학술논문

A Sacred Landscape of Sumer: Statuettes from Ur Depicting a Goat on a Tree.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions. 2020, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p27-47. 21p.
Subject
Language
ISSN
1569-2116
Abstract
The statuettes commonly referred to as "Ram Caught in a Thicket" (2500 BC) may well be associated with what is known from later texts (2nd millennium BC) as the (daily) determining-of-the-fates ritual that occurred at sunrise. Symbolic elements (tree, rosette, leaf, possible mountain), and motifs (quadruped facing a tree) occur in other media—glyptic, musical instruments—and their meaning informs the unique combination of elements found in these two statuettes. It is proposed that the statuettes are offering stands. The composition as a whole represents a sacred landscape rather than a charming genre scene. It is likely that the statuettes were associated with the daily ritual of the determining of the fates, which would push the later attestations of that ritual and the cosmological view behind it back to the mid-third millennium BC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]