ScienceDaily (July 30, 2012) — A beautiful and
colossal human sculpture is one of the latest cultural treasures
unearthed by an international team at the Tayinat Archaeological Project
(TAP) excavation site in southeastern Turkey. A large semi-circular
column base, ornately decorated on one side, was also discovered. Both
pieces are from a monumental gate complex that provided access to the
upper citadel of Kunulua, capital of the Neo-Hittite Kingdom of Patina
(ca. 1000-738 BC).
"These newly discovered Tayinat sculptures are the product of a
vibrant local Neo-Hittite sculptural tradition," said Professor Tim
Harrison, the Tayinat Project director and professor of Near Eastern
Archaeology in the University of Toronto's Department of Near and Middle
Eastern Civilizations. "They provide a vivid glimpse into the
innovative character and sophistication of the Iron Age cultures that
emerged in the eastern Mediterranean following the collapse of the great
imperial powers of the Bronze Age at the end of the second millennium
BC."
The head and torso of the human figure, intact to just above its
waist, stands approximately 1.5 metres in height, suggesting a total
body length of 3.5 to four metres. The figure's face is bearded, with
beautifully preserved inlaid eyes made of white and black stone, and its
hair has been coiffed in an elaborate series of curls aligned in linear
rows. Both arms are extended forward from the elbow, each with two arm
bracelets decorated with lion heads. The figure's right hand holds a
spear, and in its left is a shaft of wheat. A crescent-shaped pectoral
adorns its chest. A lengthy Hieroglyphic Luwian inscription, carved in
raised relief across its back, records the campaigns and accomplishments
of Suppiluliuma, likely the same Patinean king who faced a Neo-Assyrian
onslaught of Shalmaneser III as part of a Syrian-Hittite coalition in
858 BC.
The second sculpture is a large semi-circular column base,
approximately one metre in height and 90 centimetres in diameter, lying
on its side next to the human figure. A winged bull is carved on the
front of the column and it is flanked by a sphinx on its left. The right
side of the column is flat and undecorated, an indication that it
originally stood against a wall.
"The two pieces appear to have been ritually buried in the paved
stone surface of the central passageway through the Tayinat gate
complex," said Harrison. The complex would have provided a monumental
ceremonial approach to the upper citadel of the royal city. Tayinat, a
large low-lying mound, is located 35 kilometres east of Antakya (ancient
Antioch) along the Antakya-Aleppo road.
The presence of colossal human statues, often astride lions or
sphinxes, in the citadel gateways of the Neo-Hittite royal cities of
Iron Age Syro-Anatolia continued a Bronze Age Hittite tradition that
accentuated their symbolic role as boundary zones, and the role of the
king as the divinely appointed guardian or gate keeper of the community.
By the ninth and eighth centuries BC, these elaborately decorated
gateways, with their ornately carved reliefs, had come to serve as
dynastic parades, legitimizing the power of the ruling elite. The gate
reliefs also formed linear narratives, guiding their audiences between
the human and divine realms, with the king serving as the link between
the two worlds.
The Tayinat gate complex appears to have been destroyed following the
Assyrian conquest of the region in 738 BC, when the area was paved over
and converted into the central courtyard of an Assyrian sacred
precinct. These smashed and deposited monumental sculptures also include
a magnificently carved lion that was discovered last year and
Hieroglyphic Luwian-inscribed stelae (stone slabs or pillars used for
commemoratives purposes). Together these finds hint of an earlier
Neo-Hittite complex that might have once faced the gateway approach.
Scholars have long speculated that the reference to Calno, identified
as one of the "kingdoms of the idols" in Isaiah's oracle against
Assyria (Isaiah 10:9-10), alludes to the Assyrian devastation of Kunulua
(i.e., Tayinat). The destruction of the Luwian monuments and conversion
of the area into an Assyrian religious complex may represent the
physical manifestation of this historic event, subsequently memorialized
in Isaiah's oracle, experts say.
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