Stone relief from the South-West Palace of Sennacherib (Room
32)
Nineveh, northern Iraq
Neo-Assyrian, 704-681 BC
Two guardian figures
Guardian figures were traditionally used to protect Assyrian
palaces and temples from evil supernatural forces. Clay figurines
of guardians were often buried at points under the pavement of a
room to ward off evil.
King Sennacherib (reigned 704-681 BC) added several new types of
these figures to the schemes of the palaces in the earlier Assyrian
capital cities, Nimrud and Khorsabad. Two of these are shown on
this panel. On the right stands an empty-handed man wearing the
horned headdress of a god. This may be the god 'House God',
associated with frightening away the effects of witchcraft. The
lion-headed, eagle-footed man holding a mace and upraised dagger is
an ugallu (great lion or great storm
demon).
J.M. Russell, Sennacheribs palace without ri (University of Chicago Press, 1991)
I.E.S. Edwards (ed.), The Cambridge ancient histor-3, 2 vols, 3rd ed. (Cambridge University Press, 1981)
J. Black and A. Green, Gods, demons and symbols of -1 (London, The British Museum Press, 1992)