Soldiers and Prisoners in Motion in Mesopotamian Iconography during the Early Bronze Age

Author:

Couturaud Barbara1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Musée du Louvre, 75001 Paris, France

Abstract

Military images of the ancient Near East during the Early Bronze Age are characterized by one of their main features: the serial reproduction of soldiers and prisoners, side by side, the former clearly identifiable by the visual signs of power they bear and the latter by their humiliation. These images are usually and almost naturally conceived as the ideological prerogative of city-states in conflict for territorial domination or as signs of visual identity intended to reinforce the powers that be. However, the end of the Early Bronze Age is marked by the hegemony of the Akkadian dynasty and the iconographic changes that it generated. While strongly maintaining the military iconographic theme in its visual discourse, it broke with the motif of static parades of prisoners and introduced many details intended to clearly identify the protagonists, the enemies, or the environment of the battles. It could represent a transition from a discourse based on evocative repetition in order to present an ideal to one founded on detailed narration in order to assert the authenticity of an event. This paper investigates the phenomenon of repetition through soldiers and prisoners on images. Analyzing the message lying behind the series of hindered prisoners and battalions of soldiers also underlines the way the change of iconographic discourse during the Akkadian period can be understood, particularly given that the power of the Akkadian dynasty mainly rested on its military victories.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference55 articles.

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3. Amiet, Pierre (1976). L’art d’Agadé au Musée du Louvre, Musées Nationaux.

4. Amiet, Pierre (1980). La glyptique mésopotamienne archaïque, Éd. Du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.

5. Aruz, Joan, and Wallenfels, Roland (2003). Art of the First Cities. The Third Millennium B. C. from the Mediterranean to the Indus, Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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