The 'Queen of the Night' Relief
Old Babylonian, 1800-1750 BC
From southern Iraq
A major acquisition for the British Museum's 250th
anniversary
This large plaque is made of baked straw-tempered clay, modelled
in high relief. The figure of the curvaceous naked woman was
originally painted red. She wears the horned headdress
characteristic of a Mesopotamian deity and holds a rod and ring of
justice, symbols of her divinity. Her long multi-coloured wings
hang downwards, indicating that she is a goddess of the Underworld.
Her legs end in the talons of a bird of prey, similar to those of
the two owls that flank her. The background was originally painted
black, suggesting that she was associated with the night. She
stands on the backs of two lions, and a scale pattern indicates
mountains.
The figure could be an aspect of the goddess Ishtar,
Mesopotamian goddess of sexual love and war, or Ishtar's sister and
rival, the goddess Ereshkigal who ruled over the Underworld, or the
demoness Lilitu, known in the Bible as Lilith. The plaque probably
stood in a shrine.
The same goddess appears on small, crude, mould-made plaques
from Babylonia from about 1850 to 1750 BC. Thermoluminescence tests
confirm that the 'Queen of the Night' relief was made between 1765
and 45 BC.
The relief may have come to England as early as 1924, and was
brought to the British Museum in 1933 for scientific testing. It
has been known since its publication in 1936 in the Illustrated
London News as the Burney Relief, after its owner at that
time. Until 2003 it has been in private hands. The Director and
Trustees of the British Museum decided to make this spectacular
terracotta plaque the principal acquisition for the British
Museum's 250th anniversary.
Other Views
A) Image of the plaque 'restored' to how it would have looked
before painting
B) Reconstruction of original painting added
C) The plaque now compared to the reconstruction
These images were created using Photoshop by Mark Timson of the
British Museum's New Media Unit, with the guidance of Dominique
Collon, curator in the Department of the Ancient Near East.
H. W. and A. F. Janson, History of Art, 6th edition (New York, 2001)
H. Frankfort, 'The Burney Relief', Archiv für Orientforschung (1937-39), pp. 128-35
H. Frankfort, The art and architecture of th (London, Pelican, 1970)