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Bronze Mace With Three Rams Heads From A

This document discusses a bronze mace with three rams' heads from the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. It was likely from the Sasanian period in ancient Persia. The mace features three zoomorphic ram heads attached to a metal socket. It has markings on the horns and faces of the rams. The authors discuss possible typologies of animal-headed maces from this time period. They note that multiple animal-headed maces were symbols of high status. However, they were not commonly depicted in Sasanian art and their origins and use during that period are still unclear.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
179 views18 pages

Bronze Mace With Three Rams Heads From A

This document discusses a bronze mace with three rams' heads from the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. It was likely from the Sasanian period in ancient Persia. The mace features three zoomorphic ram heads attached to a metal socket. It has markings on the horns and faces of the rams. The authors discuss possible typologies of animal-headed maces from this time period. They note that multiple animal-headed maces were symbols of high status. However, they were not commonly depicted in Sasanian art and their origins and use during that period are still unclear.

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mirsad7
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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HISTORIA I ŚWIAT, nr 4 (2015)

ISSN 2299-2464

Adam Lech KUBIK* (Siedlce University, Poland)


Shah Nadeem AHMAD** (United Kingdom)

Bronze mace with three rams' heads from Ashmolean Museum, University
of Oxford
Keywords: Sasanian Warfare, M ilitary History, Sasanian Beliefs, Central Asian Beliefs, Late
Antiquity, Maces, Sceptres

Plate 1.a Bronze mace with three rams' heads from the Ashmolean M useum, University of Oxford.

A mace with three rams’ heads is kept at


the Department of Antiquities of
Ashmolean Museum (Pl. 1) in the
University of Oxford. It was acquired fro m
the Bomford collection in 1971. P. R. S.
Moorey1 initially dated the mace to the
early 1st Millenniu m BC, but a revised
dating to the Sasanian period is more likely
in the light of several maces that have
come to light fro m the Arsacid-Sasanian
and post-Sasanian periods. The Ashmolean
mace is constructed with three rams’ head

Plate 1.b Bronze mace with three rams' heads


* Institute of History and International
from the Ashmolean M useum, University of
Relations; atakan-al-vefa@wp.pl
Oxford, the mace head.
** naddem.i@googlemail.com

1
MOOREY (1966) 47.
157 | P a g e
attached to a metal socket. It features pronounced bumps and a distinct handle ending in a
closed hand holding a ball. The zoo morphic heads with almond shaped faces have marked ly
rounded eyes, clearly visib le ears and horns. The horns also have scratches marking the
segmented construction of the horn. The neck of the mace head is embellished with a “triple
dot” motif. The zoomorphic head ends with a “double pearl necklace” motif, and after that
transforms into a hexagonal form ending with another collar. The straight shaft finishes with the
handle. The handle itself has a round cross section and starts with a polygonal bump and ends
with a closed hand or fist holding a ball or orb co mp lete with a “pearl necklace” in the upper
part. The dimensions of this artifact are: its total length 56,7 cm, the mace head 5 cm x 5,8 cm.

Introduction

Maces have a unique place in the imagery, relig ion and tradition of Iran, 2 but research
in the subject is very limited. An attempt to classify this kind of weaponry was made by M. M.
Khorasani, who placed zoo morphic maces in the third group of his classificat ion.3 But it must
be said that Khorasani's classification only shows the simplest similarit ies of the shape of the
maces and has not been helpful in studies on the dating or origin of Iranian maces. Some
statements about a possible future typology of Iranian zoo morphic maces were presented in A.
L. Kubik's work “About one group of Iranian maces in the context of the new find fro m Sivas,
Turkey: an analysis from the Sasanian to the Safavid Period”, published in 2014. 4 Here Kubik
explored co mmon elements among the parts of the maces which could be helpful in a future
grouping or in creating a proper typology. Some similar elements in such maces may also
suggest close relations between them and even suggest similar dates for these obje cts.

Some possible further observations about ani mal headed maces 5

In addition to the common elements among the parts of maces, discussed by Kubik in
his work, the most obvious element in overall typology is the form of the head. All the maces

2
HARPER (1985) 246; DOOSTKHAH (2002) 165 - 166; KHORASANI (2006a) 251; KUBIK (2014)
156; KUBIK (2015) forthcoming.
3
KHORASANI (2006a) 251 - 261.
4
KUBIK (2014) 154 - 180.
5
See KUBIK (2014), where the main theses are:
1) Canonical weapons of the Sasanians consisted of swords, spears/lances and javelins, and archery
equipment. Other forms of weaponry do not appear as commonly in Sasanian art (including
maces).
2) The provenance of the maces from the beginning of the Sasanian period until the rise of Islam is
rather problematic. The author has shown in his work that an analysis of Kushan and post-
Kushan (Eastern Iran territory) material is an important aspect.
3) Some of the maces in this type, independent of the type or shape of the mace, share common
elements including: hand on the bottom of the handle, Heraclean knot, and a small additional
bull head which can be observed also in post-Sasanian finds. This enables us to group and date
more closely some of the maces/scepters with zoomorphic and anthropomorphic mace heads.
4) The art forms and objects from the new eastern provinces may have been absorbed and then
evolved into new forms in the heartlands and main territories of the Sasanian dynasty in the late
Sasanian period, most likely after the conquests of Xusro I Anushirwan.
158 | P a g e
fro m the third group in Khorasani's classification, known to the current authors, can be
described in two ways as either single or mult iple animal or hu man heads. Furthermore, one can
divide the heads into human (male and female) or animal (bull, goat, lion, bird).

Plate 2. Stamp of the Sasanian seal from Derbent showing two animals, possibly a bull and a ram, whose
long necks tie in the middle of the seal in a so called Heraclean knot plus a surrounding inscription. After:
M . Gadjiev.6

Mace heads in the form of mult iple anthropomorphic or zoo morphic heads appear to
have been an important item of regalia used by the individuals of h igh status in Iran and Central
Asia. Mace heads with multip le zoo morphic heads were also well known in Assyria and
Luristan in the 1st Millenniu m BC,7 with a strong symbolic and mythological connection.
Curiously, this type of regalia was abandoned in Sasanian art; 8 nevertheless some researchers
still wrongly connect the evolution of animal-headed maces, or gorz,9 with the Shahnama of
Ferdowsi as a primary source for the study Sasanian arms and regalia. 10 It needs to be stated
that the Shahnama epic was written for Mahmoud of Ghazni, several centuries after the fall of
the Sasanians. From the reports of Fakhr al-Din Mubarrak Shah we know that Mahmoud's

6
GADJIEV (2004) 116, ris. 1.
7
M USCARELLA (1988) 288 - 289; GORELIK (1993) 60, tab. XXXI, 278 - 279.
8
KUBIK (2014) 159 - 160.
9
KOBYLAŃSKI (2000) 66; KHORASANI (2010a) 436.
10
HARPER (1985) 247 - 259; KHORASANI (2006a) 258 - 261; KHORASANI (2006b) 89;
KHORASANI (2010b) 56 - 61.
159 | P a g e
eldest son, Sultan Mas’ud, used a horned mace. 11 We also know that some forms of zoomorphic
and anthropomorphic maces survived until the Ghaznavid period 12 but in time they evolved in
to the single animal predator form, most commonly a lion.13 It must also be noted that before
the phrase gurza-ye gāvsār (bull headed mace) appeared in the Shahnama, a strict connection to
one specific animal cannot be found in written Middle Persian sources from the Sasanian era. 14
It is thus likely that Ferdowsi suited his work to his sovereign and to have changed the image of
such an interesting piece of regalia to one where a mace with a single o x head had a supreme
position, as seems to have been the case in the early Ghaznavid court.

Plate 3. Stamp of the Sasanian seal from the collection of M . A. Piruzan, showing two animals, possibly
(from the left) a bull, a deer and two ibexes, whose long necks tie in the middle of the seal in a so called
Heraclean knot plus a surrounding inscription. After: M . Gadjiev.15

11
BOSWORTH (1963) 120; NICOLLE (1976) 134; KUBIK (2014) 165.
12
For post-Sasanian mace as continuation of late Sasanian or Indo-Iranian tradition see: finds: mace head
from Jartepa-II [BERM IDURADOV, SAM IBAEV (1999) 7 - 63], mace head from the Furusiyya Art
Foundation [M OHAM ED (2008) 244], possibly mace from MMA, gift of Parviz H. Rabenou, pl. 4
[KUBIK (2014) 164 - 165], ilustrations: Silver dish from Hermitage M useum [OVERLAET (1998) fig.
146], Sogdian terracotta ossuary from Kaška Darya [MODE (1991/92) fig. II], Panjikent wall painting of
seated king [M ARSHAK, RASPOPOVA (1990) fig. 31], Panjikent wall painting of standing warrior VI/I
[JAKUBOVSKIJ (1954) Tab. XXXV; BELENICKIJ, PIOTROVSKIJ (1959) Tab. III, Tab.VII], in the
opinion of the current author also on a wall painting of a mounted warrior from mural at Panjikent VI/41
see: AZARPAY (1981) Plate 6-7.
13
KUBIK (2014) 167 - 168.
14
TAFAZOLLI (1997) 194.
15
GADJIEV (2004) 116, ris. 2.
160 | P a g e
shown as a tool used in the combat
between a hero and demon on the amulet-
seals published by A. D. H. Bivar.17
Ferdowsi also makes comparab le
references in his Shahnama: namely to the
killing of Zahhāk by Faridun, and in the
story of Bahram Gu r killing a lion.18 It is
therefore possible that maces which are the
subject of the current paper are actually
sacral/magical or status symbols with a
purely ceremonial character rather than
being real combat weapons.19 In fact, the
Arsacid-Sasanian mace heads published
and known to the author, made fro m such
soft material as bronze, did not have any
scuff marks or scratches which could
indicate a use in combat. In Iran animal
motifs in mace heads only appear to make
a significant appearance in the late
Sasanian period 20 (although there are some
anthropomorphic mace heads dated to the
Arsacid period). They are clearly related to
late Sasanian art, and to certain motifs seen
in late Sasanian seals: as for examp le the
motif of an animal head and Heraclean
knot a combination seen in one late
Sasanian mace in the Metropolitan
Museum of A rt.21 This combination is
displayed even more clearly in the seals
fro m Derbent in the Caucasus region. The
Plate 4. Late or post-Sasanian mace with three Caucasus is the region where Sasanian
Heraclean knots ending with a bull's head from seals seem to be popular finds fro m this
the MM A collection, gift of Parviz H. Rabenou, period. K. I. Ol’shevski's excavations alone
1966. Available online: produced more than 35 of them and the
http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the- collection of the Hermitage Museum in
collection-online/search/325840 Saint Petersburg, Russia, contains more
than 800 Sasanian
The symbolic and mythological
connection between anthropomorphic and
zoo morphic mace heads in the pre- 17
BIVAR (1967) 518; KUBIK (2014) 160.
Achaemenid period is well known. 16 It 18
BIVAR (1967) 524; HARPER (1985) 257.
seems that this remained true during the 19
OVERLAET(1998) 254; KUBIK (2014) 169.
Arsaco-Sasanian period, when the mace is 20
KUBIK (2014) 168.
21
FRYE (1973) fig. D. 25, OVERLAET (1999)
16
see for example: JANTZEN (1972) 57. 261.
161 | P a g e
seals.22 During an excavation near the citadel of Naryn-Khala, in 1979, a particu larly interesting
Sasanian seal was found. Its dimensions are: 1.2x1 cm and 1.3 cm in height, and it is dated to
the 5th-7th century.23 It shows two animals, possibly a bull and a ram, whose long necks are
tied in the middle o f the seal in the so-called Heraclean knot. There is also an inscript ion around
the seal (Pl. 2). This piece is clearly related to two seals fro m the private collection of M . M.
Piruzana. These again include standing animals with long necks t ied in the so-called Heralclean
knot (Pl. 3).24 The mace showing a bull’s head with its neck tied in a Heraclean knot in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New Yo rk, has already been mentioned (acc. Nr. 66.215, Pl. 4).
The MMA mace, a gift of Parviz H. Rabenou from 1966, consists of a square iron shaft with
three bronze units cast on it. At the top, three so -called Heraclean knots are shown, with a
stylized ox head on the summit.25 It is quite possible that in future other animal heads (for
example deer, ibex or ram as on the Sasanian seals mentioned above) added on top of the so -
called Heraclean knot 26 could be found. Sasanian maces with ram or ibex heads are already
known,27 and the combination of such animals with knots is well known in Sasanian
sigillography.
The Ashmolean Museum mace
As mentioned above, the Ashmolean Museum mace head consists of three rams’ head
placed on a metal socket. The three-headed human figures exist in Arsacid-Sasanian art but it is
hard to connect them to any strict mythological trad ition.28 However, B. Overlaet and M.
Co mpareti29 have linked the tricephalis m represented on different kinds of Eastern Iranian and
Indian art 30 (including coins 31 , paintings 32 and reliefs 33 ) with the examp les of the three-headed
maces.
A similar phenomenon can be observed in regard to the mace fro m the Ashmolean
Museum. So far the four mace heads decorated with rams' heads which can be dated to the late
Sasanian period were brought to light. The first comes from Din kha Tepe in the Ushlu valley of
north western Iran. It was found by a peasant from the Dinkha village at the base of the Dikha
mound where the Gadar river had eroded the mound. The mace was then presented to O. W.
Muscarella.34 The second mace co mes fro m a p rivate collection and was presented at the Iranian
Art Exhib ition in Tokyo in 1971 by the Japanese Committee fo r the 2,500 Anniversary of the

22
GADJIEV (2004) 100.
23
GADJIEV (2004) 102.
24
GADJIEV (2004) ris. 2.
25
MUSCARELLA (1988) 419.
26
Similar to pl. 1-2 form.
27
These kinds of maces are listed later in the article.
28
OVERLAET (1998) 264.
29
M atteo Compareti lecture on UCI available online on : https://vimeo.com/87109361
30
OVERLAET (1998) 264 - 265.
31
BROWN (1922) pl. IV ; GHIRSHM AN (1962) fig. 302c, 244, 393; GÖBL (1993) Taf. 14; CRIBB
(1997) 13, 47, 50; and others.
32
STEIN (1928) 915 - 916; KAWAM I (1987) 26; TANABE (1997) 267, fig. 4.
33
TANABE (1981) 109 - 110.
34
MUSCARELLA (1988) 294 - 295, fig. 26-27.
162 | P a g e
Plate 5. So called India mace of the 7th century,
from the MM A collection, gift of Steven
Kossak, The Kronos Collections, 1986.
Available online:
http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-
collection-online/search/37682

Founding of the Persian Emp ire, and was


described by O. W. Muscarella. This mace
had the shape of a beardless human head
(in the opinion of O.W. Muscarella it is a
wo man's head35 ) crowned by a rams head.
The third mace co mes fro m the Abegg-
Stiftung collect ion (inv. nr. 8.7.63) and was
well presented by B. Overlaet in his article
“Sasanian Bronze Sculptures in the Werner
Abegg Collection”. Its head consists of
three so-called Heraclean knots, thought to
be symbols of luck,36 separating three
beardless human heads. Each human head
is crowned with a small ram’s head with
curved horns, while a line seen beside the
face may represent a fabric cap or may
even be the hide of the ram covering the
ears of the human head. Below the knots
there are well presented lions' heads and
above them were possibly three bovine
heads with short crescent horns. On the top
of the mace head there may originally have
been one more animal head, which it is
now missing.37 The fourth example is our
mace fro m the Ashmolean museum
constructed with three rams’ head. The
image of a ram can be easily connected to
Iranian animis m (but also to the art of
Gandhāra). The connection between the
ram and the royal farr in Sasanian Iran
clearly point a special role of the so-called

35
MUSCARELLA (1988) 294.
36
LERNER (1996) 18.
37
OVERLAET (1998) 254.
163 | P a g e
“ram crowns” which deserve more attention in the future study. As mentioned by B.
Overlaet, such crowns may form part of the Kushano-Sasanian tradition, in wh ich they
appeared in two forms: one consisting of a full ram's head on the top of the wearer, or
simp ly the horns alone of this animal.38 The crown in the form of a fu ll ram's head can be
seen in two maces mentioned above, and importantly can be found in Ammianus
Marcelinus's report as a headdress or helmet possibly 39 worn by Shapur II during a siege of
Amida in 35940 . The rams’ horns on their own can be observed on Kushano -Sasanian, and
Sasanian coins41 as for examp le the coins of Wahrām.42 We can see a similar style on certain
items of Sasanian silver; for examp le on the well known silver plate kept in Hermitage
Museum in Saint Petersburg (inv. no. S -24.) which has a hunting scene on the front and a
Sogdian inscription on the reverse in Samarqand script, and possibly showing a Kushanshah
on a silver plate.43 Similar horns can also be found on the Sasanian seals showing women.
For example on a seal fro m the National Library of France published in 2006 by R. Gyselen
in her “ L’art sigillaire: camées, sceaux et bulles” (cat. nr. 156)44 which shows a noble
wo man, and also on the Sasanian seal fro m K. Tanabe's book describing the Hirayama
Collection loaned and exhibited at the Brit ish Museum fro m 1 st April to 31st of May of
1993.45 An even more interesting form of the ram-decorated head cover comes fro m a
Bactrian seal from the Aman ur Rah man Collection, Islamabad/Dubai, published in 2009 by
J. A. Lerner.46 The seal itself shows an unbearded individual with three full rams’ h eads on
the top of his head.47 The full ram's head recalls the description of Ammianus Marcelinus
and the mace head mentioned above described by B. Overlaet. However, the fact that the
mu ltip le heads are shown on the individual's headdress makes this seal a unique piece of
Eastern Iran ian art. What is even more interesting is that this visualizat ion is in the form of a
beardless individual without any sexually identifying features. So it could be argued that the
face is that of a youth, a clean-shaven man, a wo man, or a eunuch. Furthermore, it was made
in the same style as the two maces with full rams’ heads identified above as bearing
wo men’s heads. It seems that we can observe here a similar visual tradit ion which could, in

38
OVERLAET (1988) 263.
39
For the problems with identification of the king under Amida see for example: GHIRSHM AN
(1955) 5 - 19; BIVAR (1979) 327 - 328.
40
Amm. M arc. XIX. 1. 3. ROLFE (1935) 470:
Insidens autem equo. ante alios celsior, ipse praeibat agminibus cuactis, aureum capitis arientini
figmentum, interstinctum lapillis, pro diademate gestans, multiplici vertice dignitatum, et gentium
diversarum comitatu sublimis.
41
GÖBL (1993) taf. 32, taf. 36, taf. 38; TANABE (1989) fig. 4; TANABE (1993) 32, pl. 95-97;
OVERLAET (1998) 263; DM ITRIEV (2012) 146, ris. 2.
42
GÖBL (1993) taf. 32, k2 a.
43
LIVSHITZ, LUKONIN (1964) 170 - 172, M ARSHAK (1986) pl. 7, TREVER, LUKONIN (1987)
pl. 147; TANABE (1993) 32, pl. 72; LUKONIN, IVANOV (1999) 116, pl. 52; DM ITRIEV (2012) ris.
1, p. 145, and others
44
GYSELEN (2006); COM PARETI (2010) 98, fig. 5.
45
TANABE (1993) 33, pl. 74.
46
LERNER (2009) 215 - 226; LERNER (2010) pl. II.8.
47
LERNER (2009) fig.1.
164 | P a g e
the current author's opinion, suggest that both maces mentioned are Indo-Iranian,48 from
post-Kushan territory. This is because of their close similarity with the seal mentioned
above, and might possibly be dated to the same period, namely the 4 th -5th century.49 The
current author suggests that these types of anthropomorphic maces should be called the
Bactrian type, as they come fro m the Kushanshahr territory. A female crown is also shown
on a silver plate fro m the Walter Art Gallery, showing a banquet scene, and is identified as
provincial Sasanian art fro m the 6th -7th century.50 There is also a known depiction of a
wo man wearing a ram's horn head decoration fro m Uzbekistan, near Termez, that was
discovered on the Fayaz-Tepe painted murals.51 This monastery was founded in the Kushan
period (1st -3rd century), but the paintings could date to the later period. 52 However, this piece
is quite different fro m the other horn headgear as the horns might be placed on the sides of
the head, not strictly on the top of the head as seen on other Iranian artefacts containing this
kind of imag inary. What should also be mentioned as an interesting line of future studies on
Eastern-Iran ian headdresses of this type, is the fact that such crowns were common ly used
by Central Asian Kidarites.53

Scholars have mostly focused on the connection of such Kushano -Sasanian horns
with the Hellenistic post-Alexander tradition, where coins often showed Alexander the
Great with additional rams horns,54 and also connecting such horns with Zeus -Amon.55

In the present author's opinion, we cannot of course disregard western influences.


Nevertheless, we also cannot simply point to such influence, as M. Co mparet i did in his
article on horned figures in late Bactrian painting. In reality, we are facing much longer and
wider trad ition of using ram symbolism in Asia. It becomes even more complicated if we
look at the nomadic Altai tribes where additional ram horns on headgear starts at least as
early as the Pazyryk period 56 and survived in different forms until at least the Mongo l
period. In fact we are here facing a bigger Asian tradition of using animal horn formu lae

48
Connection between maces from Kushan and Kushano-Sasanian art of Eastern Iran and later
traditions of Greater Iran were shown in A. L. Kubik work: About one group of Iranian maces in the
context of the new find from Sivas, Turkey: an analysis from the Sasanian to the Safavid Period,
Pskov, 2014. Some of the maces described in this paper show a connection to Bactrian and Gandhāran
art. The term Eastern-Iranian or following Kushano-Sasanian aesthetic tradition will be used here as a
synonym of bigger term Indo-Iranian to place those maces much more in some “regional tradition” or
provenance then to give them strict datation of period in history of art.
49
LERNER (2009) 216.
50
HARPER (2000) pl. 26; COM PARETI (2010) fig. 6.
51
M ural from the south-western wall of the central court: a female donor with a ram’s horn headdress.
Taškent, M uzej istorii narodov Uzbekistana see: TANABE, M AEDA (1999) fig. 156; COM PARETI
(2010) 97; LO M UZIO (2012a) fig. 7, pl. 6, 194, 207; (2014) fig. 3.13, 129.
52
COM PARETI (2010) 97; LO M UZIO (2012b) 319-327; (2014) 130.
53
COM PARETI (2010) 97; LO M UZIO (2012a) 199-201.
54
COM PARETI (2010), DMITRIEV (2012); DM ITRIEV (2013).
55
DM ITRIEV (2013) 67.
56
YATSENKO (2006) 83 - 101.
165 | P a g e
which, in the current author's opinion, was widespread throughout Asia and was possibly
suited and modified to local trad itions and beliefs. This needs future detailed study.

As was mentioned above, we can in fact connect such late Sasanian or - in the
author's opinion - Indo-Iranian maces, or the maces following the Kushano -Sasanian
aesthetic tradition, with a strictly ceremon ial or even liturg ical function. 57 We cannot
exclude the possibility that in Iran the ram, as part of a mace, could refer to the Victory God
Verethragna or could be shown as the bearer of xvarnah – the royal glory, guarded by
Verethragna58 as, perhaps, could other animals shown in Sasanian art. But as was mentioned
above and suggested by Kubik,59 the maces of this type share many elements with eastern
art and possibly entered Sasanian Iran during the late Sasanian period fro m the

Plate 6. Four-Armed Goddess with a ram’s head in her hand. North India, from the MMA collection,
gift of M r. and M rs. Perry J. Lewis, 1984.
Available online: http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/38252

57
The current paper only discusses anthropomorphic and zoomorphic maces. It is important to note
that there were a variety of mace forms in Arsacid and Sasanian Iran, for example, the mace head
found at Dura Europos [JAM ES (2004) 189]. The mace as a weapon of war is also mentioned by
Tabari [see: BIVAR (1972) 275 - 276, 291; BOSWORTH (1999) 262 - 263].
58
LERNER (2009) 219 ; SIM PSON (2013) 104.
59
KUBIK (2014) 161 - 163.
166 | P a g e
Sasanian Empire's eastern provinces or neighbors. 60 Some interesting elements are present
in Gandhāran art, for example, the appearance of ram's heads in the hands of deities . As an
example we can show here a Goddess sculpture from MMA (acc. nr. 1984.488), which was
acquired as a gift of Mr. and Mrs. Perry J. Lewis in 1984 (p l. 6). Th is piece has been
interpreted by S. Kossak as a four-armed Durgā Śāradā.61 Controversies concerning the
mean ing of rams' head in Gandhāran art were well presented by A. Di Castro in his art icle, 62
but are outside the remit of the present study. However, the connection betwe en the part of
the animal and the use of the animal sy mbolis m on maces was not investigated further by Di
Castro. A similar pattern of influence fro m b ird sy mbolis m to bird -headed maces or scepters
can clearly be seen on Kushan coins, where the motif of a bird held on an outstretched open
hand exists in the same formulae as the bird on Kushan maces or scepters. 63 It is likely that
the two motifs are related, and that the animal held in the hand may have formed the
precedent for the same animal forming the head of a mace or scepter. Interestingly, the motif
of animal symbo ls held in the hand or on mace heads existed mainly on Kushan coins, in the
most north-western area of Indic influence, but was absent in central and southern India. 64

Plate 7. From the left: A cast of a coin showing the God Yamsho standing to right with a bird sitting
on his outstretched arm, The British M useum, London, coin of Kushan king Huvishka published by
M eenakshi Singh in JNSI Vol. LX VII, after R. Bracey. 65

The second interesting features of the Ashmolean mace are the so-called “double
pearl necklace” 66 and “three dots” decorative pattern. The “three dots” motif, or “cintamani”

60
KUBIK (2014) 168.
61
KOSSAK (1994) 33.
62
DI CASTRO (2015).
63
BRACEY (2009); KUBIK (2015) forthcoming.
64
DI CASTRO (2015) 288.
65
BRACEY (2009) 39 - 40.
66
Perl necklaces survived on the animal maces till the Ghaznavid period and can be observed on the
mace from The Furusiyya Art Fundation published by M OHAM ED (2008) 239, see also: KUBIK
(2014) 178 - 179, fig. 2.
167 | P a g e
is a co mmon motif that was ubiquitous in Sasanian Iran and had been seen as early as the
Arsacid period. In the Sasanian and post-Sasanian periods, this motif most commonly
appeared on textiles and clothing (as seen on Sasanian and post -Sasanian metalwork, and on
a find fro m Xinjiang), but could also be seen as a decorative motif on metalwork, on certain
seals, and on coins.67 It was also used on banners and decorative covers for armor (as seen
on the 8th - 10th century plates from Semirechye) and on the handles of implements (such as
a knife handle fro m Qasr-e-Abu Nasr, 5th - 7th Century).68 The exact mean ing and origin of
this motif is debated. Soudavar has linked it to the Chamrosh bird and the star Tishtrya. 69
This reference backs up the idea of such a mace having religious or ceremonial importance
although it must be noted that arms and armor and textiles in a secular setting were also
often adorned with such a motif. The mot if has been linked to a Buddhist tradition where the
dots are thought to represent three pearls or jewels of the Buddha. 70 This variety of
“cintaman i” is often accompanied by a “wave” or “tiger stripe” pattern (the identification of
a “wave” pattern links back to Apam Napat, the Iranian water deity, in Soudavar’s
opinion).71 However it must be noted that the association of the triple dot motif with the
tiger stripe motif in close ju xtaposition was rare during the Sasanian period when they were
more co mmon ly used as separate motifs. Much later, this “cintamani” or “three dots” motif
returned and became ext remely popular during the Timurid and Ottoman periods. 72
Interestingly, the link between the triple dot motif and a motif consisting of three animals
has been brought to light.73 Hence it is possible that the three heads of the mace may also be
lin ked with this feature.

The double pearl necklace is another common motif that was very freq uently seen
on text iles depicting animals. Pearl roundel textiles often show animals either wearing a
double pearl necklace, or holding one in their mouths (as for example by the Ducks in
‘Sasanian’ Pearl Roundels, on wall paint ings from Kucha, Xinjiang, Kyzil, Cave 60 in the
State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg). These are linked to investiture rings as seen on
Sasanian art, and were a symbol of the royal farr. Th is motif was also common in the post-
Sasanian period in Central and Inner Asia, but did not b ecome as widespread either
geographically or chronologically as the triple dots motif.

The shaft of the Ashmolean Museum mace can be regarded as ‘typical’. The
polygonal bulb on the handle section does not seems to be a significant feature in close
association with other finds of zoo morphic maces, because similar forms of decoration

67
SIM PSON (2013) 104.
68
WHITCOMB (1985) 171.
69
SOUDAVAR (2014) 47 - 48.
70
Named also wish-fulfilling jewel, possibly adopted from the art of Central Asia see: ARNOLD-
DÖBEN (1978) 58 - 60.
71
SOUDAVAR (2014) 48.
72
SOUDAVAR (2014) 50 - 52.
73
For example with three hares motif see: J. Lees “Three hares and cintamani: two well-travelled
motifs”, 2013, available online: http://www.green-man-of-cercles.org/articles/cintamani.pdf
168 | P a g e
survived at least until the 14th century.74 A much mo re interesting part of the handle seems
to be the right human hand which ends the mace where it serves as a pommel. What is
clearly visible is that it is holding a hemispheric object, identified as a ball by P. O. Harper
and associated with the Roman or By zantine tradition. 75 However, it should be noted that in
her work Harper d id not explore the mot if of a ball or a sphere held in the hand familiar
fro m Indian art.76 Further study may help to link many other symbolic aspects of the maces

Plate 8. From the left: Sasanian silver plate, the king Yazdgard I killing a stag, MM A, Harris
Brisbane D ick Fund, 1970, available onlin e: http://www.met mus eum.org/collect ion/the-
collect ion-online/s earch/326007 , P enjikent mural, hunting s cene from the museum on the site
of Old Penjikent, Tajikistan, 2007, Photograph courtesy of Jack Farrell.

under consideration to an Indo-Iranian tradition as well as to Central Asian and Western


traditions. The hand motif could be seen on other Sasanian or late Sasanian tools and is not a
feature unique to maces. In Sasanian art, shafts ending with fists are known fro m a certain
silver-gilded plate now in The Metropolitan Museum of Art which shows Yazdagird I
killing a deer (pl. 8).77 It also appears on Kushan luxury items 78 which were in itially and
incorrectly understood by A. L. Kubik79 as bone maces or scepters. A similar motif appears
as the pommel of a dagger of a hunter fro m Panjikent, dated to the 7th — early 8th centuries
(pl. 8). These hands existed in many different forms: right and left clenched hands holding a
hemispheric object, sometimes with an extended index finger (pl. 5); as open hands; and as

74
KUBIK (2014) 169.
75
HARPER (1985) 253 - 254.
76
For example: in the hand of India Goddess Durga ( see for example: Goddess Durga Slaying the
Buffalo Demon (M ahishasuramardini), Kushan period, 2nd century, The Art Institute Chicago, USA,
Gift of M r. and M rs. Lawrence R. Philips (inv. no. 1985.1108)) or in the hand of Siva-M ahesvara (see
for example: painting of Siva-M ahesvara from Dandan-Uiliq, 6 th century, British M useum, London,
England) and also in the hand of M esopotamian Goddess Nana.
77
GRABAR (1967) 98; HARPER, M AYERS (1981) 64; SKUPNIEWICZ (2009) 51.
78
PUGACHENKOVA, RTVELADZE (1978) 61,111; STANČO (2005) 54 - 64 ; ABDULAEV,
STANČO (2011) 140; STANČO (2013) 19 - 40.
79
KUBIK (2014) 163, 169.
169 | P a g e
fists. In the current author's opinion, such hand endings need also further study in relation to
the hand gestures which had a prominent place in Sasanian 80 and Buddhist traditions. The
“pearl bracelet” of the hand fro m the Ashmolean mace corresponds to the upper ending of
the hand from a so called “Indian mace” (pl. 5), a mace fro m MMA collection, gift of Parviz
H. Rabenou, 1966 (pl. 4) and a mace fro m Iran Bastan Museum, Tehran, mentioned above.
This gives us the opportunity to group those maces together for the more p recise dating of
the objects. Two of them can be dated to the late or the end of the Sasanian period. The so
called “Indian mace” is dated by the Department of Asian Art of MMA to the 7th century.
The mace fro m MMA collection with three Heraclean knots ending with a bull's head (pl.
4), because of a clear simplification of the form of the hand 81 and connection with late-
Sasanian seals as for examp le thos e mentioned above dated to the 5th-7th century, can be
also dated to the late-Sasanian or post-Sasanian period. We need to state here that the
symbol of the hand with the orb or the ball cannot be found in post -Sasanian iconography. It
is quite possible that this motif was abandoned or disregarded in early Islamic period.
Therefore we can state that those four maces date fro m the similar late-Sasanian period.
However, a majo r difference between the hand seen here, and the hands on other Indo -
Iranian maces, is the hole that may have been intended for a thong or strap to hang the mace
by, or it may have held a pair of floating ribbons. Such ribbons are seen in late Sasanian
iconography flowing fro m sword hilts or pommels and fro m the upper siyah of bows (and in
several places on clothing as well). Many maces have unique features that, while fitting an
overall Iranian theme, all differ slightly in aesthetic terms. Th is may suggest differences in
local trad itions or perhaps changes in art style over time. 82

Conclusion

The mace was an essential weapon in Greater Iran, while anthropomorphic and
zoo morphic maces and scepters also had an important symbolic and liturgical ro le. The
mace fro m the Ashmolean Museum has not been fully studied so far and it is an important
example in the study of Sasanian and post-Sasanian iconography. Although several
triceaphalic maces are known (including an examp le with three human heads, and an
example with three ox heads), this is the first examp le with three ram's heads. The three
rams’ heads are likely to have been connected with Central Asia or Eastern Iran and the
motif is well known fro m Kushano-Sasanian and Kidarite seals, coinage, and artwork. The
ram itself is also strongly associated with the farr in Sasanian symbolis m. The As hmolean
mace has two other important symbolic features – the triple dot motif, co mmon in Sasanian
Iran on textiles and metalwork, and the pearl necklace motif, a co mmon symbol for the royal
farr. Overall, the mace itself h ighlights several important new id eas and motifs regarding
animal symbolis m in Asia which, while briefly touched upon the present study, require
further research to fully exp lore their significance. Such motifs include the widespread

80
FRYE (1972) 102.
81
Such simplifications are well known from late Sasanian and post -Sasanian periods in Iranian art.
82
The possibility of travelling artists cannot be excluded, as such individuals may have travelled into a
region carrying art forms from a different region but which were nevertheless suited to local traditions.
Every new mace that is brought to light can help shed further light on these interesting concepts.
170 | P a g e
visualizat ion of rams heads and rams horns throughout As ia (including in hairstyles); the
Herakles knot; the use of the hand pommel and hand gestures in Asia; and the use of the
pearl necklace and trip le dots and its connotations in Central Asian visual language.
Interestingly a full explo ration of these comple x concepts would be an important topic for
future study.

Bibliography

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Summary

The present study brings to light a new Sasanian mace in the Ashmolean Museum
in Oxford, Eng land, acquired in 1971 fro m the Bo mford Collection. The bronze mace head
is in the shape of three ram heads, has an iron shaft, and a bronze pommel in the shape of a
hand holding a ball. The mace incorporates several important decorative motifs – the ram
heads which can be linked to the royal farr and to Central Asian visual language; the pearl
necklace which is another symbol of the royal farr, and the triple dot motif which may have
lin ks to the star Tishtriya, to Apam Napat, or to Buddhist symbolis m. In addition to these
elements there is the hand motif, whose meaning is still unknown but might be linked to
Asian symbolic hand gestures. The mace or scepter was an important element of royalty and
of religion in Iran and Central Asia and the examp le in the Ashmolean museum is an
important addition in the study of Iranian visual language and royal image in the specific
context of Indo-Iranian mutual influence.

In the present authors' opinion, the present mace is likely to date, based on relations
with other objects, fro m the 5th - 7th Centuries and is likely to originate fro m Eastern-Iran
or is rooted in Eastern-Iranian artistic tradit ion.

Keywords: Sasanian Warfare, Military History, Sasanian Beliefs, Central Asian Beliefs,
Late Antiquity, Maces, Sceptres

174 | P a g e

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