HOME :
Near Eastern Art :
Sassanid Art : Sassanian Brown Agate Seal
|
 |
|
|
Sassanian Brown Agate Seal - FJ.0446
Origin: Amman, Jordan
Circa: 200
AD
to 600
AD
Dimensions:
.875" (2.2cm) high
x .875" (2.2cm) wide
x .75" (1.9cm) depth
Catalogue: V1
Collection: Near Eastern
Medium: Agate
Additional Information: hk, sold
Location: Great Britain
|
|
|
Photo Gallery |
|
Description |
In 244 A.D., Ardeshir I founded the
Sassanid
Dynasty, the last native Persian Kingdom
to
rule
Ancient Iran before the Islamic
conquest.
The
Sassanid era was a golden age of Persian
culture
that witnessed the revival of
Zoroastrianism, an
ancient mystical religion native to
these
lands,
and a literary Renaissance spurred by
the
translation of many Old Persian epics
recorded in
cuneiform into the Middle Persian
language
of
Pahlavi written in an alphabet derived
from
Aramaic. By introducing heightened
international
trade and commerce they created a legacy
of
political and economic diplomacy. They
sponsored trade with the Romans (later
on
the
Byzantines), their archenemy, to the
west
and the
Chinese to the east. Excavations in
China
have
unearthed gold and silver Sassanid coins
covering a span of many centuries until
the
demise of the Empire during the reign of
Khosrow II. However, the fall of the
Empire
had
already started with a series of wars
waged
under the rule of Khosrow I, the father
of
Khosrow II. Challenged by the
intensification of
the same international commerce that had
bore
such wealth, struggles for national
power
and
international prestige had escalated to
an
ungovernable degree. In the face of
threats
to his
royal house, Khosrow II embarked upon
military
campaigns that would prove unsuccessful.
By
the close of his reign, the once mighty
Sassanid
Empire came to an end, paving the way
for
the
rise of Islam in the Middle East.
A star and a crescent moon, associated
with the
ancient Persian faith of Zoroaster,
flank this
elegant portrait of a Sassanid noble.
The
inscription is a name: “Moraspand”,
which
was
common among the Sassanid aristocracy.
One
needs only to look upon this proud image
to
understand that the sitter is a man of
importance. Through this small but
powerful
talisman, we touch directly upon that
ancient
life.
- (FJ.0446)
|
|
|