11/33
[ stop the slideshow ]

Mythological Personage

Mythological Personage.jpg An Assyrian King and His Chief MinisterThumbnailsAssyrian Warrior (temp. Sargon II)An Assyrian King and His Chief MinisterThumbnailsAssyrian Warrior (temp. Sargon II)An Assyrian King and His Chief MinisterThumbnailsAssyrian Warrior (temp. Sargon II)An Assyrian King and His Chief MinisterThumbnailsAssyrian Warrior (temp. Sargon II)An Assyrian King and His Chief MinisterThumbnailsAssyrian Warrior (temp. Sargon II)An Assyrian King and His Chief MinisterThumbnailsAssyrian Warrior (temp. Sargon II)An Assyrian King and His Chief MinisterThumbnailsAssyrian Warrior (temp. Sargon II)

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