- Offerings to a god
- Gods carried in procession
- Gods carried in procession 2
- Feast of Assurbanipal
- Feast of Assurbanipal 2
- Eagle-headed divinity
- Demons
- Anou or Dagon
- The suite of Sargon
- The suite of Sargon 2
- The King Sargon and his Grand Vizier
- Statue of Nebo
- Assurbanipal at the chase.
- Genius in the attitude of adoration
- Assyrian Bas-relief
Layard's "Nineveh." Beards were curled and probably dyed and powdered, the powder, however, being gold. As a matter of fact, gold was employed in various ways as an enrichment to the hair. - Queen of Assur-nasir-pal
Queen of Assur-nasir-pal - A captive of Sennacherib
This woman, a captive of Sennacherib who reigned in eighth and seventh centuries B.C., wears a long tunic - A hunter
This man, in hunting dress dates from ninth century B.C - Assyrian
Assyrian - King Assur-nasir-pal
King Assur-nasir-pal (ninth century B.C.) - King Assur-nasir-pal
King Assur-nasir-pal - Mythological Personage
This type of dress, which in the British Museum is described as worn by “a Mythological Figure in attendance upon King Assur-nasir-pal”, ninth century B.C., might be dated about 1000 B.C., as following the usual custom of the ancients who dressed their sacred figures in the costume of some previous generation as a rule