- Ishtar Gate
The Ishtar Gate (Assyrian: ܕܵܪܘܲܐܙܲܐ ܕܥܵܐܫܬܲܪ translit: "Darwaza D'Ishtar",
Arabic :بوابة عشتار) was the eighth gate to the inner city ofBabylon . It was constructed in about 575 BC by order of KingNebuchadnezzar II on the north side of the city.Dedicated to the Babylonian goddess
Ishtar , the Gate was constructed of blue glazed tiles with alternating rows ofbas-relief "sirrush " (dragons ) andaurochs .The roof and doors of the gate were of
cedar , according to the dedication plaque. Through the gate ran the Processional Way which was lined with walls covered inlion s on glazed bricks (about 120 of them).Statues of the deities were paraded through the gate and down the Processional Way each year during the New Year's celebration.
Originally the gate, being part of the
Walls of Babylon , was considered one of theSeven Wonders of the world until, in the 6th century AD, it was replaced with theLighthouse of Alexandria .A reconstruction of the Ishtar Gate and Processional Way was built at the
Pergamon Museum inBerlin out of material excavated byRobert Koldewey and finished in the 1930s. It includes the inscription plaque. It stands 47 feet high and 100 feet wide (14 meters by 30 meters). The excavation ran from 1902-1914 and during that time 45 feet of the foundation of the gate was uncovered.The gate was in fact a double-gate. The part that is shown in the Pergamon Museum today is only the smaller frontal part, while the larger back part was considered too large to fit into the constraints of the structure of the museum. It is in storage.
Parts of the gate and lions from the Processional Way are in various other museums around the world. Only three museums acquired dragons while lions went to several museums. The
Istanbul Archaeology Museum has lions, dragons, and bulls. TheDetroit Institute of Arts houses a dragon. TheRöhsska Museum in Gothenburg, Sweden, has one dragon and one lion; theLouvre , the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, theUniversity of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Philadelphia, theMetropolitan Museum of Art in New York, theOriental Institute in Chicago, theRhode Island School of Design Museum , the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and theYale University Art Gallery of New Haven, Connecticut, each have lions.A smaller reproduction of the gate was built in Iraq under
Saddam Hussein as the entrance to a museum that has not been completed. Damage to the reproduction gate has occurred since theIraq war (see Effects of the U.S. military).Gallery
External links
* [http://www.andycarvin.com/video/pergamon.ishtar.avi Video of Pergamon Museum's Ishtar Gate]
* [http://www.lammgard.se/designmuseum/lejon.htm Pictures of lion & dragon, Röhsska museum, Gothenburg]
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