Foundation figures

Foundation figure in the form of a peg surmounted by the bust of King Ur-Namma, Neo-Sumerian, Ur III period, reign of Ur-Namma, c. 2112–2094 BCE.

Foundation figures were ritualistic works of art from the Early Dynastic period that were used in the construction of ancient Mesopotamian temples. Foundation pegs first appeared in ancient Sumer around the third millennium BCE.[1] Stylized as anthropomorphic nails, foundation figures were symbolically used to mark the grounds of a temple.[2] These nails/pegs were either hammered around the foundation of the temple, along with an inscribed tablet, or they were buried in clay boxes under the foundation of the temple. Typically, the pegs were created to represent either the deity that the temple was honoring, or the king that orchestrated the construction of the temple.[2] Many of the pegs discovered stand about a foot tall and show a clear attention to detail. It is believed that foundation figures were used for solely ritualistic purposes.[3] This is because they were not meant to be seen by the public, yet still show a high level of detail and aesthetic thought.

  1. ^ Richard L. Zettler. "From Beneath the Temple: Inscribed Objects from Ur," Expedition 28 (January 1, 1986): 29-38, 32.
  2. ^ a b (Bahrani, Zainab. "Architectural Ritual ." Art of Mesopotamia, Thames & Hudson, 2017, p. 82.).
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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