mail_outline sales@mediastorehouse.com
Figure of Astarte-Isis, 1st century BCE-1st century CE. Creator: UnknownFigure of Astarte-Isis, 1st century BCE-1st century CE
Terracotta statue of the goddess Astarte (Ishtar), Susa, Middle Elamite period, 1150 - 1100 BCTerracotta statue of the goddess Astarte (Ishtar), Susa, Middle Elamite period, 1150-1100 BC. Now in The Louvre
Terracotta Fertility goddess, Ishtar (Astarte), Old Babylonian, c2000 BC. Ishtar was the Mesopotamian goddess of love, beauty, sex, desire, fertility, war, combat, and political power
Babylonian terracotta statuette of AstarteTerracotta statuette of Astarte/Ishtar from Susa, from the Louvres collection
Terracotta relief of the goddess Astarte (Inanna) standing on two animals. Part of the collection at The Louvre
Terracotta Astarte or Ishtar figure, Third Dynasty of Ur, c2100 BC. The Third Dynasty of Ur, also known as the Neo-Sumerian Empire
Babylonian Terracotta Plague of Goddess Astarte, c2000BC-1600 BC. Worshipped from the Bronze Age through classical antiquity
Phoenician ivory of a woman at a window, 8th century BCPhoenician ivory panel depicting a womans head and shoulders wearing an Egyptian wig and necklace, looking through a window. Found at the North West Palace at Nimrud
Ivory Phoenician figurine of a woman, 8th century BCIvory Phoenician figurine of a woman, possibly Astarte, found in the Burnt Palace in Nimrud, from the British Museums collection, 8th century BC
The Philistines offer up Sauls Armour, 1804. The offering is being made to Astaroth (Ashtoreth), Canaanite and Phoenician goddess of fertility
Terracotta statuette of the goddess Lama, Susa, 2nd millenium BC. Now in The Louve