Ingot with Hittite hieroglyphs. Culture: Hittite. Dimensions: 3.07 x 3.54 in. (7.8 x 8.99 cm). Date: ca. 14th-13th century B.C..Hittite scribes wrote both in cuneiform script (borrowed from Mesopotamia) and in hieroglyphs, a local development that continued after the end of the Hittite empire into the Neo-Hittite kingdoms. Unfortunately, the hieroglyphs on this silver ingot are not legible, so the writing cannot help us determine the ingot's function.It has been suggested that the ingot belonged to a silversmith, who might have used it to make or repair jewelry, sculpture, or drinking vessels or other ceremonial containers, such as the stag-headed cup (MMA 1989.281.10) . On the other hand, we know that in the earlier Assyrian Trading Colony period specific weights of Anatolian silver were traded for the goods imported from Assyria. Perhaps this ingot, or pieces from it, were weighed and used as currency in Hittite times, since coins as we know them were only invented in the mid-seventh
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SuperStock offers millions of photos, videos, and stock assets to creatives around the world. This image of Ingot with Hittite hieroglyphs. Culture: Hittite. Dimensions: 3.07 x 3.54 in. (7.8 x 8.99 cm). Date: ca. 14th-13th century B.C..Hittite scribes wrote both in cuneiform script (borrowed from Mesopotamia) and in hieroglyphs, a local development that continued after the end of the Hittite empire into the Neo-Hittite kingdoms. Unfortunately, the hieroglyphs on this silver ingot are not legible, so the writing cannot help us determine the ingot's function.It has been suggested that the ingot belonged to a silversmith, who might have used it to make or repair jewelry, sculpture, or drinking vessels or other ceremonial containers, such as the stag-headed cup (MMA 1989.281.10) . On the other hand, we know that in the earlier Assyrian Trading Colony period specific weights of Anatolian silver were traded for the goods imported from Assyria. Perhaps this ingot, or pieces from it, were weighed and used as currency in Hittite times, since coins as we know them were only invented in the mid-seventh by Album/Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY/Album Archivo is available for licensing today.
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Image Number: 4409-17356120Rights ManagedCredit Line:Album/Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY/Album Archivo/SuperStockCollection:Album Archivo Contributor:Album / Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY Model Release:NoProperty Release:NoResolution:3941×3898
