North Palace Relief with War Captives
North Palace Relief with War Captives
Place of OriginNineveh, Assyria (Mosul, Iraq)
Date668-627 BCE
Dimensions13 3/4 × 19 5/8 × 1 1/8 in. (34.9 × 49.8 × 2.9 cm)
Mediumalabaster, gypsum
ClassificationSculpture
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number
1921.84
Not on View
DescriptionA fragmentary relief representing five figures marching towards the left. The three men on the left, dressed in knee-length tunics, are prisoners of war. They carry objects in their hands or on their backs. Behind them walks an Assyrian soldier, dressed in elaborate boots and a belted tunic, wearing a tall helmet. He is armed with a spear, a circular shield, and a stick wielded in his right hand. Behind him is a female prisoner dressed in a long fringed tunic, carrying an object in her left hand and another one on her right shoulder. The right edge preserves the arm of a sixth person, likely another captive, carrying a bucket. Behind the procession are two tall palm trees with spreading branches.
Label TextThis fragmentary relief originates from the North Palace of Ashurbanipal in Nineveh (modern Mosul, Iraq). The palace was part of the grand architectural program of Ashurbanipal (reigned 668–627 BCE), the last great king of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, known for expanding the empire and consolidating his influence through extensive military campaigns. The relief fragment depicts a procession of captives and booty, a scene typical of Assyrian palace art, used to glorify military victories. This specific relief, excavated in Court J of the North Palace, features civilian prisoners, likely Babylonians or Chaldeans, identifiable by their distinctive hairstyles and beards. The captives are escorted by Assyrian soldiers in pointed helmets, armed with raised sticks.The two reliefs 1921.83 and 1921.84 were purchased on the London art market in 1921 , reportedly from the personal collection of Austen Henry Layard, the archaeologist who led the excavations at Nineveh on behalf of the British Museum in London.Published ReferencesToledo Museum of Art Museum News, no. 40, Dec. 1921, p. [484-485], repr. p. [483].
Godwin, Blake-More, "Reliefs from the Palace of Sennacherib," Art in America, vol. 10, no. 6, Oct. 1922, p. 282, repr. p. 280.
6th-7th Century
Old Kingdom, Dynasty 5, about 2400 BCE.
Old Kingdom, Dynasty 5, about 2400 BCE.
1st century CE (or 19th century immitation)
about 101 BCE
4th-5th century CE
Membership
Become a TMA member today
Support TMA
Help support the TMA mission