Typ <itemType> |
Objekt/föremål |
Plats <presPlaceLabel> |
Presumably from Anatolia. |
Inventory number <itemDescription> |
|
Acquisition <itemDescription> |
|
Comments <itemDescription> |
-
Erroneously marked ”MM 1959:008”. When Telemachus visited Nestor in Pylos in his search for his father Odysseus, the wise king honored him and his companion Athena with a costly sacrifice, a heifer wi...
Visa hela
Erroneously marked ”MM 1959:008”. When Telemachus visited Nestor in Pylos in his search for his father Odysseus, the wise king honored him and his companion Athena with a costly sacrifice, a heifer with her horns overlaid with gold. “The heifer came from the plain and from the swift shapely ship came the comrades of great-hearted Telemachus; the smith came, bearing in his hands his tools of bronze, the implements of his craft, anvil and hammer and well-made tongs, wherewith he wrought the gold, and Athene came to accept this sacrifice. Then the old man Nestor, the driver of chariots, gave gold, and the smith prepared it, and overlaid the horns of the heifer, that the goddess might rejoice when she beheld the offering” (Od. III, 430-438). This Homeric passage helps us to understand the function of the horn, with its tip sheathed in gold, in the Békésy Collection. According to Prof. Nils-Gustaf Gejvall the horn is a snag from the antler of a red deer. From the earliest Neolithic villages (Çatal Hüyük) down to the Greek cult of Artemis and later of Diana the red deer was a sacred animal in Anatolia. The habit of sheathing the horns of sacrificial animals in precious materials was known from Mesopotamia to Greece. The red deer was, however, particularly revered in Anatolia. Many snags have been found in Anatolian votive dumps, especially from Troy. It therefore seems reasonable to assume that this snag originates from Anatolia. It is the only one known to us with a tip sheathed in gold. There is also a pierced hole for suspension. As few other objects this horn evokes scenes of a pageant past with costly royal sacrifices. “Now when they had prayed, and had strewn the barley grains, straightway the son of Nestor, Thrasymedes, high of heart, came near and dealt the blow; and the axe cut through the sinews of the neck, and loosened the strength of the heifer. Then the women raised the sacred cry, the daughters and the sons’ wives and the revered wife of Nestor” (Od. III, 447-452).Madeleine von Heland
Stäng
|
Dimensions <itemDescription> |
|
Exhibitions <itemDescription> |
-
Donation of the Hungarian-American professor Georg von Békésy (1899-1972). He was leader of the research-department at the Hungarian Telephone Company until he left Hungary in 1946. After spending a p...
Visa hela
Donation of the Hungarian-American professor Georg von Békésy (1899-1972). He was leader of the research-department at the Hungarian Telephone Company until he left Hungary in 1946. After spending a period at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm (1946-1947), professor at Harvard University (1947-1966), and after that he served at the University of Hawaii. In 1961, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in Stockholm. His good relations to Sweden resulted in several donations received by Swedish Museums in 1972. The numbers connected with the objects in these donations are still those given by von Békésy himself.
Stäng
|
Publications <itemDescription> |
-
Wirgin, Jan, ed. 1974 The Georg von Békésy Collection. Malmö, p 34. George von Békésy’s Antiksamling. Stockholm 1974 p 32.
|
Utställning / ingår i <itemDescription> |
|
Exhibition / Previously <itemDescription> |
|
Exhibition, Part of / Current <itemDescription> |
|
Exhibition, Part of / Previously <itemDescription> |
|
Acquisition, Swedish <itemDescription> |
|
Referens, publicerad i <itemDescription> |
|
Händelse <context> |
-
Förvärvad av Békésy, Georg von.
-
Funnen i Presumably from Anatolia..
-
Ägd av Nobelstiftelsen.
|
Material, engelska<itemMaterial> |
- Antler
- Gold
- Horn
|
Nyckelord <itemKeyWord> |
|
Mått <itemMeasurement> |
-
Length / Längd: 24,2 cm.
-
Diameter: 3,4 cm.
|
Object<itemName> |
- antler
- ornament
|
Ämne <subject> |
|
Inventory number <itemNumber> |
|
Rättigheter för metadata <itemLicense> |
|
Källa <presOrganization> |
Statens museer för världskultur - Medelhavsmuseet |
Källa <url>
|
|