| Management number | 213260065 | Release Date | 2026/04/12 | List Price | $36.00 | Model Number | 213260065 | ||
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This stone seal stamp hails from western Mesopotamia, dating back to roughly the 4th millennium BCE. Once part of the collection of Gustav Oberländer (1926-2012), who acquired his extensive and significant collection of seals between 1985 and the 2000s from reputable dealers and old collections, specializing in early stamp and cylinder seals from prehistoric and dynastic civilizations in the Middle East, including Mesopotamia, Anatolia, and Bactria. If visible in the product photos, this item comes with the original documentation written by Mr. Oberländer. Seal stamps like these played a crucial role in administrative, legal, and trade domains of their time. Crafted from various materials like baked clay, jadeite, diorite, and rock crystal among others, they were primarily used to imprint geometric patterns into soft clay. The seals serve as evidence of early understanding of personal property, and potentially even functioned as counting tools. Many of these seals likely served a dual purpose as amulets, indicated by the holes drilled into them. The Halaf culture, known for its innovative farming techniques and exquisite pottery, marked the earliest known use of these stamp seals. Halaf settlements consisted of round houses, with domestic chores likely carried out in open spaces rather than inside individual homes, reflecting a communal, kinship group social structure. These communities spread widely, coexisting and eventually merging with the Ubaid culture in Iraq. The use of these seal stamps in Halaf society evolved significantly over time. Initially, in the 6th millennium, their society appeared egalitarian, with seals primarily found in communal storehouses. However, as the 5th millennium began, a noticeable shift occurred, influenced by the neighboring Ubaid culture. Halaf settlements started exhibiting more distinct family houses with clearer boundaries. A class distinction emerged, as evidenced by the concentration of seals in new religious structures and specific households, suggesting the rise of an elite class. The function of the seals also changed: from tools for overseeing collective redistribution, they became instruments signifying financial inequalities, used by families who withdrew goods, perhaps as a method of redistributing resources among different households.
| Size | 19mm |
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| Brand Name | history hoard |
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