Back to top: Seals and sealings (i.e., glyptics)
1. Bibliography on Urkesh/E-Library
This list displays in alphabetical order the authors of the contributions mentioned in the following list (each number links to a singular contribution).
For further information about seals/sealings (i.e., glyptics) at Urkesh, see the dedicated topical book “GLYPTICS” (cf. also “Overview” and “Typology/Seal legends”).
For a punctual query, cf. pages “Keywords” and “SEARCH/Topics”.
Back to top: Seals and sealings (i.e., glyptics)
Alphabetical List
Abbati, Valeria (degli):1; 2;
Buccellati, Giorgio: 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8; 9; 10; 11; 12
Kelly-Buccellati, Marilyn: 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8; 9; 10; 11; 12; 13; 14; 15; 16; 17; 18; 19
McCarthy, Andrew: 1
Nadali, Davide: 1
Otto, Adelheid: 1
Sedláček, Tibor: 1
Stein, Diana L.: 1
Suter, Claudia E.: 1
Back to top: Seals and sealings (i.e., glyptics)
Bibliographical entries
The following entries are displayed in chronological order; you can easily find above the publications listed in alphabetical order.
1994 |
Mozan: Tales from a Hurrian (?) Storehouse, Backdirt, Spring, pp. 1,4-5,98. See full text See abstract Sealings from Urkesh are here presented, stressing their importance as the northernmost evidence of cuneiform writing for the third millennium BC; a large storehouse exposed in sector B is then widely described as a possible 'house of the seal(s)'. [mDP – November 2019] |
1995 |
The Identification of Urkesh with Tell Mozan (Syria), Orient-Express 1995/3, cover page and pp. 67-70. See full text See abstract The authors explain in this contribution why they decided to concentrate their efforts on Tell Mozan; moreover, the 'vault' in sector B of the Palace is described, together with its sealings and written materials; the existence and peculiarity of a 'Hurrian art' is then discussed. [mDP – November 2019] |
1995-1996 |
The Royal Storehouse of Urkesh: The Glyptic Evidence from the Southwestern Wing, Archiv für Orientforschung 42-43, pp. 1-32. See full text See abstract Glyptic material (more than 600 seal impressions dating to the mid to late Akkadian period) from the Royal Storehouse (building AK) of Urkesh is here presented, analysing its peculiar features towards the determination of a specific 'Hurrian artistic tradition', further investigating the function of the seals and the storing practices at Urkesh. [mDP – November 2019] |
1996 |
The Seals of the King of Urkesh: Evidence from the Western Wing of the Royal Storehouse AK, Wiener Zeitschrift für die Kunde des Moregenlandes 86, pp. 65-100, pls. 1-7. See full text See abstract Sealings of kings of Urkesh (mostly Tish-atal and Tupkish), are here introduced, underling the peculiarity of the title endan; later on, seals and sealings of queens and queen's household are also presented, offering for all of them a valuable palaeographical and iconographical analysis. [mDP – November 2019] |
1996 |
Nuzi Viewed from Urkesh, Urkesh Viewed from Nuzi: Stock Elements and Framing Devices in Northern Syro-Mesopotamia, Studies on the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians 8, pp. 247-268. See full text See abstract The papers discusses Urkesh's glyptic material in comparison with other specimens coming from the later seals and sealings from Nuzi; the final section of the contribution is instead devoted to the question of Hurrian ethnicity of Urkesh's inhabitants, stressing how attempting to attribute art, or indeed any aspect of material culture, to a specific ethnic group needs to be approached with a great deal of caution and with theoretical awareness (p. 266). [mDP – November 2019] |
1996 |
Seals in Ancient Mesopotamia and Seals of God in Revelation, Rivista della Facoltà di Teologia di Lugano 1, pp. 79-100. See full text See abstract In this paper, the author presents specimens of seals from the fourth, the third and the second millennium BC, discussing their original function and purposes, mostly to guarantee the identity of a person within letters of legal transactions. [mDP – November 2019] |
1997 |
Urkesh. The First Hurrian Capital, Biblical Archaeologist 60, pp. 77-96. See full text See abstract Mythological textual sources are here investigated to define the ethnicity of Urkesh's people, directly reconnecting the myth to a possible actual role played by the city in the trading of metals from the Taurus; moreover, sealings from Tell Mozan (over 1000 items) are presented, strengthening the development of a specific and coherent dynastic program. Two appendices describes some terracotta figurines and a small fragment of a school lexical tablet. [mDP – November 2019] |
1998 |
The Courtiers of the Queen of Urkesh: Glyptic Evidence from the Western Wing of the Royal Storehouse AK, Subartu 4/2, pp. 195-216. See full text See abstract Sealing belonging to Urkesh's king (Tupkish), to queen (Uqnitum), and to theirs courtiers are here described, representing a total amount of 164 rollings of 17 singular seals; these sealings presents a specific typology and style, here analyzed in detail. [mDP – November 2019] |
1998 |
The Workshops of Urkesh, in Giorgio Buccellati and Marilyn Kelly-Buccellati (eds.), Urkesh and the Hurrians, Urkesh/Mozan Studies 3, Bibliotheca Mesopotamica 26, Malibu: Undena Publications, pp. 35-50. See full text See abstract This contribution is devoted to the analysis and of glyptic and stone materials from Urkesh, trying to define how, where and to what purpose they have been realized; a peculiar focus is given to Tell Mozan's workshops: It is difficult to determine how many seal carvers would have been working for the Urkesh dynasts and their courtiers. [...] The artistic climate within some Urkesh workshops stimulated innovating thinking on the part of both artists and patrons. [...] The detail to which the artists went to convey the dynastic message is also impressive and must reflect the very real concerns of the patrons. [...] Evidence for this type of creativity and intense collaboration is otherwise rare in the ancient Near East (pp. 49-50). [mDP] |
1999 |
Das archäologische Projekt Tall Mozan/Urkeš, Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft zu Berlin 131, pp. 7-16. See full text See abstract An overview on the archaeological mission at Tell Mozan/Urkesh: mythological texts, glyptic material, and other various artefacts arise the question about the Hurrian ethnicity of the city; Urkesh was evidently regarded as a 'mythological town', since some myths recognize the city as the home of the god Kumarbi; in the second part of the paper the main structures brought to light at Urkesh (together with some major finds) are presented. [mDP – November 2019] |
2000 |
La figlia di Naram-Sin, Urkesh Folio, 1 (2000), 6 plates. See full text Italian version See abstract The sealings from Urkesh belonging to the daugther of Naram-Sin, Tar’am-Agade are the topic of the present contribution. Their discovery places Urkesh a one of the most important city of the second-half of the third millennium BC, when the royal family of Urkesh strenghted his power by means of a dynastic and wedding alliance with the Akkadian Empire. [mDP – November 2019] |
2000 |
The Royal Palace of Urkesh. Report on the 12th Season at Tell Mozan/Urkesh: Excavations in Area AA, June-October 1999, Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft zu Berlin 132, pp. 133-183. See full text See abstract Area AA (the Royal Palace) at Urkesh has been further investigated in the 12th season, in 1999; the results of this archaeological campaign are reported herewith: the finding on sealings of the name of Tar’am-Agade (Naram-Sin's daughter); the investigations in Area C2 with the discovery of a sealings cache; the interpretation of an iwan structure as a possible scribal installation; the description of some structures on the exterior of the palace; the excavation in the residential quarters of the time of the 'Bitumen Use Ceramic Tradition'; a clay statuette of a female figure is introduced; a paragraph is devoted to the description of the main ceramic typologies; eventually, computer network and digital photography, together with conservation strategies are presented. [mDP – November 2019] |
2001 |
City of Myth: In Search of Hurrian Urkesh, Archaeology Odyssey May/June, pp. 16-27. See full text See abstract The mythological background (the Cycle of Kumarbi) of Hurrian myths related to Urkesh is firstly discussed in this contribution; the authors then report their own works on the site, started in 1984: the main structures and the major finds are presented; a discussion about the function and the actual use of sealings is then offered, underlining the local production of the seals and their typical and characteristic style; two side-boxes offer insights on Hurrian at Nuzi and on the methodological approach applied in the identification of Urkesh with Tell Mozan. [mDP – November 2019] |