Dish

ca. 1300–1000 BCE
Not on view
This dish has a flat base and a straight rim. A small handle in the form of a horned animal head rises from one side. The dish is made of grey clay, and wheel lines on the interior indicate that it was made on a potter’s wheel.

This dish was excavated at Tepe Sialk, near Kashan in central Iran. Sialk was the site of a fortified town, constructed in the early first millennium B.C. Several hundred yards from the town there was a large cemetery, called Necropolis A by the archaeologists who discovered it in 1934. The graves were pits lined with stones, and in addition to the bodies of the dead they contained mainly ceramic vessels such as this one, along with metal weapons and jewelry, and occasionally cylinder seals. Possibly this dish was used in a funerary banquet or ritual before it was placed in the grave; the base suggests, however, that it was designed for use on a flat surface such as a table, meaning its primary intended purpose was for dining. Regardless, its burial in the cemetery shows that drinking was an important part of life and death in Iron Age Sialk.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Dish
  • Period: Iron Age I
  • Date: ca. 1300–1000 BCE
  • Geography: Iran, Tepe Sialk
  • Culture: Iran
  • Medium: Ceramic
  • Dimensions: 3.54 in. (8.99 cm)
  • Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1948
  • Object Number: 48.98.22
  • Curatorial Department: Ancient West Asian Art

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