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Sabaean Stele with the Head of a Dignitary

Home  / Sculpture / Relief / Sabaean Stele with the Head of a Dignitary

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  • Sabaean Stele with the Head of a Dignitary

Sabaean Stele with the Head of a Dignitary

This Sabaean (Yemen, Arabia) stele was carved from a rectangular plate; its upper part shows a male face in relief, while the lower section is covered with an inscription in three characters, which may indicate a family name.

Sabaean
1st century A.D., 2nd century B.C.
H: 42.5 cm

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Categories: Relief, Sculpture. Tag: Stele with the Head of a Dignitary.

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Product Description

This stele was carved from a rectangular plate; its upper part shows a male face in relief, while the lower section is covered with an inscription in three characters (11o, to transcribe in Latin characters ll’ ), which may indicate a family name.

The head is oblong, the face is thin with stylized features. It is framed by a chinstrap beard and, on the forehead, by straight bangs in very light relief. There are no individual features: the treatment of the smooth, firm skin shows no wrinkle or expression. This is a constant of South Arabian figures, which all differ from each other, but never show personal features.

The large variety of human representations in South Arabian art is astonishing: along with the statuettes (seated or standing figures), one finds steles in relief, long-necked heads mounted on a base, etc. The fact that they come almost exclusively from necropolises clearly indicates that they were images of the deceased placed near the tomb: the inscription (written in South Arabian language) often provides information on the name, clan and function of the deceased.

Additional information

Culture

Sabaean

Datation

1st century A.D., 2nd century B.C.

Dimensions

H: 42.5 cm

Type

Relief, Sculpture

Material

Limestone

Colors

Beige

Condition

Complete and virtually intact, despite minor chips and damage. Pupils now lost.

Serial Number

30263

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