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History Canvas Print featuring the photograph Gula Incantation, Medical Cuneiform by Science Source

Frame

Top Mat

Top Mat

Bottom Mat

Bottom Mat

Dimensions

Image:

8.00" x 6.00"

Overall:

8.00" x 6.00"

 

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Gula Incantation, Medical Cuneiform Canvas Print

Science Source

by Science Source

$78.00

Product Details

Gula Incantation, Medical Cuneiform canvas print by Science Source.   Bring your artwork to life with the texture and depth of a stretched canvas print. Your image gets printed onto one of our premium canvases and then stretched on a wooden frame of 1.5" x 1.5" stretcher bars (gallery wrap) or 5/8" x 5/8" stretcher bars (museum wrap). Your canvas print will be delivered to you "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.

Design Details

Cuneiform tablet. Gula incantation. Neo-Babylonian or Achaemenid, ca. mid- to late 1st millennium B.C. Probably from Sippar (modern Tell Abu Habba)... more

Ships Within

3 - 4 business days

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Canvas Print Tags

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Photograph Tags

photographs history photos historic photos historical photos ancient civilization photos ancient photos cuneiform photos cuneiform writing photos pictographs photos clay tablet photos text photos writing system photos mesopotamia photos archeology photos archeological photos artifact photos

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Artist's Description

Cuneiform tablet. Gula incantation. Neo-Babylonian or Achaemenid, ca. mid- to late 1st millennium B.C. Probably from Sippar (modern Tell Abu Habba) in Mesopotamia. Proto-cuneiform is the name given to the earliest form of writing -- pictograms that were drawn on clay tablets. Gradually, the pictograms became abstracted into cuneiform (Latin, "wedge-shaped") signs that were impressed rather than drawn. At its greatest extent, cuneiform writing was used from the Mediterranean coast of Syria to western Iran and from Hittite Anatolia to southern Mesopotamia. It was adapted to write at least fifteen different languages. This late Babylonian tablet contains the text of an incantation. The text, which reads from left to right, addresses Gula and Marduk (here identified by his Sumerian name, Asalluhi), who were deities associated with healing, and it calls upon them to help cure an afflicted patient, who is thought to have been attacked by a ghost. Although physicians (Akkadian asus) treated a...

 

$78.00

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