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El vaso sagrado de Warka, también llamado “Jarrón Sagrado de Warka“, datado del año 3200 a. C., fue elaborado en época de la civilización sumeria, que se considera la primera y mas antigua civilización de la historia, que se extendió por el sur de Mesopotamia, en la zona de los ríos Tigris y Eufrates, (actual Irak) concretamente forma parte del período de Uruk, un período arqueológico de la historia de Mesopotamia comprendido entre el 3800 a. C. y el 3200 a. C., en el último milenio del Calcolítico en la región mesopotámica.

Cerámica sumeria del período Uruk datada del 3000 a. C.
La pieza fue hallada en 1940 durante la sexta campaña de excavaciones llevadas a cabo por arqueólogos alemanes, en el nivel IIIa-II del complejo de templos dedicados a la deidad sumeria Eanna, Inanna ; diosa del amor y la fertilidad, que forman parte de las ruinas de la antigua ciudad de Uruk, ubicadas cerca de a ciudad de Samawa, 280 km al SSE de Bagdad en la provincia iraquí de Al Muthanna.
Sus características son:
- Forma cilíndrica
- Altura: 1,05 metros.
- Anchura: parte superior 36 cm.
- Material: alabastro.
- Consta de cuatro franjas horizontales, con relieves que representan ofrendas relacionadas con la agricultura dirigidas a la diosa Inanna en el Eanna de Uruk.
El vaso de Warka fue uno de los millares de objetos fueron saqueados del Museo Nacional de Iraq durante la Invasión de Iraq en 2003. Fue devuelto al mismo museo por tres iraquíes durante un alto el fuego, el 12 de junio de 2003.
The detailed drawing above was made from tracing a photograph (from Campbell, Shepsut) of the temple vase found at Uruk/Warka, dating from approximately 3100 BCE.
It is over one meter (nearly 4 feet) tall.
On the upper tier is a figure of a nude man that may possibly represent the sacrificial king. He approaches the robed queen Inanna. Inanna wears a horned headdress.
The Queen of Heaven stands in front of two looped temple poles or “asherah,” phallic posts, sacred to the goddess.
A group of nude priests bring gifts of baskets of gifts, including, fruits to pay her homage on the lower tier. This vase is now at the Iraq Museum in Bagdad.
“The Warka Vase, is the oldest ritual vase in carved stone discovered in ancient Sumer and can be dated to round about 3100 B.C. or probably 4th-3rd millennium B.C.
It shows men entering the presence of his gods, specifically a cult goddess Innin (Inanna), represented by two bundles of reeds placed side by side symbolizing the entrance to a temple.
http://www.crystalinks.com/sumerart.html
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- Sala de la antigua Sumer en el Museo Nacional de Irak.
- Tesoros perdidos de Irak (Instituto Oriental de Chicago de la Universidad de Chicago) (pre-2003 b&w photo compared with colour photograph from 12 June 2003)
- El vaso de Warka (ancientworlds.net)
- Fiona Curruthers, “Iraq Museum resembled ‘emergency ward’“, University of Sydney News, 19 September 2003. (Colour image of pre-war Warka Vase, as well as missing “Lady of Uruk (Warka)” stone head).
- The Iraq Museum Database (hosted by the Oriental Institute, Chicago)
Warka Vase as recovered (6/12/03)
- bibliography and image source: (unpublished; via McGuire Gibson).
- copyright for image: left side: Hirmer Verlag / right side: (via McGuire Gibson; source withheld upon request)
• date: (ca. 3000 BC)
• description:
vase, relief decoration in four registers, showing (bottom to top) rows of plants, sheep (make and female), nude males carrying baskets or jars, and a cultic scene, in which the ruler of city of Uruk delivers provisions to the temple of the goddess Inanna, represented here by two reed bundle standarts-symbols of the goddess-and a woman, probably her priestess ); rim broken; repair piece inserted in antiquity (holes drilled for repair)
• status: stolen in April 2003, returned to museum in June 2003.
http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/IRAQ/dbfiles/Iraqdatabasehome.htm
Some 15,000 items are now confirmed to be have been stolen. Several famous pieces, such as the Warka Vase and the Warka Head, were retrieved or returned to the museum, but many other important pieces, including the museum’s collection of 4,800 cylinder seals, remains missing. Irrespective of numbers, these losses are tremendous not only to the world of archaeology but to mankind in general.
For documentation on cuneiform tablets from the Iraq Museum see the website of the Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative Project (CDLI).
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