The Burney Relief and myself, London. Click on any image for a hi-rex view. |
Anyway, I walked to the museum, and found it within minutes. It as rather small given all that has been written about it.
It is a Mesopotamian terra-cotta plaque depicting a winged, nude, goddess-like figure with bird's talons, flanked by owls, and perched upon supine lions. The relief, known as The Queen of the Night, has dated it between 1800 and 1750 BCE. It originates from southern Iraq, but the exact site where it was found is unknown. There is much debate whether the woman represents Lilith, Lilitu, Inanna, Ishtar, or Ereshkigal. Also, is she a goddess or a demon? All these points are unknown, but open to endless speculation, making any research a bottomless pit of wishy-washiness.
I recognize the temptation to cherry pick the available data (and there is a lot of it), then latch onto someone's conclusion that matches my own avenue of thought. I reference the Burney Relief in my ongoing book project as well as my presentations. All I can really say is that this image seems to represent something more demonic than the goddess Athena (also seen with owls), and that the myth of Lilith was that she could shape shift into an owl, fly at night and drink the blood of babies. So, this tablet might represent the more ominous aspects of the mythology of owls.
the card accompning the Burney Relief |
The Burney Relief |
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5 comments:
Ah, I missed the symbolism for the rod and ring of justice. I don't suppose they necessarily mean she doesn't mete a swift and maybe cruel justice. Her eyes appear very large too.
I'm drawn to the thought that she may be both demon and goddess; as in, any such force has both dark and lightness to it, at least from a human perspective. Force is simply force, power. Who knows what she's up to?
I guess the artist deliberately left her eyes hollow, to make them look as if they were completely dark.
Shadow and light, good and evil, male/female, yin/yang. Contrasts. Maybe that's what she symbolizes.
god or demon, what's the difference? They are both mostly indifferent to the affairs of mortals. Good and evil are for humans; the gods just do what they do...that was the attitude then, I think.
I see an object in a household shrine (too small to be a public piece) that might have been used as a symbol of feminine power for meditation purposes, by the lady of the house. Perhaps a symbolic portrait of the lady herself, in her power form.
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