MEDIA INFORMATION

 
 
 
COLLECTION NAME:
The AMICA Library
Record
AMICA ID:
MMA_.1989.281.16
AMICA Library Year:
2002
Object Type:
Decorative Arts and Utilitarian Objects
Description:

Hittite scribes wrote both in cuneiform script (borrowed from Mesopotamia) and in hieroglyphs, a local development that continued after the end of the Hittite empire into the Neo-Hittite kingdoms. Unfortunately, the hieroglyphs on this silver ingot are not legible, so the writing cannot help us determine the ingot's function.

It has been suggested that the ingot belonged to a silversmith, who might have used it to make or repair jewelry, sculpture, or drinking vessels or other ceremonial containers, such as the stag-headed cup (1989.281.10) also illustrated in this section of the Timeline. On the other hand, we know that in the earlier Assyrian Trading Colony period (ca. 1950&150 ;1750 B.C.), specific weights of Anatolian silver were traded for the goods imported from Assyria. Perhaps this ingot, or pieces from it, were weighed and used as currency in Hittite times, since coins as we know them were only invented in the mid-seventh century B.C.

Creator Nationality:
Asian; Anatolian
Creator Name-CRT:
Central Anatolia
Title:
Ingot with Hittite hieroglyphs
View:
Principal view
Creation Date:
15th?13th century B.C.
Creation Start Date:
0
Creation End Date:
0
Materials and Techniques:
Silver
Style or Period:
Hittite period
Creation Place:
Central Anatolia
Dimensions:
W. 3 1/4 in. (8.3 cm)
AMICA Contributor:
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Owner Location:
New York, New York
ID Number:
1989.281.16
Credit Line:
Gift of Norbert Schimmel Trust, 1989
Copyright:
Copyright ? 2002 The Metropolitan Museum of Art . All rights reserved.
Rights:
Related Image Identifier Link:
MMA_.h1_1989.281.16.tif

Ingot with Hittite hieroglyphs

Ingot with Hittite hieroglyphs