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Basım Tarihi: ca. 2450 BCE
Basım Yeri - Penn Museum
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Kütüphane: Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası B17528A | 29617
Kayıt Numarası penn-museum-29617
Lokasyon Penn Museum
Tarih ca. 2450 BCE
Notlar CBS Register: copper, pair of harpoon head, arrow or spear head. length 134 mm sample found in Sam Nash's Metallurgy cabinets. Sample Number Ur 52 Woolley termed these weapons “harpoon-shaped arrowheads” and noted that the marks of the (sinew?) binding that secured them to their shafts were visible at the base of the hollow sockets. Both were found to the right of the entrance to PG 580’s death pit, along with other sets of weapons, including unbarbed and barbed arrowheads and spearheads, that Woolley surmised had been carried in quivers. The rounded and flattened tops of these weapons and the prominent side hook suggest that these were not arrowheads or harpoons but more likely pole weapons sued, probably in phalanx fighting, for hooking and pulling. | Length: 13.4 | Width: 2.3 | Thickness: 1.4 | Measurement unit: Centimeters/Inches | more | less
Parçası Olduğu Curatorial section: Near Eastern
Malzeme Copper Alloy
Kaynağa git Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi Digital Library of the Middle East
Digital Library of the Middle East Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Kaynağa git

Untitled

Basım Tarihi ca. 2450 BCE
Basım Yeri - Penn Museum
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Kütüphane Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası B17528A | 29617
Kayıt Numarası penn-museum-29617
Lokasyon Penn Museum
Tarih ca. 2450 BCE
Notlar CBS Register: copper, pair of harpoon head, arrow or spear head. length 134 mm sample found in Sam Nash's Metallurgy cabinets. Sample Number Ur 52 Woolley termed these weapons “harpoon-shaped arrowheads” and noted that the marks of the (sinew?) binding that secured them to their shafts were visible at the base of the hollow sockets. Both were found to the right of the entrance to PG 580’s death pit, along with other sets of weapons, including unbarbed and barbed arrowheads and spearheads, that Woolley surmised had been carried in quivers. The rounded and flattened tops of these weapons and the prominent side hook suggest that these were not arrowheads or harpoons but more likely pole weapons sued, probably in phalanx fighting, for hooking and pulling. | Length: 13.4 | Width: 2.3 | Thickness: 1.4 | Measurement unit: Centimeters/Inches | more | less
Parçası Olduğu Curatorial section: Near Eastern
Malzeme Copper Alloy
Digital Library of the Middle East
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