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SUPERB PIRIFORM EGYPTIAN ALABASTER MACE HEAD ON STAND
Egypt
3600 -
3100 B.C.
The mace is a very primary weapon requiring no
skill or special training and its effectiveness is obvious.
Stone
mace heads were first used in Pre-Dynastic Egypt in the 4th millennium
B.C.. Earliest examples resemble discoidal-shaped stones ground
and drilled to be mounted on a wooden handle. Maces were used in
combat both on foot and in chariots and horseback extensively in Egypt
and neighboring Canaan. This weapon was most effective on
unarmored or lightly armored foes. Upon the advent of bronze,
bronze armor and helmets became commonly worn during combat and as a
result, the stone mace became much less effective as the stone heads
shattered upon impact with the metal armor. Egyptians mace
design included a sharper-edged disk shape in the Predynastic Period
(about 3850-3650 BC) in order to increase penetration and impact force
effectiveness but this design eventually became replaced in the Nagada
II Period of 3600 - 3250 B.C. in Upper Egypt, with an inverted
pear-shaped (piriform) design continuing in use throughout the Naqada
III Period (3250-3100 BC). Similar mace heads were also used in
Mesopotamia around 2450-1900 BC.
This is an INTACT and COMPLETE drilled Egyptian stone mace head made of
alabaster dating to the 4th millennium B.C.. It is of the later
PIRIFORM shape and despite its reduced size, was likely a very deadly
weapon when used on a moving chariot or running horse against a
stationary enemy. Surface preservation is excellent with fine
banding in the stone and translucency. Mineral and original soil
traces deep in crevices and patina over grinding marks are traits ONLY
found on AUTHENTIC specimens like this. Custom made museum stand
recreates the shaft of the original handle making for an impressive
display. What appears to be a crack is not but is a natural vein
in the original alabaster stone.
NO
RESTORATION, NO REPAIR and NO MODERN DAMAGE.
Ancient stone tools and weapons
from Pre-Dynastic and Ancient Egypt are extremely rare as a result of strict
Egyptian laws in place now protecting and preventing all export of such
artifacts. This VERY RARE specimen is one of only a very limited
number we will ever occasionally have to
offer. Be wary of modern copies that have been around for many
decades and sold to unsuspecting tourists and brought back as an
"authentic" piece, now littering numerous old collections. In our
own museum lab facility, we subject to rigorous inspection and authentic
every artifact we offer for sale, accompanied by a written lifetime,
unconditional guarantee of authenticity and proper identification.
At
the end of the Pleistocene Period in the Nile Region, temperate
conditions made for an ideal environment for the birth of a highly
specialized Neolithic society between 7000 B.C. and 3000 B.C.. The
Neolithic Fayum farming societies of Egypt cultivated emmer wheat and
flax for cloth production. They grew their crops by the lake in
the Fayum depression, hence the name for their tool culture. The
Neolithic peoples also raised and herded goat, sheep, pig and cattle.
Their living quarters left no trace in some regions but were likely made
from reeds or skins over a light frame. Wattle-and-daub villages
have also been attributed to these peoples. These Neolithic
societies
represent the oldest evidence of food production from the Nile dating
back to 4400 B.C.. As time progressed, the farming villages gave
way to cities and kingdoms, ushering in the famous ancient Egyptian
Dynasties.
SUPERB
AND INTACT EGYPTIAN STONE MACE HEAD - ONE OF THE EARLIEST FORMS OF A
TOOL DEDICATED TO COMBAT AND WARFARE
1.85" in height
$695 OA002
INCLUDES CUSTOM STAND
Actual Item - One Only |