Two Headed Anatolian Early Turkey Idol Miniature Statue 5.5H

PN# ANA01
  • $29.00 USD
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Two heads with wide open eyes pop out of a central circular body of the small scale statue from Ancient Turkey. The facial expressions are stylized much like the ancient Sumerian statuettes off priests with wide open eyes suggesting supplication to a deity. It would be a helpful replica for homeschooling education for teaching children about early statues and ancient history.

  • This small figurine replica after an original from Anatolia, Ancient Turkey around 2000 BC is reproduced to look like an old original.
  • Made from resin with a metal stand. Ancient text details appears on both sides.
  • Part of the Parastone Museum Collection. PN ANA01
  • Measures: 5.5 in H x 3 in W x 1.5 in D including metal stand. Weight 0.4 lbs.

Two Headed Idol (Anatolia, Ancient Turkey, around 2000 BC).

This curious looking idol was found in Kltepe in central Anatolia, the enormous peninsular that is now the Asian part of Turkey. At the close of the early Bronze Age, around 2000 BC, Anatolia became incredibly wealthy thanks to its strategic location between Asia and Europe. The majority of the population lived in fortified settlements. Large Assyrian trading caravans made up of hundreds of the donkeys loaded with textiles and tin crossed the area. They paid tax to local princes in exchange for protection and the right to establish trading posts (karums).

Kltepe is famous as the site where the oldest Anatolian writings were found. The contracts, bills and stock lists on these clay tablets were written in an Assyrian dialect. The two headed idol dated back to the beginning of the prosperous period. It is very similar to the later, copper statuettes of the Hittites, who captured central Anatolia in the 19th-century BC.


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