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Details
LOT 2460
Indus Valley Painted Terracotta Bowl
3RD-2ND MILLENNIUM B.C.
4 1/2 in. (122 grams, 11.3 cm).
Carinated in profile with painted band to inner rim, painted latticework and geometric panels to sidewall.
Provenance
Ex M. Schoyen collection, 2000s.
This lot is accompanied by an illustrated lot declaration signed by the Head of the Antiquities Department, Dr Raffaele D’Amato.
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Etched carnelian beads are characteristic of the Indus Valley culture and have been produced since the third millennium B.C. They are a typical product of the Harappa culture, but they are also attested in later millennia and produced elsewhere in Southeast Asia. The oldest specimens come from the Indus Valley and from Mesopotamia. A few specimens were found in the so-called royal cemetery of Ur, where they were identified in the excavation publication as coming from India.