- Source: Lady of Galera
Lady of Galera is an alabaster female figurine, made in the 7th century BC, that probably represents the Near Eastern goddess Astarte. It is at the National Archaeological Museum of Spain, in Madrid.
The Lady of Galera is most likely of Phoenician manufacture. She sits between two sphinxes and holds a bowl for liquid that poured from two holes in her breasts. Her hair and costume show Egyptian influences, but the sturdy form also resembles Mesopotamian statues. She may have lasted through several generations as a sacred object before being buried as funeral goods.
The figurine was found in Galera, a Spanish town once called Tutugi, in Granada province. Nearby, in Cerro del Real, is the Iberian Necropolis of Tutugi, an important archeological site with various kinds of tombs. The commonest type of tomb there consists of a rectangular chamber covered by a circular mound, which is reached via a long corridor. In these tombs have been found Phoenician, Greek and Iberian vases, ornaments, weapons, furniture and figures of clay and alabaster, dating between the third and sixth centuries BC.
See also
Iberian sculpture
Astarte
Tanit
Carthaginian Iberia
References
External links
ARTEHISTORIA.COM
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Don Juan de Austria
- Lady of Galera
- Lady of Baza
- Lady of Elche
- National Archaeological Museum (Madrid)
- Lady of Ibiza
- Galera, Granada
- Lady of Cerro de los Santos
- Inanna
- Bacchus of Aldaia
- Phoenician Harpocrates statues