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Warka Vase - Relic
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Warka Vase

description Warka Vase Overview

The Warka Vase is a carved alabaster vessel from Uruk in Iraq, made around 3200-3000 BC and known for early narrative relief carving.

help Warka Vase FAQ

Where was the Warka Vase discovered?

The vase was discovered by a German archaeological team led by Julius Jordan during excavations in the Eanna temple complex of Uruk, in modern-day Iraq, in the 1932-1933 excavation season. Uruk is one of the world's oldest known cities and was dedicated to the goddess Inanna.

Was the Warka Vase looted during the Iraq War?

Yes, the vase was stolen from the National Museum of Iraq in Baghdad during the looting that followed the U.S. invasion in April 2003. It was recovered and returned undamaged in June of that year as part of an amnesty program encouraging the return of stolen artifacts.

What scenes are carved on the Warka Vase?

The alabaster surface is carved in four horizontal registers depicting a religious procession: the bottom layer shows crops and livestock, the middle layers show nude male figures carrying offerings, and the top register shows a figure (likely a priest-king) presenting offerings to the goddess Inanna. It is considered one of the earliest known examples of narrative relief sculpture.

How old is the Warka Vase?

The vase dates to approximately 3200-3000 BC, placing it in the Late Uruk period of Sumerian civilization. This makes it over 5,000 years old and places its creation at the very dawn of urban civilization in Mesopotamia.

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