Uruk Kleinfunde IV: Metall- und Steinobjekte im Vorderasiatischen Museum zu Berlin.

AuthorBahrani, Zainab
PositionBook Review

Uruk Kleinfunde IV: Metall- und Steinobjekte im Vorderasiatischen Museum zu Berlin. By FRIEDHELM PEDDE, MARLIES HEINZ, and BERND MULLER-NEUHOF, Ausgrabungen in Uruk-Warka, Endberichte, vol. 21. Mainz: VERLAG PHILIPP vON ZABERN, 2000. Pp. xiii + 213, plates. DM 180.

Uruk Kleinfunde IV is one of those superb publications that in these days of economic stress, when publishers are cutting costs of production in every way possible, is in itself an artifact of days past. The book, included in the series edited by Rainer Michael Boehmer in which the final reports of the excavations of Uruk-Warka appear, is beautifully produced, well organized, and reader-friendly. All of these factors make it an exemplary report on archaeological finds from one of the most interesting sites in the ancient Near East.

Besides the impressive quality of production of the book, and of this series in general, the writers of this volume can be commended on the clear manner in which the catalogue of finds is organized. The hook is divided into two parts. The first half, written by Friedhelm Pedde, presents the metal objects. The second half, by Marlies Heinz and Bernd Muller-Neuhof, presents the stone objects.

The first part of the catalogue is meant to be supplementary to Pedde's 1992 publication (co-authored with M. van Ess), Ausgrabungen Uruk-Warka Endberichte 7. The latter dealt with the small objects from Uruk that are now in Baghdad and Heidelberg. The metal and stone objects are thus first subdivided according to the museum collections in which they are kept. While one might question the advisability of cataloguing excavated objects according to current museum locations, rather than some other criterion inherent to the ancient artifact itself, it is understandable that such a large corpus must be subdivided in some way.

Within the group catalogued here, now at the Vorderasi-atisehe Museum, Berlin, Pedde organizes the objects first by material, and then by what he refers to as "object groups" in his short introduction to the catalogue (p. 3), and which is in fact a grouping based on function. These groups are in turn arranged chronologically, based on find spot...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT