Double-sided stamp seal, late 3rd - early 2nd millennium BC. Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex. Currently in the Met museum...
Official interpretation of the images: "nude winged hero dominating snakes" on one side and "winged dragon" on the other.
About the "nude winged hero dominating snakes"...This is not a "master of the animals"...This is Mesopotamian Shamash (or his BMAC equivalent), the sun god, with sun heat rays coming out of his shoulders...Both of his shoulders. Which means full power, maximum heat...Depicting here in dry irrigation canal. In between the lions...Which means in Leo. The hottest and driest part of the year in Mesopotamia...And Bactria by the way...
About the "winged dragon"...In Bronze Age Mesopotamia the dragons did indeed have lion's bodies...But had no wings...They had the heat rays radiating from their backs, just like Shamash...They also had snake heads...7 snake heads. One for every month of the old Sumerian summer.
Evolving into this lion dude with heat rays radiating out his back in "wing like" fashion, on our original BMAC seal...
Until we get to the winged lion...Which no one really understands very much...I talked about this cute guy and the reason why he has wings and why he likes chewing bull's butts in my post "Butt chewing"
I presume you meant "on" rather than "no" here: 'And maybe we can see how it happened no BMAC seals...'
ReplyDeleteOnce again, excellent post clarifying a very confusing image. I am currently trying to figure out what these stone stamp seals were actually called. In Turkish, damga, in Mongolian tamga, in Malay cap "chahp" (from Chinese?) but I don't know in Sumerian, Assyrian, Greek, Balto-Slavic.
:) Yes. On BMAC seals
DeletePicture stone from Gotland https://www.pinterest.se/pin/571464640209333707/
ReplyDeleteFascinating
ReplyDeleteAncient Aryan Culture all over the world:
ReplyDeleteYou will find answers and confirmation of your theories here:
https://frenschan.org/r/res/630.html