Sassanian Mandaean or Aramaic pottery incantation bowl

E45

£450.00

Sold

A pottery bowl inscribed on the inside surface with the remains of a partially legible black ink inscription written over 11 lines spiraling towards the centre. Bowls such as this were inscribed with magical incantations to invoke favours or good fortune upon the owner or to trap evil spirits. They were often buried upside-down in cemetries or building foundations and came to be known as “devil trap bowls” among early excavators.

Culture
Mesopotamia, Sassanian, Aramaic or Mandaean, c. 6th to 7th Century AD

Size
6.4 x 16.1 cms

Condition
Intact with surface wear as seen in the photographs

Provenance
Ex. private collection, Cheshire, UK; inherited by the former owner from his paternal great-uncle who acquired the bowl during or shortly after World War II (1940’s or 1950’s).

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