found close to her body. When she was buried, soldiers guarded the entrance to the pit while serving ladies crowded the floor. Woolley discovered their bodies. He suggested that they might have taken poison.
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Egyptian Red Gold | Thematic Essay | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art gold compositions appropriate for the formation of the agaus phase. ... red sulfide tarnishes have been identified on historical gold-silver objects from other cultural contexts, including goldwork from the royal cemetery at ur ( 33.35.3 ) and nineteenth-century european jewelry. that these tarnishes occur predominantly on ancient egyptian objects likely reflects the high sulfide ion activity associated with the typical contexts of sealed burial chambers as well as the unparted gold-http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/rgod/hd_rgod.htm [1252 words]
Headdress with leaf-shaped ornaments [Mesopotamia] (33.35.3) ¦ Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History ¦ The Metropolitan Muse kings and nobles became increasingly powerful and independent of temple authority during the course of the early dynastic period (ca. 29002350 b.c.), although the success of a king's reign was considered to depend on support from the gods. a striking measure of royal wealth was the cemetery in the city of ur, in which sixteen royal tombs were excavated in the 1920s and 1930s by sir leonard woolley. these tombs consisted of a vaulted burial chamber for the king or queen,http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/33.35.3 [255 words]
Headdress ¦ Highlights ¦ Ancient Near Eastern Art ¦ Collection Database ¦ Works of Art ¦ The Metropolitan Museum of Art, gallery 403 description provenance description kings and nobles became increasingly powerful and independent of temple authority during the course of the early dynastic period (2900–2350 b.c.), although the success of a king's reign was considered to depend on support from the gods. a striking measure of royal wealth was the cemetery in the city of ur, in which sixteen royal tombs were excavated in the 1920s and 1930s by sir leonard woolley. these tombs consisted of a vaulted burial chamber for the king or queen,http://www.metmuseum.org/works_of_art/collection_database/all/headdress/objectview.aspx?page=1&sort=5&collID=24& [320 words]
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