READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE ASSYRIAN EMPIRE. TABLE OF CONTENTSCHAPTER XV
ORIENTAL ART OF THE SAITE PERIOD
I
ARCHAISM IN EGYPTIAN ART
THE decline of the Egyptian civilization under the
XXth Dynasty saw also a decline in the arts. Architecture became heavy and
lumpy, the pillars of temple-courts resembled rows of sausages and the
inscriptions on their architraves became disproportionately large. It was an
epoch of bad taste. Decoration was vulgarized by the lavish use of gold, which
while beautiful when combined with other materials and as the vehicle of
coloured stones, is coarse and ugly in itself, and in
mass is unbearable. The representations of the human figure became as
monotonously alike as those of an Assyrian relief. And the type they perpetuate
is an inane and degenerate one.
Under the XXIst Dynasty there was something of a
revival of taste. The ushabti figures, for instance, which under the XXth
Dynasty had in some cases degenerated into shapeless blocks of calcite rudely
scrawled in green and black paint, were now made of a very deep and brilliant
blue faience, not so delicate as that of the XVIIIth and XIXth Dynasties and
glassier than that of the XIIth, on which the inscription was painted in an
equally brilliant black glaze. But the coffins of the time preserve the bad
taste of the preceding dynasty, with their yellow-varnished decoration in low
gesso relief designed to give the appearance of gold. A new style of wrapping
the mummies now comes in. Also, in the vignettes and writing of the funerary
papyri we notice a new tendency to comparative smallness and greater neatness.
In architecture we see no new tendencies as yet. The Tanites, to a much greater
extent the Bubastites, built largely (and no doubt heavily) in the Delta: the
work of Osorkon II survives to some extent, and is well known. It presents no
outstanding features of interest. And the chapel of Osiris Hikzet at Thebes,
built by Osorkon III is uninteresting. Under the Bubastites the level of the
arts falls distinctly. There is still some charm left in the work of the
priest-kings, but under the XXIInd Dynasty it is absent. This, though not the
worst, was the dullest and least inspired period of Egyptian art. The temple
reliefs are mere clichés of those of the Ramessids: sculpture in the round is
expressionless and without originality or distinction; the smaller arts reach
their nadir.
Yet there was a new spirit beginning to blow through
the choked and dusty ways of art. It is first observable in small art under the
Ethiopians, but its influence does not become apparent in sculpture until the
beginning of the XXVIth Dynasty, when it became the fashion. Its characteristic
was conscious archaism. We have already mentioned it in dealing with the
history of the Saite period. This was a new tendency in art, previously
unprecedented, and typical of a degenerate age. In the strong old days men
often admired the works of their predecessors but never so much as actually to
imitate them. The taste of the IVth Dynasty would never have appealed in this
way to the men of the XVIIIth, still less to those of the XIXth or XXth
Dynasties. Their taste may have been bad towards the end, but it was at least a
natural development. They would simply have shrugged their shoulders at the
work of the Old Kingdom as ‘Gothic,’ and would certainly never have thought of
reviving its style.
The art of the XIXth and XXth Dynasties was of course
Theban, and the Bubastite of the XXIInd Dynasty inherited the Theban style and
spirit. But in the eighth century the new archaizing spirit grew up, most
probably at Memphis. There, where the remains of the more ancient dynasties
dominated the necropolis-fields of Sakkarah and Gizeh, the art of the
Pyramidbuilders must always have been regarded with more understanding than in
the south, where it always had been comparatively little represented, and had in
any case been overlaid by the works of the Theban dynasties. At Memphis,
however, nobody could ignore the work of the early kings, which on every hand
challenged comparison with that of the XIXth Dynasty monarchs (no doubt the
best represented at Memphis of the later style) and of their inferior
imitators, the Bubastites.
It was natural that when, in the eighth century, the
kingdom was once more virtually divided, and the prestige of Bubastis as well
as of Thebes had sunk to a low ebb, and the local dynasts of the Delta looked
to a leader of their own country from Sais and Memphis, that a Memphite school
of art should have arisen, characterized by an archaistic imitation of the
early styles. This new style was soon adopted in the south, at any rate in
small objects of art, as we find scarabs of Kashta, Amonirdis, Shabaka and
Taharka decorated with spirals imitated from those of the XIIth Dynasty. It is
interesting to note that here the style of the XIIth Dynasty had to be
followed, as there were no contemporary scarabs of the Pyramid-builders to be
imitated. But a certain mixture of Old Kingdom and Middle Kingdom styles is to
be noted in this imitating archaistic art, as was natural. We have seen much
the same thing in the early days of our own revival of ‘Gothic.’
In the reign of Psamatik I the archaizing style became
quite fashionable, and we see tombs decorated with reliefs of country life,
trains of servants representing estates bearing the products for the
delectation of the dead man in the underworld, and so forth, in almost slavish
imitation of the tomb reliefs of the IVth to VIth Dynasties. This ancient style
was considered peculiarly appropriate to the great tombs which the chief men of
the realm now began to build for themselves, and already in the time of
Psamatik we find that this fashion has reached Thebes. In the Asasif, the flat
ground between the tomb-hill of Sheikh ‘Abd el-Kurnah and the village of
Kurnah, and immediately in front of the cliff-cirque and temples of Der
el-Bahri, rise the dilapidated crude-brick pylons, with arched gateways, of the
tomb-enclosures of Mentumehet and Pediamonopet. The first was the prince of
Thebes at the time of the Assyrian invasions, whom we have met already. In his
tomb we find scenes of offering-bringers that were copied from the walls of the
funerary temple of Queen Hatshepsut at Der el-Bahri, close by, which themselves
had probably been copied from the Xlth Dynasty pyramid-temple of king
Mentuhotep. The second was an important priestly official. His tomb, excavated
in the rock beneath, is enormous in size and in the number of its chambers,
many of which were sculptured with scenes in the new archaizing style. The
outer wall of its enclosure, to which the arch-pylon belongs, is built with
deeply recessed panels of the false-door type, which strangely resemble those
of the great First Dynasty tomb at Nakada.
A third tomb close by, quite recently discovered by
the American excavators, working for the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art,
is an admirable example of the type. It was built for a certain Pebasa (‘The
Leopard’), chief-steward of the Divine Adoratrix Nitocris, daughter of
Psammetichus I, who nominally ruled Thebes from 654 till her death seventy
years later, in the reign of Apries. The date of the tomb is probably about 620.
It is much smaller, of course, than Pediamonopet’s, but has its subterranean
antechamber and hypostyle hall, and its court of offerings open to the sky
above in the inner court of the enclosure. The walls of the underground chamber
are decorated with archaizing sculptures which betray their modernity; for
underneath the imitation of the Old Kingdom models we still see the Theban
style, the inheritance of the XVIIIth Dynasty. A fourth tomb,
that of Nesisepek, mayor of Thebes and vizier at the same period, has an
entrance like that of the XIth Dynasty tombs nearby, and sculptures equally
imitated from those of the Old Kingdom.
A fifth tomb close by, that of Aba, also steward of
the ‘Adoratrix’ Nitocris, ‘is interesting because certain scenes on its walls
were copied from those in the tomb of a namesake of his who lived far back in
the days of the VIth Dynasty, at Der el-Gebrawi between Manfalut and Asyut....
It has occasionally been possible to restore scenes in the older tomb at Der
el-Gebrawi by the copies in the Theban tombs. These copies are sometimes very
accurate, at others they might be described as adaptations, occasionally
modernized.’ This is one of the best examples of deliberate Saite imitation.
The old style of tomb-relief was so much admired that we see it reproduced in
miniature in woodcarving or ivory, or on small amulets of glazed steatite. A
fine example in the second material is a box of carved and tinted ivory shown
in the Burlington Club exhibition of Egyptian art in 1922. There is no doubt
whatever as to the Saite date of this box, yet the miniature reliefs have all
the feeling of Old Kingdom work, and it has been remarked that the well-known
Saite simper, which so often betrays the late date of archaistic works of this
period, is totally absent from the faces of the figures. But this simper is
really characteristic of later, not earlier Saite work, and is most apparent
under the Ptolemies. It is probable that this remarkable box is to be attributed
to the seventh century. It is no doubt a mark of archaism to find funerary
reliefs rather senselessly imitated on a box that was probably not intended for
any funerary use whatever. This is perhaps a sign of bad taste, which is not seldom apparent in a period of artificialism in art,
such as this. We see the same inappropriateness in small amulets, such as one
in the British Museum which bears on it a miniature relief of a great man, the
owner of a tomb, seated stick in hand, in the style of the IVth Dynasty, and of
course contemplating, instead of his flocks and herds—vacancy.
Saite art was in fact often very precious, and went
with the preciosity characteristic of the time in other respects, such as the
titulature of the great men, in which an affected archaism was rampant. The
archaistic fashion persisted till the early Ptolemaic period, as we see in the
reliefs of the tomb of the Hermopolite high-priest Petosiris at Derut, near
Eshmunen. These reliefs are extraordinarily interesting as exhibiting not only
the continued vigour of the archaistic spirit, but also the influence of Greek
art, and the combination of the foreign influence with the two native currents
of inspiration, the traditionally developed and the consciously archaistic. The
Greek touches in costume and the tournure of the figures are of the highest
interest to observe. Reliefs of tombs such as those of Zanefer and
Psamatikneferseshemu, mentioned by Maspero in his Art in Egypt, are hardly to
be dated as late as he would have put them, and cannot in any case be later
than the early part of the fourth century BC: indeed, that of Psamatik-Nefer-Seshemu
may well belong to the fifth. In them we see the archaistic style of
tomb-decoration midway between the work of the seventh century that we have described
at Thebes, and that of the third, in the reign of Ptolemy Soter, at Derut.
II
SAITE PORTRAITURE, SMALL ART, ETC
It must not be supposed that the whole current of
Egyptian art had been turned into the archaistic channel. The traditional style
survived, modified by archaistic influences, or at least purified by them from
the more conspicuous vulgarisms into which it had fallen from the XXth to the
XXIInd Dynasty. It was probably at Thebes more than anywhere else that the old
imperial style survived, except in such matters as tomb-decoration, in which
the archaizing of Memphis prevailed. This is chiefly noticeable in
architecture, in which the old models were generally followed; but in temples
we find a new fashion of dedicating huge monolithic shrines (naoi), that are
characteristic of the Saite period. Conservatism is also seen in the case of
small statuary. The well-known alabaster statuette of the high-priestess
Amonirdis at Cairo is a case in point. Many variations on this theme are known
in our museums, especially in bronze: one in the British Museum was found at
Camirus in Rhodes with other Egyptian objects of the Saite period from
Naucratis. The statue of the later high-priestess Ankhnes-Neferibre
(temp. Amasis) is a heavy and
clumsy example of the survival of the Ramessid tradition. It is obvious that
Old or even Middle Kingdom models could not be found for every statue or
relief.
The typical wig and wing-sleeved garments of the XVIIIth—XXth
Dynasties were not often represented now, though we know that the latter were
generally worn. Fashion decreed that statues should have the ancient costume of
the simple waistcloth, which nobody of rank really wore. Sometimes, as in the
remarkable statue No. 1682 of the British Museum, which is frankly archaistic
from top to toe, not only the ancient kilt but also the ancient ‘bobbed’ wig of
short curls characteristic of the Vth Dynasty is uncompromisingly represented.
No Saite Egyptians really went about like this. We know what they really looked
like from the amusing caricatures of the Greek vase-painters which we see in
the early sixth century, as on an Ionian hydria found at Caere in Italy, and
now in Vienna, which depicts the conflict of Heracles with the legendary
Egyptian king Busiris and his followers—a theme repeated in the kylix by
Epiktetos in the British Museum, executed nearly a century later. Here the
Egyptian retainers have the kilt, now confined to the common people, but
Busiris and his courtiers wear the long gauffred white linen robe that they had
actually worn since the time of the XVIIIth Dynasty, and their heads are
clean-shaven.
It is evident from the later Saite statues that many
Egyptians (not merely the priests or those holding priestly offices) did go
about without wigs more than was formerly the custom, but usually we find the
less severely archaizing figures with a round wig falling behind the ears which
was evidently a really existing fashion of coiffure at the time, since we know
it at no earlier period. It is, however, often combined with the archaic and
obsolete kilt in a way which exactly resembles our late XVIIth and early
XVIIIth century representations of Englishmen or Frenchmen or Austrians as
ancient Romans, but with long perukes. What was really worn with the round wig or
shaven poll was the long linen robe. Under the Ptolemies and Romans we find a
fringed and dagged robe represented, passing over the left shoulder and leaving
the right bare almost in the fashion of a toga. This no doubt represents the
real dress of the Ptolemaic grandees, as modified to some extent by Greek
influence. The dress of the women shows no notable change till Roman times.
A remarkable characteristic of Saite art is the
revival of portraiture, which may also be regarded as a result of the archaistic
movement. It is noticeable, as in the portrait statues of Mentumehet, at the
end of the Ethiopian period, and no doubt marks a reaction against the
characterless representations common under the Ramessids and Bubastites, and a
return to the painstaking portraiture of the IVth and Vth Dynasties. Some of
the Saite heads are remarkable for their obvious truth, and this fidelity was
maintained under the Sebennytites down to the beginning of the Ptolemaic
period. The study of these heads and their comparison with the ancient
portraits is very instructive, and one can draw interesting conclusions from
them as to how far foreign infiltration had modified the Egyptian type during
more than two thousand years.
At the same time, when the portrait of the individual
was not insisted upon, or when the sculptor was incapable of reproducing it, a
conventional type grew up which becomes commoner towards the end of the period,
in which the face has the fixed smile or simper we have already mentioned. It
is not previously met with, and is characteristic of the late sixth to fourth
centuries; it became fixed under the Ptolemies, and only disappeared with the
dry, hard Romano-Egyptian style. This smile we see in egyptizing Cypriote Greek
sculpture of the sixth century B.C., and it is possible that it was a feature
borrowed from the work of the Greek sculptors and vase-painters of the time,
which would be well known not only from that of the Cypriotes but also from
that of Greece itself at Naucratis. The court of Necho, Apries, and Amasis at
the neighbouring Sais was certainly not unacquainted with ‘archaic’ Greek art.
In Cyprus, in return, the Egyptian round wig and conventional waistcloth appear
as the garment of smiling Greek figures.
Another characteristic of Saite art is the meticulous
care evinced in the cutting of hieroglyphs and small figures in hollow relief.
It is often ‘finikin’ and this refined attention to detail is specially noticeable under the Sebennytites. At the same
time the wonderful accuracy with which the hardest stones, such as green and
black basalt, specially in vogue at this period, were
carved is equally noticeable, and forbids any undue depreciation of the work of
these sculptors. They did fine work in the cutting of hieroglyphs in these
adamantine materials which would have astonished the XVIIIth and XIXth Dynasty
sculptors with their soft limestone and comparatively easily-worked granite.
The huge stone sarcophagi of the time are specially notable, and were imitated by the Phoenicians, as is that of Eshmunazar in the
Louvre. Even huger sarcophagi were made for the mummified Apis-bulls in the
Serapeum at Memphis, discovered by Mariette in 1850. These are of granite,
average 13 feet in length and weigh 65 tons each. Stone vases were often made
in imitation of those of the earliest dynasties, and in the British Museum
there are ancient vases of the First Dynasty with Saite inscriptions.
Among the objects of funerary art that had no ancient
representatives and so could not be treated in accurate archaistic fashion
were the shawabti or ushabti figures;
the little ‘answerers’ who accompanied the dead man to the tomb to answer for
him if he should be called upon to work in the next world. There were no
ushabtis before the XIIth Dynasty to copy; but the Saites managed to
differentiate theirs in somewhat archaistic fashion from those of the XVIIIth
and XIXth Dynasties by giving them the high plinth at the back and the pedestal
under the feet that had been very characteristic of the Old Kingdom sculpture and
was imitated now by the Saite statuaries. They also dropped the fashion
inaugurated under the XVIIIth Dynasty of representing the ushabti in the
ordinary costume of civil life (which had existed side by side with the usual
representation as a mummy), and returned to the sole use of the mummiform type,
with the addition of the long plaited beard of a god, appropriate to Osiris,
with whom the deceased was identified. At the end of the XXVIth Dynasty and
under the Sebennytites they also gave the ushabti a heavy curved wig that had
been characteristic of women and goddesses under the Middle Kingdom.
The material of which these figures were made was
usually faience; and here also we see a return to ancient fashion in the colour
of the glaze, which, instead of the deep and brilliant blue in vogue (with
variations of shade) from the XIIth to the XXIst Dynasties, was now of the pale
blue characteristic of the faience of the Old Kingdom. The use of this pale
blue faience, the blue of turquoise rather than of lapis, is equally
characteristic of the Saite period in faience and in the coloured frit or
homogeneous composition now in vogue for such figures and amulets, scarabs,
vases, and other small ceramic objects. A characteristic form of vase was the
‘pilgrim-bottle,’ often with good wishes for the New Year incised upon it, and
evidently used commonly as a gift. Other common forms were the situla and the
alabastron, the first really a metal form, and the second a stone form. At Naucratis
we find that factories of Egyptian and Graeco-Egyptian objects of these
materials must have existed, whose products were exported to Camirus in Rhodes
and to other Greek centres even as far as the colonies of the Black Sea, where
they seem to have been popular. And in Phoenicia the same faience was also
imitated in egyptizing objects that were exported to Tharros in Sardinia and other
western trading-colonies.
This pale blue, sometimes pale green, Saite ceramic,
with an occasional inlay of darker blue, is usually fine and delicate, and
often extremely beautiful. And perhaps the finest of all Egyptian glaze-work of
the more delicate kind was produced under Nekhthorehbet, the last Sebennytite
king of the fourth century, in the remarkable polychrome faience hieroglyphs
for inlay, now (1925) in the Carnarvon Collection.
The fine style survived, though with a thicker and
glassier glaze and in a peculiar grey-blue colour, almost like that of Chinese
celadon-ware, under the Ptolemies. Under the Persians the commoner glaze had
already coarsened, and we find ushabtis covered with a sugary glass film like
thin ice, pale blue except for the wig which is dark blue. This coarse, often
crazed sugary glaze became the typical Egyptian glaze of the Roman period, with
its deep greens, blues and yellows, and its novel green effect produced by
glazing blue over yellow, which was the ancestor of the glaze ware of Fostat,
of Persia and of China.
In glass we find the alabastron form characteristic of
pottery at this time reproduced in the variegated bottles made not only in
Egypt, but all over the east Mediterranean world, descendants of the art of the
XVIIIth Dynasty glassmakers. At the same time, coloured pictorial glass made of
rods lightly fused together to form a miniature picture came into vogue, and
characterized the Sebennytite, Ptolemaic and Roman periods.
The ordinary pottery, other than that of faience, was
crude and uninteresting. In woodwork the ordinary ‘Empire’ models seem to have
been still generally followed. Jewellery and work in the precious metals have
the delicacy but not the beauty that might have been expected: here the splendid
examples of the XIIth Dynasty, for instance, do not seem to have been known,
and work followed traditional non-archaizing lines. The same may be said of
bronze-work, which was, however, massive and good, if undistinguished.
III
INTERCOURSE WITH THE MEDITERRANEAN LANDS
We have more than once referred above to the question
of mutual influence of Greek and Egyptian art at this time, and to the factory
of egyptizing objects at Naucratis. There can be little doubt that the regular
commercial connection with Egypt established by the Milesians in the eighth
century BC must have caused a certain rapprochement between the artists of the
two countries, though naturally it was the inquisitive Greek who was the more
eager of the two to learn from the other. The Egyptian, who was now (like the
Chinese) in the full tide of that pompous admiration of his own antiquity,
which we see so well exemplified in Herodotus’s piromis story, would patronize
the Greek, who would learn something from him at first trustingly and admiringly,
but very soon with his tongue in his cheek. No doubt the Greek tales of Samian
and other artists who went to Egypt in the seventh century, and learnt
technical processes of art there, are founded on fact. But they are
exaggerated, in that they imply that the Greeks were entirely ignorant before
they went to Egypt, and that they obtained all their knowledge there. In
contradiction to this it is evident, not only that, besides Egypt, other
countries such as Phoenicia and Syria may also claim to have helped to teach
the new Greece, but also that the Greeks themselves (or at any rate those of
Ionia, of whom alone we are talking) possessed a vigorous artistic tradition,
which, in the present writer’s opinion, they had inherited from the Mycenaean
ancestors of the Ionians in continental Greece. And it is to this tradition
that Ionian art owed its distinctive character, whatever extraneous elements
from Egypt or Syria may have contributed in greater or less degree to its
making.
To Egypt the revival of improved methods of casting
bronze may have been due. In sculpture we may trace some influence of the
archaistic Saite statues on the archaic so-called ‘Apollos’ (really portraits
of athletic prizewinners) of Greece; and, in return, we may think it probable
that the late Saite smile or simper was a rather unintelligent Egyptian
imitation of the naturally naif smile of the ingenuous Greek archaic figures.
In gem-cutting, always a Greek speciality, we note the taking-over by the
Greeks of the Egyptian scarab, which, shortly to disappear in its own home, was
to obtain a new lease of life in a slightly altered form in Greece and Italy.
An Egyptian creation that struck the imagination of the Greeks at the time was
the dancing figure of the god Bes, probably derived originally from the
Mesopotamian region and the Sumerian figures of the demon Lakhamu or of Enkidu
(Eabani), the half-animal companion of the hero Gishdubar. Bes was very popular
under the XXVIth Dynasty in small figures of faience and other materials, and
he seems undoubtedly to have been the original of the Satyr or ‘Silen’ of the
Greek vase-painters.
Otherwise, the vase-painters we meet at Naucratis and
Daphnae do not seem to have owed much to the Egyptians, and it is probable that
none of their vases was made or painted in Egypt, but all were imported from
Greece. When they had to illustrate an Egyptian legend they knew what the
Egyptians were like, as we see from an early sixth century Ionian
vase-illustration of the legend of Heracles and Busiris, but did not feel
inclined to imitate any Egyptian style in their pictures. Their products were
not specially intended for the Egyptian market, but were to be used by Greeks.
And though the Ionian master Amasis, who painted vases at Athens towards the end
of the sixth centuiy, had an Egyptian name (which probably means that he was a
Samian, a subject of Polycrates the friend of king Amasis, or else was a
Naucratite by birth), there is nothing of Egypt in his art. His name is in
itself proof of the interest that the Greeks took in Egypt, but the caricature
of the Busiris-hydria shows that they were under no illusions as to the
personal characteristics of the Egyptians of their time.
IV
ART OF PHOENICIA AND SYRIA
The Egyptian and Graeco-Egyptian faience objects that
were manufactured at Naucratis and exported to Camirus and much farther afield
have already been mentioned. They have been commonly regarded as of Phoenician
manufacture, but we now know their real place of origin. A typical Naucratite
faience figure of a man was found at Sparta during the excavation there by the
British School at Athens. Objects of this type have been found, as might have
been expected from their place of origin, in the Black Sea colonies of Miletus,
at Olbia, Panticapaeum and Tyras. Among vases of this faience the small Greek
vase known as the aryballos is specially noticeable: in Egyptian faience it was
now exported to Greece, while its Greek painted original came to Egypt, and was
used by the Egyptians much as the Mycenaean false-necked vase or Bugelkanne had
been centuries before.
But though the Camirus faience was not of Phoenician
origin, much imitation of Egyptian objects of art was produced by the
Phoenicians and exported westwards to Greece and Italy. The acid test of genuine
Phoenician art, as distinguishing it from the north Syrian, is, apparently,
apart from its greater clumsiness, its conscious and careful eclecticism, its
use of scenes and motives directly, though badly, imitated from Egyptian,
Assyrian, Syro-Hittite, or other Oriental arts side by side on the same object
with occasional reminiscences of Minoan art, derived, no doubt, from Cyprus and
perhaps Cilicia. We see this trait on some of the famous bronze bowls from
Nimrud in Assyria, from Cyprus, Olympia, Delphi and the Idaean Cave in Crete,
on the silver bowls exported to Italy and found, for instance, in the tombs at
Caere, Praeneste and Salerno, and in the recently discovered treasure of
Aliseda in Spain. Shields for export, such as those found in Crete at Palaikastro
and in the Idaean Cave, were decorated in the same way. These bowls, which date
from the ninth century BC at Nimrud to the seventh at Caere and Praeneste, were
ultimately imitated from the finely embossed and engraved Egyptian bowls of the
XVIIIth Dynasty, a thousand years before. They are easily distinguishable from
these by the purity of their designs, as also is the Saite Egyptian metal work
contemporary with the Phoenician bowls, which are always of mixed style, and
sometimes bear Phoenician inscriptions.
This eclecticism is a constant trait in the decoration
of all objects on which varied representations were possible. Otherwise we
simply have heavy and clumsy reproductions, often reminding us of bad modern
forgeries, chiefly of Egyptian objects, and designs. These appealed more to the
Phoenicians than did the rival style of Assyria, probably on account of the
age-long maritime and political connection between Egypt and Phoenicia. Bad
egyptizing art was, in fact, endemic in Phoenicia. We see its close influence
nearer home in Cyprus, although the population of that island was
overwhelmingly Greek or indigenous, and only one city, Citium, was at this time
really Phoenician. Other cities, such as Amathus, though now Greek, apparently
had Phoenician names, and were originally Phoenician foundations from which
either the indigenous Cyprians or the Greeks had driven away the Sidonian
colonists. In Cyprus, however, in the sixth century we see also the direct
Egyptian influence due to political domination, as has already been mentioned.
The Cypriote artists adopted Egyptian designs with more success than did the
Phoenicians.
The Phoenico-Egyptian objects found in the west can be
distinguished, even when in faience, from the Graeco-Egyptian by characteristic
differences of style. There is about them, as in all Phoenician work that we
know, a clumsiness which we do not see in the Naucratite products. Very
characteristic specimens are the tridacna shells with incised decoration found
in Greece, and at Naucratis, and also with the wonderful collection of ivories
discovered by Layard in the north-west palace at Nimrud in Assyria, which
themselves are often distinctly Phoenician in style. In these shells and
ivories Egyptian motives are imitated more than any others. Some of them may be
more than a century older than the oldest Graeco-Egyptian objects, and belong
to the ninth century, but many are probably later. A few bear Phoenician
inscriptions. One of the finest is a remarkably good imitation in high relief
of an Egyptian statuette of the Amonirdis type.
With them may be seen in the British Museum ivories of
a different type, the products of fine artists who seem almost too good to be
Phoenician: too original, not sufficiently eclectic. They have even been taken
to be Ionian, though this is impossible for chronological reasons. The undercut
carving of these ivories is often marvellous in technique, and some of them
were inlaid with lapis and coloured glass as well as gilt or tinted. The
hawk-headed Minoan gryphon (which perhaps came originally from Egypt at the
time of the XIIth Dynasty) constantly appears on them, as he did on the older
Cilician (?) ivory mirror-handles from Cyprus, which bridge the gap, so far as
this motive is concerned, between Crete and Nimrud. This work has been assigned,
by one authority, to the artists of northern Syria, who were in touch with
Egypt, Mesopotamia and Phoenicia, and had inherited Hittite traditions and the
Minoan memories of the older artists who carved the ivories of Enkomi in Cyprus.
The latter, in the present writer’s opinion, were probably natives of the
Cilician region, and inheritors of a portion of the Minoan art-tradition that
came from the Aegean to Cyprus in the fifteenth century BC. So far as
Mesopotamia is concerned there is, too, in this style, according to Poulsen,
much of that of the fine late-Sumerian work of the Gudea period, which no doubt
influenced Syrian and probably influenced Minoan art. But
there is little of the more conventional Semitic-Babylonian spirit to be seen,
and nothing particularly Assyrian except motives that Assyria probably borrowed
from Syria. In return we cannot doubt that this north Syrian art of the
ninth century—if it was Syrian: Poulsen would seem to consider it Phoenician of
an older and finer type—greatly influenced early Ionian art. And we see the
influence in the figures of tinted ivory, the work ‘of the Maeonians,’ found by
Hogarth at Ephesus, and dated by him to the end of the eighth century. Does the
Greek caryatid, too, come from this part of the world? The idea went east to
Assyria.
Yet a third style is to be seen in others of the
Nimrud ivories, which, like some of the bronze bowls from the same place, need
not be ascribed to any but native Assyrian artists. The incised and relief
reproduction of Assyrian scenes of kings, gods and heroes, and no others,
without any eclecticism or obvious Phoenician imitation, are too faithful, and
at the same time too good to be the work of Phoenician or other imitators: they
are as Assyrian as the great palace-reliefs, or the bronze-reliefs of the
palace-gates found at Balawat, which probably belonged originally to Calah
(Nimrud), or the embossed Urartian shields from Toprak Kaleh near Van.
The three styles are no doubt more or less
contemporaneous, and we perceive how Mesopotamian and Egyptian art influenced
the Syrian (?) as well as the later or inferior undoubtedly Phoenician work in
these ivories. We also see from the north Syrian relief-sculpture of the time,
inferior as it was to the ivory-carving in every way, how the Mesopotamian
tradition influenced this region. The majority of the sculptures of Zenjirli
and Sakjegeuzi are Aramaean of the ninth and eighth centuries, only a few of
the oldest being describable even as Syro-Hittite; while those of Carchemish,
which date from the eleventh to the ninth century, are distinct instances of
this Syro-Hittite style, in which beneath the Assyrianizing surface we see the
native spirit of the old Hittite art we knew at Boghaz Keui, Euyuk, and Yasili
Kaia, still differentiating them from mere imitations of Mesopotamian work. In
fact, it is a moot question whether the inspiration of the first Assyrian
rock-reliefs of the time of Tiglath- pileser I (1100 b.c.)
and the great reliefs of the ninth century at Nimrud was not at least partly
derived from the Syro-Hittite art-centre, purely Mesopotamian though their
style and subject are.
V
ART OF ASSYRIA AND BABYLONIA
So far as we yet know, great relief-sculpture of the
sort found at Nimrud was not Babylonian in origin; Babylonia was a stoneless
land, and although the Babylonians from the beginning made statues and relief
stelae of isolated blocks of stone imported for the purpose, they are not
likely to have originated the custom of sculpturing numberless great slabs of
stone with interminable scenes of religion, war and the chase for the
decoration of the walls of palace-corridors and chambers; although the recent
discoveries at el-Obeid near Ur have shown that they did so use high-relief
decoration in metal at the earliest period. Either the Assyrians invented the
idea of their great reliefs themselves, or they borrowed it from their Syrian
or Hittite neighbours. And the second alternative is at least as probable as
the first. Perhaps the fact that the later Syro-Hittite sculpture was strongly
influenced by that of Assyria, while we cannot see any influence of the pure
Hittite style of Anatolia in the reliefs of Nimrud, or until the rock-reliefs
of Bavian and Malatia (temp. Sennacherib), where we see Assyrian gods standing
on animals in the Hittite fashion, may incline the balance in favour of
Assyrian invention. On the other hand, the Assyrians, the Syrians and the
Hittites may, more or less simultaneously, have adopted the idea of
stonerelief panels from Egypt in the Ramessid period. In any case, the
Assyrians were not merely great warriors: they were also great artists, as is
exemplified by the reliefs of Nimrud, Kuyunjik and Khorsabad, and the gates of
Balawat, imitating the stonereliefs in skilfully-beaten bronze. Indeed, one
wonders again whether possibly the toreutic relief in bronze, derived from Babylonia,
is not really the parent of the stone-relief, and whether the school of
Assyrian sculptors did not derive from the metal-workers.
That is as it may be. Their representations are of
course Babylonian in character, like their whole civilization, but their own
originality is none the less manifest. The great reliefs of the ninth century,
set up by Ashur-Nasir-Pal at Nimrud, are splendid precursors of those of the
seventh executed under Sennacherib and Ashurbanipal at Nineveh. The epic
strength of Ashur-Nasir-Pal’s work, the wonderful beauty, in spite of the
Mesopotamian conventions, of Ashurbanipal’s, is a striking contrast to the
degeneracy of Egyptian art in Bubastite times and its futile, recherché
archaism under the Saites. What Egyptian artist of the ninth century could have
carved Ashur-Nasir-Pal’s roaring lioncolossus from Nimrud, what Egyptian in
the seventh could have produced Ashurbanipal’s wonderful chariot-horses and
dying lions in relief, or the relief of the hunting of the wild horses?
Yet, the fact remains that the Saite Egyptians give us
the real portraits of their men as they actually were in life, whereas there is
hardly a single characterized portrait of an individual in the whole of
Assyrian art. Everybody seems exactly alike, gods, kings and men. Accordingly,
we have to recognize that each system of art had its own fine moments: each its
failures. Still, what would we not give for real portraits of the Assyrian
kings, instead of the monotonous regiments of curled and bearded figures with
big noses, high tiaras and large earrings? What would not Assyrian art have
been could the Assyrians have thrown off the trammels of their convention in
respect to human beings and shown us men as lifelike and true as their animals?
The truth and care of their reliefs of men engaged in war show they could have
done it; but here too every face is exactly alike. Realism stopped short with
the figures of gods and men: they could only be represented with faces of the
type that convention had already fixed as the ideal. The Saite and Assyrian
arts, though contemporaneous for a time, were not on the same plane of
development: Assyrian art is more comparable to that of Ramessid Egypt, though
it is better. Like that, it is a great and imperial art: Saite art was merely
precious and pretty.
The relief sculpture of Assyria, like that of the
Hittites, was in plain relief: the Egyptian style of sunk relief or cavo-rilievo was never adopted by them or by anybody else. In Saite
Egypt itself it was still used, but was probably regarded as rather old-
fashioned, being characteristic of the Ramessid and Bubastite periods. Under
the Ptolemies even the carving of the hieroglyphs, which under the Saites were
usually incised, was carried out in relief with unfortunate results in the
coarse yellow sandstone generally used from the fourth century onwards: only
the fine white limestone of the XIIth and XVIIIth Dynasties and of Seti I at
Abydos, or sometimes very finely worked granite, could be used for hieroglyphs
in relief. The Hittites had either incised their hieroglyphs or cut them in
relief on their rough dark stone; the Assyrian cuneiform was always incised: no
attempt at rendering cuneiform in relief is known. Statues in the round or
half-round with plinths like those of Egypt were, apparently, less usual in
Assyria than they had been in old Babylonia: the attention of the sculptors was
almost wholly given to their splendid reliefs in the local alabastrine marble
of Assyria.
Coloured tempera-painting with a covering of thin
glaze was used by the Assyrian with beautiful results, as the specimens from
Kuyunjik and Ashur (Kalat Sherkat) show. The painting is minute, delicate and
tasteful, while the line is masterly, and the design is good and strong. That
is to say, it is of the same characteristic type as the reliefs, and very
different from either the broader style of Egyptian distemper painting, or the
slap-dash and unequal true fresco of the Minoans. Coloured glaze was also used,
on a large scale and with great effect, in architecture on bricks as well as
for pottery. This art was also a Babylonian speciality, as the Ishtar-gate of
Nebuchadrezzar at Babylon shows, with its lions and sirrushes, or dragons of
Marduk, in enamelled bricks. The art probably came to Babylon from Ashur, which
perhaps had borrowed it from Egypt, the original home of glass and glaze. It
was the direct ancestor of the Persian art of glazed brickwork which we see in
the Frieze of the Archers at Persepolis.
Assyrian art died down soon after it had put forth its
finest flower. But its tradition lived in that of Persia, at Bisitun
(Behistun), and at Persepolis; it influenced the art of Caucasia and of
Scythia, even ultimately Siberia and China.
Of Babylonian art as distinct from that of Assyria
little can be said at this time, except that the seal-cylinders of the period
are characteristic in style, and that some have
suspected in them a mood of archaism resembling and possibly imitated from that
of Egypt. Of course it is not meant that the Babylonians imitated Egyptian
work, à la phénicienne; their
archaism would be their own. But, as a matter of fact, there is little trace of
such a movement, in art at least. One interesting fact is that with the
conquest of Alexander the native art of Babylonia, in contrast to that of
Egypt, seems suddenly to be extinguished, and supplanted by that of Greece, or
rather by the very decadent form of the latter that the Seleucids supplied. In
Egypt, on the other hand, all the old art went on under the Ptolemies and
Romans in merely an increasing degeneration: though a mixed art existed side by
side with the classical, the old art did not die till its conqueror was ready
for death too, and the stern puritans and ‘athletes’ of Christianity slew it on
the altar on which Hypatia and the learning and beauty of Greece were also
slain. Yet many a pagan idea survived in Coptic art.
On the other hand, in Babylonia the native art
disappears, is wiped out already under the Seleucids, and only a bastard Greek
style exists until the revival of native culture under the Sassanians. Why this
was so, why a fine old tradition was thus suddenly extinguished, we do not
know. One would have thought that the Babylonians had as much power of
patriotic resistance to foreign ideals as the Egyptians. Yet, perhaps they had
not, and perhaps they now thought more of their book-keeping than of their
nationality. It was not until the native revival in Persia after the end of the
Hellenized Parthian rule that men took new inspiration from the
Assyrian-inspired sculptures of Persepolis; and when Shahpur treads down
Valerian at Naksh-i-Rustam, the art of his sculptor owes as much to the
tradition of Assyria as to that of Hellenism and of Rome.
CHAPTER XVITHE TOPOGRAPHY OF JERUSALEM |
CAMBRIDGE ANCIENT HISTORY. EDITED BY J. B. BURY - S. A. COOK - F. E. ADCOCK : VOLUME III |