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Cylinder Seals Made of Clay*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 August 2014
Extract
“Terracotta …, Amulet in the form of a cylinder seal … This terracotta object is an example of the kind of thing that is so crude that no one wants to publish it, with the incidental result that we probably have a somewhat distorted idea of the average standard of production in some periods; many authentic amulets or seals of this quality have probably been presumed to be fakes.”
Julian Reade's comment defines precisely the opinion held by archaeologists regarding clay seals. It also helps to explain why museums and private collectors have not acquired clay seals which were generally regarded to be, if not crude and insignificant, possible forgeries. The number of clay seals excavated in archaeological sites impels us to examine them more thoroughly than has been the case so far.
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- Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1988
Footnotes
I wish to dedicate this paper to Lady Barbara Mallowan on her 80th birthday. Through the years she has encouraged and guided me in my work on seals. I am grateful to the Iraq Director General of Antiquities for permitting me to publish the seals from the Iraq Museum. My thanks go to the authorities in the Iraq Museum for all their help and particularly Mrs. Rasmiya Rashid. Thanks also to Dr. Dominique Collon for drawing my attention to the seals in the British Museum and for advice and many discussions on the subject.
References
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3 See note 1, p. 83, no. 41, Pl. IVh.
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11 See note 7.
12 Louvre Cyl. I, Pl. 29, no. 4.
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19 Porada, E., Corpus of Ancient Near Eastern Seals in North American Collections I, The Collection of the Pierpont Morgan Library (Washington, 1948), no. 386Google Scholar.
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21 See note 2.
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