Top Section of a Water Jug
- Medium: Ceramic; earthenware.
- Possible Place Made: Iraq
- Dates: late 12th-early 13th century
- Dynasty: Possibly Seljuq
- Period: Possibly Seljuq
- Dimensions: 11 1/2 x 13 1/2 in. (29.2 x 34.3 cm)
- Collections: Arts of the Islamic World
- Museum Location:
This item is on view in Arts of the Islamic World, 2nd Floor - Accession Number: 73.30.6
- Credit Line: Gift of The Roebling Society
- Image: Overall, CUR.73.30.6_view1.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph, 2008
This remarkable object is the top half of a habb, or water jug. The unglazed ceramic body allowed for the cooling of water stored inside; for this reason, habbs have been used in Mesopotamia since pre-Islamic times. Surviving early examples vary in their degree of decoration. This habb is elaborately embellished, with a depiction of a ruler seated on a carpet and flanked by armed attendants and harpies (mythical birds possessing the head of a woman) with tails that terminate in dragon heads. A background of scrolling vines inhabited by birds is pierced into the vessel’s body. Overall, such figural decoration is typical of the courtly imagery popular in the eastern Islamic world during the medieval period, as is evident from both architectural decoration and manuscript painting of the time.
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