Studying disguised activities in antiquity implies asking what could have been a mask in a specific society and how it could have been used. As the number of currently known masks from pre-theatrical societies is still very low, new examples are especially important, particularly those from sites or regions where they were previously unatested. This paper presents an unpublished fnely-made mask from Tell Mardikh/Ebla (Syria). The detailed analysis of its fnd-context supports its dating to the Late Bronze Age and its provenance from a house. Both these factors make it possible to connect this mask to coeval examples from the Middle Euphrates River Valley, but it difers from them in the practice of inlaying the eye cavities. The use of red slip hints at a comparison with similar metal fnds, while the profle of the mask and its size suggest that it could not have been originally worn. Instead, it is argued that this mask could have covered the face of a life-size statue or could have been applied to a mannequin or a pole that was made of wood or other perishable material. Its discovery in a house makes it plausible to suggest that – following what has already been proposed for the examples from the Middle Euphrates region – it might have been used in domestic cults devoted to the ancestors or the clan/family deities. As the house from which the mask comes was built on the area previously occupied by the Sacred Area of Ishtar, a connection between the goddess and this terracota could be an intriguing working hypothesis.
Masking Phenomena in Late Bronze Age Syria. A New Mask from Ebla”, Studia Eblaitica 7, 159-190 / Alkhalid, Mohammed; M., Orsingher. - In: STUDIA EBLAITICA. - ISSN 2364-7124. - 7:(2021), pp. 159-190. [10.13173/STEBLA/2021/1/159]
Masking Phenomena in Late Bronze Age Syria. A New Mask from Ebla”, Studia Eblaitica 7, 159-190.
Alkhalid;
2021
Abstract
Studying disguised activities in antiquity implies asking what could have been a mask in a specific society and how it could have been used. As the number of currently known masks from pre-theatrical societies is still very low, new examples are especially important, particularly those from sites or regions where they were previously unatested. This paper presents an unpublished fnely-made mask from Tell Mardikh/Ebla (Syria). The detailed analysis of its fnd-context supports its dating to the Late Bronze Age and its provenance from a house. Both these factors make it possible to connect this mask to coeval examples from the Middle Euphrates River Valley, but it difers from them in the practice of inlaying the eye cavities. The use of red slip hints at a comparison with similar metal fnds, while the profle of the mask and its size suggest that it could not have been originally worn. Instead, it is argued that this mask could have covered the face of a life-size statue or could have been applied to a mannequin or a pole that was made of wood or other perishable material. Its discovery in a house makes it plausible to suggest that – following what has already been proposed for the examples from the Middle Euphrates region – it might have been used in domestic cults devoted to the ancestors or the clan/family deities. As the house from which the mask comes was built on the area previously occupied by the Sacred Area of Ishtar, a connection between the goddess and this terracota could be an intriguing working hypothesis.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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