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Burney Relief

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The Burney Relief, ca. 1950 BC.

The Burney Relief (named after a former owner) is an early 2nd millennium BC (ca. 1950 BC) Mesopotamian (Babylonian, not Sumerian or Assyrian, as sometimes described) terracotta relief of a winged goddess-like figure with eagle's talons, flanked by owls and perched upon supine lions. It is in a private collection, probably in Japan, though it became well-known through its former on-loan exhibition in the British Museum in London. The goddess-like figure has been identified with the Sumerian Kisikil-lilla-ke of the Gilgamesh epos, and, somewhat improbably, with 7th century BC Babylonian Lilitu. Otherwise, she has been identified as the goddess Inana (Sumerian) or Ishtar (Babylonian) during her visit to the Underworld.

The piece has sometimes, on stylistic grounds, been regarded as not genuine, but scientific testing now appears to confirm its authenticity. A very similar relief dating to roughly the same period is preserved in the Louvre (AO 6501).


F. Davis, "A puzzling "Venus" of 2000 B.C.: a fine Sumerian relief in London". The Illustrated London News 13 June 1936 (issue 5069) 1047. D. Opitz, "Die vogelfüssige Göttin auf den Löwen". Archiv für Orientforschung 11 (1936-37), 350-353. E.D. Van Buren, "A further note on the terra-cotta relief". Archiv für Orientforschung 11 (1936-37), 354-357. H. Frankfort, "The Burney Relief". Archiv für Orientforschung 12 (1937-39), 128-135. Th. Jacobsen, "Pictures and pictorial language (the Burney Relief). In: M. Mindlin, M.J. Geller and J.E. Wansbrough, eds., Figurative Language in the Ancient Near East, 1-11. London: University of London School of Oriental and African Studies.

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