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Ishtar Gate Collection

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Moulded bricks from the Ishtar Gate showing lions and mushrushu, 7th century BC

Moulded bricks from the Ishtar Gate showing lions and mushrushu, 7th century BC
Moulded bricks from the Ishtar Gate from Babylon, erected in the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II, showing lions and mushrushu, from the Pergamon Museum in Berlin, 7th century BC

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Dragons and bulls, glazed bricks, Ishtar Gate, Babylon, Iraq

Dragons and bulls, glazed bricks, Ishtar Gate, Babylon, Iraq. Built in about 575 BC by the Neo-Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar II

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Bull, glazed bricks, Ishtar Gate, Babylon, Iraq

Bull, glazed bricks, Ishtar Gate, Babylon, Iraq. Built in about 575 BC by the Neo-Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar II, the Ishtar Gate was the northern entrance to the inner city of Babylon

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Dragon, glazed bricks, Ishtar Gate, Babylon, Iraq

Dragon, glazed bricks, Ishtar Gate, Babylon, Iraq. Built in about 575 BC by the Neo-Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar II, the Ishtar Gate was the northern entrance to the inner city of Babylon

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Ishtar Gate, Babylon, Iraq

Ishtar Gate, Babylon, Iraq. Built in about 575 BC by the Neo-Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar II, the Ishtar Gate was the northern entrance to the inner city of Babylon

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: The Ishtar Gate, Babylon. Relief of bull, 6th century BC. Artist: Assyrian Art

The Ishtar Gate, Babylon. Relief of bull, 6th century BC. Artist: Assyrian Art
The Ishtar Gate, Babylon. Relief of bull, 6th century BC. Found in the collection of the Pergamon Museum, Berlin

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Relief on the Ishtar Gate, Babylon, 1917-1919

Relief on the Ishtar Gate, Babylon, 1917-1919

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Ishtar Gate, Babylon

Ishtar Gate, Babylon
Ishtar Gate, c575 BC. Reconstruction in the Pergamon Museum, Berlin, of the eighth gate to the inner city of Babylon built by Nebuchadnezzar II in c575 BC

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Ishtar Gate, Babylon, 575 BC, (c20th century)

Ishtar Gate, Babylon, 575 BC, (c20th century). The Ishtar Gate was the eighth gate to the inner city of Babylon. It was constructed in about 575 BC by order of King Nebuchadnezzar II on the north

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Glazed brick relief of a mushrushu on the Ishtar Gate, 7th century BC

Glazed brick relief of a mushrushu on the Ishtar Gate, 7th century BC
Glazed brick relief of a mushrushu, sacred to Marduk, on the Ishtar Gate erected in Babylon in the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II, 7th century BC

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Glazed brick relief of a lion on the Ishtar Gate, 7th century BC

Glazed brick relief of a lion on the Ishtar Gate, 7th century BC
Glazed brick relief of a lion on the sacred way leading up to the Ishtar Gate from Babylon, erected in the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II, From the Pergamon Museums collection in Berlin, 7th century BC

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Lion passant from wall of the sacred way to the Ishtar Gate, Babylon (Iraq), c575 BC

Lion passant from wall of the sacred way to the Ishtar Gate, Babylon (Iraq), c575 BC
Lion passant from wall of the sacred way to the Ishtar Gate, Babylon (in modern Iraq), c575 BC. The lion was the cult animal of Ishtar, great goddess of the Sumero-Akkadian pantheon

Background imageIshtar Gate Collection: Ishtar Gate, Neo-Babylonian, c575 BC

Ishtar Gate, Neo-Babylonian, c575 BC
Ishtar Gate, Babylonian, c575 BC. The Ishtar Gate, through which a processional road ran into the city of Babylon. One of 8 fortified gates of Nebuchandrezzars (Nebuchanezzar II) city


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