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Bactria-Margiana Art : Bactria-Margiana Alabaster Goblet
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Bactria-Margiana Alabaster Goblet - LO.842
Origin: Central Asia
Circa: 2000
BC
to 1500
BC
Dimensions:
6.75" (17.1cm) high
x 4.9" (12.4cm) wide
Collection: Near Eastern
Medium: Alabaster
£9,000.00
Location: Great Britain
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Photo Gallery |
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Description |
This piece pertains to an ancient culture referred
to both as the Bactria-Margiana Archaeological
Complex (BCAM) or as the Oxus Civilisation. The
Bactria-Margiana culture spread across an area
encompassing the modern nations of
Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and
Northern Afghanistan. Flourishing between
about 2100 and 1700 BC, it was contemporary
with the European Bronze Age, and was
characterised by monumental architecture, social
complexity and extremely distinctive cultural
artefacts that vanish from the record a few
centuries after they first appear. Pictographs on
seals have been argued to indicate an
independently-developed writing system.
It was one of many economic and social entities
in the vicinity, and was a powerful country due to
the exceptional fertility and wealth of its
agricultural lands. This in turn gave rise to a
complex and multifaceted set of societies with
specialist craftsmen who produced luxury
materials such as this for the ruling and
aristocratic elites. Trade appears to have been
important, as Bactrian artefacts appear all over
the Persian Gulf as well as in the Iranian Plateau
and the Indus Valley. For this reason, the area
was fought over from deep prehistory until the
Mediaeval period, by the armies of Asia Minor,
Greece (Macedonia), India and the Arab States,
amongst others.
Through local stone carvers inhabiting the
regions of Margiana and Bactria experienced no
shortage in material; the main raw material was
soft steatite or a dark soapstone, but also various
kinds of marble and white-veined alabaster. The
main source for these stones, including semi-
precious lapis-lazuli, was in Bactria, at
Badakhshan in north-western Afghanistan, which
provided material not only for the Bactrian and
Margian carvers but also farther to the west into
Mesopotamia, for the Assyrian kings. White-
veined alabaster was indeed used for varied
vessels, including small vases with
disproportionately long stems and low capacity,
such as the one here illustrated.
- (LO.842)
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