TOWARDS AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE ROLE OF GLYPTIC IMAGERY IN THE ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEMS OF PROTO-LFTERATE GREATER MESOPOTAMIA Holly Pin man Introduction The considerable value of glyptic art as a source for the study of pre- and proto-historic cultures of the Near East is clear from the fact that it has been successfully incorporated into wide variety of analytical approaches. In addition to its invaluable role as a chronological and regional marker, glyptic art is one of the few artifact types regularly scrutinized for insights concerning both the ancient belief and symbolic systems, While it has long been known that seals were used in the administration of the pre-literate economies, this subject has recently become a focus of greater attention, as the stimulating symposium of "Archives before Writing" demonstrates1. As my contribution to the symposium, I want to discuss glyptic in the context of pre- and proto-literate systems of accounting used in greater Mesopotamia. My discussion will proceed from two perspectives that are usually kept separate in the analysis of glyptic art. One, which has been so clearly articulated in the seminal work of Enrica Fiandra and Piera Ferioli, focuses on the functional role of seals in administrative systems. Another considers the symbolic message of the imagery engraved on the seals. Rather than discussing a specific category of seal Imagery, a specific administrative practice or a specific site, I will raise here more general questions about the glyptic imagery of the proto-literate period in greater Mesopotamia2. For example, should we expect there to be any correlation between glyptic imagery and the administrative process in the proto-historic period? If so, to what degree might such correlations exist? If imagery is involved with administration, how would we expect that association to be expressed through the imagery? How dtd the Imagery work in the administration? It is not answers to these questions that I offer in this preliminary attempt. Rather I will examine some of the assumptions that must underlie a discussion of these questions. As has been so clearly shown both through the work of Denise Schmandt-Besscrata and through the work of German and other scholars who have studied the archaic scripts4, the economic administration in the ancient Near East developed out of a system of signing that denoted quantity through abstract number and denoted quality through visual symbols that acquired their meaning through both resemblance and convention. Through the archaeological evidence we know that from the beginning, seals were one of the tools of the ancient administrative systems that also used tokens and clay masses of various shapes into which marks were incised or impressed5. It is the symbolic value for the economic administration of the marks made by those engraved stones on clay masses that I am concerning with here. This is not a new topic for consideration6, Hans Nissen openly grappled with the problem of the function of glyptic imagery in the economic administration of proto-historic Mesopotamia7. Nissen's hypothesis divided glyptic imagery of the Late Uruk period Into two categories. His criteria for these divisions were first, complexity, or more accurately uniqueness, of image and second, technique of manufacture. He designated these categories the "schematic" (Fig. 1 a, b) and "complex" groups (Fig. 2). He proposed that "schematic" seals, which could be quickly made with mechanical tools such as the 178 /Vfj//v Pittman Fig. la - Uruk: UVB 5 If. 27b (aflerAmtet 1980: no 34G). FijJ- lb - Seal In New York (after Amiet 1980 no. .112). cutting wheel and the drill (and were therefore cheap to produce) belonged to institutions. He eonlrasted these with seals having more complex figural imagery. He concluded that these would have belonged to individuals whose position within the administrative hierarchy required that they take individual responsibility for the commitment undertaken through the act of sealing. The assumptions that underlie this construct deserve to be examined because it has become a model through which variation in pre- and proto-literate glyptic Imagery is understood8. Nissen supports his hypothesis through two lines of reasoning. The first concerns social organization and argues that because complex seals would have taken a long time to make, they would have been expensive. From thai one deduces that they were objects of elite ownership, in particular they belonged to elite individuals who held positions of authority within the economic administration. The second line of reasoning concerns systems of signing. Nissen argues that the mechanism through which the seals would have been differentiated and associated with individual people was the unique features found among the design elements or within the composition of the imagery. To support such a hypothesis, he argues that while proto-literate seals share themes and design elements, there are very few examples that are virtually indistinguishable9. Nissen does not, however, explore how such a system of signs would function but proceeds to a consideration ol administrative hierarchy. Before going further, let us consider the assumption that lead Nissen to this conclusion in the firsl place. It is consistently asserted in the scholarly literature that seals "as markers of their owners, . . . served to witness, guarantee, acknowledge receipt or confirm obligation when rolled on commercial or administrative documents, letter orders, envelopes, bullae, jar and door sealings"10 When we look carefully at the impressions in their administrative context, it becomes clear that this authorizing function was not accomplished through the carved imagery per se but rather through the more general act of sealing, of making a mark, be it the impression of a seal, a fingernail, or the fringe of a garment11. The identity of any individual seal owner was conferred not through imagery1-, but rather through an inscription, either on the seal itself or on the document that was sealed. The glyptic art of the pre- and proto-historic periods do not carry inscriptions13. Thus the sole means by which individuals were designated on seals of the historic periods was not employed in the earlier seals. Returning to the Imagery on proto-literate seals, Nissen's notion works well enough in the absence of visual differentiation, namely with the so-called "schematic" seals which have a low level of differentiation and might therefore designate institutions or groups11. But even if we accept the Idea that repeated imagery denoted membership in a particular group, il is not possible to conclude from this that the opposite would be true, that a high level of visual differentiation would serve to denote individuals. Towards an Understanding of the Role of Glyptic Imagery 179 Fig. 2 a - Uruk (after Brandes 1980b: 79 no, 6). Fig. 2 b - Uruk: UVB 26/27 (1972) pi. 42a (after Amiel §980: no 1609). What Nissen is proposing is a system of signs that was used to designate individual. II one actually considers how such a system would work, it seems that It would entail the exceedingly uneconomical task of memorizing large numbers of unsystematized differences. Semiotic systems do not work in this way. When "code" is established to denote something as specific and as numerous as individual identity In a community of any size, consistency and economy in that symbolic system are of the highest value15. At around the same time that Nissen offered his hypothesis, Mark Brandes, in a study of seal linages from Level IV of the Carina precinct at Uruk, suggested that the seal imagery of the proto-literate period should be considered as referring to such things as distinct offices within the administration or particular occasions'6. Jn a third consideration that combines the approaches of Brandes and Nissen. Keinhardt Dittmann proposed an interpretation of the proto-iiterate seal imagery based on the large sample from Susa]T. Dittmann proposed to understand the "complex" seal images as literal depictions of activities relevant to different sectors of the proto-literate economy. Along with Nissen, Dittmann assumed that administrative hierarchy would be an important message contained In the glyptic imagery. Looking for the markers for Rich hierarchy, he proposed that within each sector theme higher and lower ranking In the administration was flagged by the presence of certain symbols embedded in the sector-specific imagery'". It should be stated at this point that it has been shown through numerous analyses that by the l.il. liruk period a hierarchical political/economic system had long been in place in southern Mesopotamia'^. But can we conclude therefore that such a hierarchical structure would be the single most or one of the most Important features flagged by the imagery of glyptic for the economic administration? Or can we assume that, although there are clear references to social and economic hierarchy in the imagery, symbolic references that are indeed extremely valuable to us in our understanding of the political/economic and the administrative system in which they were used, all Images held what might be considered essentially equal value. That is to say that their primary function was not to convey hierarchical status in the administration but rather to convey some kind of Information directly relevant to the transaction at hand. Holly Piaman The Images Themselves: Thfmes vfrsi:s Hierarchy Archaeological investigations over the past two decades have greatly extended our knowledge of the Late Unik period. Although there is a considerable range in the interpretation of the evidence, there is general agreement that the site of Warka, ancient Uruk, was the largest site In the Mesopotamia!) alluvium at the time. Further, judging from the results of recent excavations we now know that a number of sites in the upper Euphrates and Tigris drainage systems had close relationships with Uruk. Guillermo Algaze has argued that we understand Hie relationship of these sites in terms of a "World System" model which explains the farflung distribution of the closely related material assemblages through the idea that people living in the resource-poor Mesopotamian alluvium penetrated neighboring regions in order to extract raw materials from the rich neighboring regions20. He defines several different types of relationships that sites in the periphery had with the center. Many of these sites, referred to here through the use of the generic term "colonies." have produced administrative evidence including sealed documents, seals and sealings that are closely related to those known from Uruk. Of all of the sites of the proto-literale period, the glyptic from Susa is the best known21. Within the Susa assemblage, virtually all of the theme and style-types of the proto-literate glyptic repertory are known. Further, they are known at Susa through ancient impressions as well as actual seal stones, a fact that allows us to be confident that seals with all types of imagery were actually used in the administrative system. Most of the impressions retrieved from Late Uruk period Susa22 were made on documents rather than sealings used for closing jars or doors23. Hollow clay bullae enclosing clay tokens .ire I he most common administrative document, followed by numerical tablets and tags. All of these documents carry impressions of between one and three cylinder seals24. Although none of the other excavated groups of sealings from the Late Uruk period have been fully published, from what is currently available il appears that the general patterns of sealing known from Susa were also practiced at other "colonies" at Habuba Kibira, Jebel Aruda, Nineveh as well as at Choga Mish in Khuzistan25. In total, there is a published corpus of more than 450 linages that can be assigned with confidence to the proto-historic phase contemporary with and related to levels VI through HI in the Eanna precinct at Uruk2*. Virtually all of these images can be categorized as figural even if we cannot readily identify the subject. Looking at these images by theme rather than by style (that is complex vs. schematic), we see that within I he extant sample there exist a substantial number of different themes27. Individual examples within each theme are differentiated by varying design elements. Themes are defined though an assemblage of design elements. Examples of these themes can be found among both the complex and the schematic style groups. When combined in this way, these thematic categories divide into two large groups. One that depicts or refers to events or activities and the other which depict things or places or emblems. In lhe first category are the images that Henri Frankfort long ago called "action" scenes, a term that neatly skirts the thorny problem of narrative2**. One way to think about these images is that they all depict events. Through the clarity of their presentation, many of these events can be readily interpreted as depictions of rituals or ceremonies that were probably central to the functioning of the Late Uruk state. Many show goods that were offered or brought to or emerged from a structure that we identify as a "temple." It is possible that such events took place at regular intervals as an important mechanism through which goods were redistributed29. From Uruk iLself we are extremely fortunate to be able lo relate the most frequently occurring theme on the seal images from Uruk to one of the most famous proto-literate monuments, the Uruk vase (Fig. 3)30. Several seal images show the so-called priest-king and a second figure approaching large conical baskets (Fig. 4 a), holding symbols (Fig. 4 b). Others show the stepped altar carried on the back of an animal (Fig. 4 c). And others show paraphernalia such as vessels in the shape of animals (Fig. 4 a,d). There is never an architectural structure (i.e "temple") associated with this scenes. Other seals refer to other registers on that monument showing files or animals and rows of plant (Fig. 4 e)31. Another prominent theme seen in the glyptic images from Uruk is the procession of figures bearing Towards an Understanding of the Rote of Glyptic Imagery 181 goods towards the temple (Fig. 5 a-d)32. In addition to a reference to the Warka vase, we have hints of the same theme depicted in other media, such as the lamentably fragmentary wall paintings from the painted temple at Uqatr33, Virtually all of the temples in these scenes that have identifiable symbols have the standard with the single, double or triple paired rings. Although the identity of this deity is uncertain, we can be confident that it is not lnanna:w. A third theme shows young animals emerging from the biers that are associated both with the deity of the double ringed emblem (Fig. 6 a, b) and with Inamia (F'ig, 6 c, d). This scene must refer to the increase in the temple herds. In another series of "action" themes from Uruk we see the priest/king receiving bound and controlled prisoners (Fig. 7 a-e)35. These also depict events, a public display of the defeated human I lit imes of the early slate. From Uruk all prisoners are clearly identifiable by their rope binding and their crouched posture, distributed heltcr skelter over the image ground (Fig. 7 a, b. c). From the "colonies" at both Choga Mish and Susa (Fig. 7 d, e) come a small number of images that show events that involve either the priest/king or warfare. Representations of bound prisoners from the site of Susa are always shown standing or ben! over (Fig, 7 e). If the system of images are linked between sites then it is possible that these different postures represent particular stages in the tenure of these individuals as captives. In addition to the "action" scenes shared with Uruk, there are many images that were found at the "colony" sites that are different from those we know from Uruk3*. They are not different in style, in compositional structure, or in individual design elements, but in theme. While at Uruk the themes of action 'I'I'K t what can be categorized either as a ritual or military/political event, at Susa the most common theme among the "action" images is the manufacturing of goods. Among the most common industries depicted in the Susa glyptic are activities related to weaving (Fig. 8 a-e). As is true in the scenes of presentation of goods to the temple al Uruk, the relationships of individuals in the workplace arc clearly and consistently defined. Worker, supervisor, commodities, record keeping in the workplace are shown37. Another activity is the threshing and the storage of grain (Fig. 9 a, b). Other images show working the fields (Fig. 10), the birthing of young animals (Fig. 11), and the transportation of goods (Fig. 12 a, b)38. Included in Fig. 3 - Uruk Vase (Pittman 1987). 182 Holly Pittman this group are tin-; numerous impressions of seals found at Susa of pigtail ladies carrying a variety of objects that might be commodities or standards signifying group membership (Fig. 13 a-f)39. The other major group of images carved on proto-Hterate seals both in the center at Uruk and in the "colonies'* does not present literal representations of events, cither as ritual or as production. Rather than a "discursive" one, the arrangement of the design elements, many times identical to those found in the "action" images, have a formal "'symbolic"* or "emblematic" character. There are several types of these "symbolic** representations. One group known from both Uruk and the "colonies" show vessels, tools or products of manufacturing in rows (Fig. 14 a, b). Some show these in association with human figures, such as the weaving or manufacturing scene from Susa (Fig. 8 c), but others seem not to refer to a process, but rather they appear to list visually the end products of the manufacturing process (Fig. 14 a). At Uruk we do not find among the published seals such visual lists of commodities. Instead they are combined with scenes of "action." A related subject shows animals associated with certain of these manufactured products. From both Uruk and the "colonies", caprids are shown with finished textile and plants (Fig. 15 a); with textile, vessel and plant (Fig. 15 b, c); with a ladder pattern'1" (Fig. 15 d); and felines and raptors with vessels (Fig. 16 a-l for a thing/word (Fig. 5 a). Others seem to be more like determinatives, slotted in one for the other (Fig. 13 a-f or Fig. 17 b, c). In addition to these formal features in which the presentation and the organization of the glyptic imagery can be seen in some ways comparable to the script, there is undeniable similarity in the appearance of some signs and some design elements used in glyptic imagery. Obviously, since we cannot read these signs on the tablets, it is impossible lo speculate on whether they could have the same meaning in both systems, but in the case of the frontal bulls head47, or divine symbols4* or the typology of vessels49, the similarity cannot be overlooked50. Concluding Remarks Having compared the formal structure of proto-cuneiform texts and proto-literate glyptic images, we can return to function of the imagery in the economic administration. What, if anything could Ihey have contribuled to the administrative system in which they are used? Are they really the visual equivalent of names, of signatures? It seems in fact lhat the one topic thai the seat imagery does not address is name. We have representations of different types of officials, the priest/king, acolytes, Towards an Understanding of the Rote of Glyptic Imagery 191 Fig. 14 a - Sum (after Amiel 1972: no. 629), Fig. H b - Susa (after Amiet 1972: no. 713). supervisors and personal workers. They are all clearly distinguished both by attire and by posture but they are treated as generic types and are not differentiated. Before the administrative role of the seals can be understood in the proto-literate period, we must have a clearer understanding of the scope and the objectives of the administrative processes. This seems to be a very difficult thing to know. It is in many ways contingent on our understanding of the structure of the Uruk "state" and the fundamental purpose of the administration. From the evidence we hiive, it is possible to suggest that an interrelated if not integrated administrative system was widespread throughout greater Mesopotamia. The type of administration envisioned here is one that was concerned with a small but extremely Important part of the economy, the portion that was of interest to the central authority. Further, the glyptic imagery suggests that the most commonly occurring themes, those of rituals or activities of production were all bound together. All of these economic functions must have been extremely important not only to the religious life but also to at least a significant portion of the economic life of the Late Uruk state-In such a context. Images could be indicating a particular occasion and hence the lime and the particular destination of goods51. Images of production show us In quite specific terms what was produced and what the social relations of production were. Could these be the production of goods that were given at time of ritual celebrations? Or are they goods that were given in exchange for raw materials? Images that do not refer to actual events are more difficult to interpret. Many seem lo refer to particular commodities or combinations of commodities: textiles, vessels, caprids for textiles, caprids for milk, caprids for meat/sacrifice. Others might flag social groups. The emblematic groups are often modified either by vessels or by symbols whose meanings are lost to us; perhaps they are designations of cities or production groups or other corporate entities. A literal reading of these images will always lie beyond our reach, just as a literal reading of the archaic texts. But [ believe thai they must be approached together both because I hey were Invented together, and because they were used together in the same administrative system. These images somehow contributed to the administration of the economy In a way that augmented the inscriptions. When individual seal ownership becomes important, during the later pari of the Early Dynastic I period, Is the point when names were added lo the seal imagery through the use of proto-cuueiform inscription. It Is also at that point that the large number of themes so typical of I he protu-l iterate period are replaced by the undifferentiated and illegible theme of animal combat. As important as reading these laconic: documents. Is what they can tell us about the social and Indeed cognitive habits of ancient humanity. Not only do we have the invention of writing at this moment, but we have the invention of what Frankfort has called "action" art. Before this time, much of the material culture that we define as "art" is essentially the residue of ritual or ceremonial activity or it served as status markers within the social hierarchy. The art of Ihe proto-literate period, both on the seals ami hi other media records for as (as it did for its original audience) status and ritual, but unlike the "art" of earlier periods, It does not do so directly. What images begin to do for the first time was to narrate social relations and social behavior; through illustration, imagery communicated social norms 192 Holly Pittman Fig. 15 a-Uruk IVa (after Amiet 1930: 171). I'll?. 15 b- Uruk IVa: Kleinluitde tl 15 1 (after Amiet 1980:175). Fig. 15 c - Uruk IVa: Kleinfunde If. 15 k (after Amiet 1980:173) Fig. 15 d - Susa (after Amiet 1972: 511). and it extended ritual. It stood outside of the event; It conveyed message through time and space that was clear to all who were literate in the visual system. It has long been noted that one of the features that accompanies the appearance of the "state" is the occurrence of this kind of representation. Al least In greater Mesoj>otamIa, we see the representation of ever more elaborate and detailed and differentiated events and relationships. Both writing and visual narration as systems of symbolizing were invented in the same crucible. Both were the externalization and the concretization of information and both were tools of social control. I am exploring in more general terms the ways in which these two modes of symbolic expression, textual and visual, were related. My investigation of this early material suggests that there was a strong structural, contextual and thematic linkage between visual works of "art" and "written" texts and that these two modes of expression stood in opposition to spoken communications, in particular to dialogue, and to ritual or other acts of physical communication. Implicit in such a view is an explanation for the tremendous thematic variety that characterizes the proto-literatc glyptic corpus, a variety that rapidly constricts following the collapse of the proto-literate social economic organization and the re-alignment into what we know as the Early Dynastic city states. TtfuHirds an Understanding of the Role of Glyptic Imagery Fig. log - Uruk (after Hrandes 1979: if 16) 194 Htttty Pittman Rg. I7n -Uruk IV; IJVU 2 p. 42 abb. 32 UVB fi if 24 e. Niv. IV (after Amiet 1980:182). Fig. 17b - Unik; Red Temple: UVB 5 If. 24a (after Amict 1980: 176). / -—; > j ----- i —------ lig. 17c - Uruk; Anu Ziggurat; UVB 9 tf. .We (after Amiet 1980: 224). Rg. 18a - Uruk; Limestone Temple: UVB 5 tf. 25f (after Amiet 1980 178). Fig. ISh - Uruk IV: UVB 5, tf. 24c. level 4 (after Amiet 1980: 177). Towards an Understanding of the Role of Glyptic Imagery 195 Fig. 19a - Susa (after Amiet 1972: 464). Fig. 19b - Uruk IV: UVB 5 lf.26f (after Amiet 1980: 1MB). fíg. 19c - Uruk rV: Lenzen ZA 15 tl. 4 abb 11 (after Amiet 1980:197). Fig. 19d - Uruk; Limestone Temple: UVB 5 tf. 26b (after Amiet 1980:199). Rg. 19e - Susa (after Amiet 1972 478). Fig. 19g - Susa (after Amiet 1972: 475). no} Fl«. 19Í- Uruk I.FVU Id wm tl 2Gg; 30 a-d; p. 50: W 19421 a.b (after Amiet 1980: pL 13 bis L). Flg. 19h - Uruk; Red Temple: UVB 5 tl. 22d. lenzen ZA 15 tf. 4 abb. 9 (after Amiet 1980:201). Holly Pittman Rg. 20c - Susa (after Amte11972: 488). Towards an Understanding of the Role of Glyptic Imagery 197 1 This is a rewritten version oj the paper presented at the conference. I am grateful to the organizers lor their Invitation anil for their patience It has ttcncfUted from comments made at the symposium as well as remarks by the editors. 2 The term "proto-literate* is used here In the sense first proposed by Delougaz to denote the cultural horizon equivalent to the level VI through 111 in the Banna sounding at Uruk. The general geographical term "greater Mesooplamla" embraces southern Mesopotamia, Khuzislan, and those sites in Syria and northern Mesopotama which were, judging hy their material culture, closely associated wiih the southern sites. 3 SCHMAIOTT-0b.v.hat 1992. 4 See Nbmn, Damerov ahd Engluw 1990, pp. 220-1 lor a selective bibliography. 5 The earliest Impressions ol seals on clay are know from the Halaf period at Arpachlyah. Arguing from the criterion o( discernible dlflerentation, both the shape of the seal acid the number of impressions on those flat, round or oblong "documents* may have contained information about number and commodity (or subject). For illustrations see vu\ Wukitii: 1990. 6 The symposium on seals and seallngs held In Chicago in 1975 initiated the current discussion of this subject. Gibson and Bio* 1977. Others who have tackled this problem in the early periods arc 1j- Brun and Vallat 1978; Shendge 1983: AMihi 1985; Ajjzaoeh 1988; Rothman this volume. 7 Nissen 1977. h Km example, Li: Bri* Win Vaimt I97R; Rdthman 1988; AlV>nrjr 1988. V BiMNDti 1979, tl. 25. 26, 27, 28, opp. 29 Illustrates separate seal images that are virtually indistinguishable. These seals Ijelung to Nlssen's complex category. By Nlssen's reasoning, these seals would have lielouged to the same individual. 10 Wintir 1987. p. 81 11 RlMJf* 1977, p. 77. 12 Although as one might expect. It is possible to discern souu- h - i ..i . . s . .1 consistent patterns linking imagery and seal owner or User. For example, Winter has shown that there exist correlations between the rank of official and the content of seal imagery In thr l.r 111 period. WlNTUX 1987. 13 However, it seems that persona] names were represented in the prolo-cunelform script, See Ntssm, Damuwv aw E«gij^in 1990. pp. 66-7 for a discussion of the use of personal nami-s in the archaic script- 14 This system would work in essentially the same way as the Neo-Sumerian seals in which rank was Magged through Imagery, although there is never the rigorous consistency in the Proto-litcrate schematic seals that one finds In the seals ol the Neo-Snmerlan period 15 We can suppose from the lexical lists that the Proto-Sumerians were Interested in systematic correlations. I Jsts of fishes see Cm. 1961; birds see Civil ami BttCS 1966; list of professions and titles jNksen. Damikov anp Englund 1990. pp. 153-7. Faijo^nstun 1936, pp. 14-47. M8LXU4-24. 16 Bmmgg 1979; 1980a; 1986. He did not. however, attempt to explore how such a system would work as a code. For a discussion ol these Issues see the review by Collon 1981/2. 17 Drrnuwi 1986, is Because, following Nissen, his Interest is in hierarchy or early states, Llittmarm assigned a place in the administrative hierarchy n> each image and then counted I he number of tiers in the hierarchy. The assignment to one or other level in the hierarchy depended on the presence or absence ol design elements While some ol the modifying design elements may indeed have reflected status, others seem arbitrary in their assignment to one or the other of the three tiers in the hierarchy. Dittmann 1986. pp. 337-38. 19 For a discussion and bibliography see Wright 1977 and Wright 1982. 20 Amaze 19©. 21 Thanks to the tireless work of Pierre Amiet, the corpus of glyptic imagery from Susa has long been hilly published in Amiet 1972. 22 Defined in archaeological terms as levels 19 lo 17B In the Acropole sounding. SeeLt Bkiin 1971. 23 Awet 1972; Chaw at 1988. 24 The analysis presented here thus not attempt to account lor the co-occurence of the impressions ol different seals on these documents Diltniauu charts the patterns ol occurence but tails to delect any convincing pattern. 25 StrohmENO* 1980; van Dwrx 1982; 1983; Collon and Reatje 1983; Dw.lK.igaZ ano Kantor 1972 There is striking homogeneity in the administrative systems used in these "colonial" sites, while the administrative system found at Uruk has some different features. Fur one attempt to consider the function of the sealings from Uruk see RiuiUjO 1991. 26 What t Include In this number are glyptic exemplars contemporary with Levels VI through III at the Eamia sounding at Uruk. According to my count of published examples there are 161 Images from Uruk; 14 from Jemdet Nasr; 6 from Habuba Kibira; 9 font Tel] Kaunas. 43 from Jebel Aruda; 220 from Susa; 4 from Choga Mlsh; and 2 from Nineveh. When all ol the material is published this numlrer might be perhaps doubled. What I exclude from that sample are the prolo-elamlle images Ironi Susa and from the sites on the Iranian highland and those from the Seal Impression Strata levels 8-4 at Ur. The same general functional and structural argument can, in my opinion, he applied to both of these groups of seal images. V The themes I have defined for the seal Imagery from Uruk include feeding the flocks; presentation to In a una: procession lo temple, boat approaching leniple. ritual at temple; herd to temple; animal bier: workers: warlare; marshes: twist; animal and abject; animal file: heraldic animals, symbols, for Susa the major themes are: ritual with ruler master of animals, combat; prisoners: hunting, herding; figures with goods/standards; transixirtatlon ol goods: symlmls; weaving; figures and vessels; IMa; human birthing; animal birthing; working in Hie fields; animal files; heraldic composition ol animal: composite animals; snake interlace: animal and object. 18 FtWKKKiRT 1939. p. 16. He divides these further into ritual scenes and secular scenes. 19 Other themes less obviously reler to ritual or ceremonies but do show the priest/king engaged In activities which must also liave been of symbolic importance. In one example we see the priest/king hunting in the marshes, perhaps an efficacious event l i was somehow associated wit It the economy, 30 For a discussion of the Iconography ol the vase see Hansen 1976. 198 Holly Pittman 31 Kkanixcs 1986, p. 55 argues that such seal Imagery directly copies the Warfca vase. A striking characteristic ol the art of the proto-lltcrale period, first observed by Framcfort 1939, p. 23, Is the homogeneity ol lite Imagery across media in this period, I intend to explore the significance of this relationship in a future study. 32 Among the published examples, this theme u( procession overlaps wllh Hie previously considered llwme in only in shared emphasis oti Hie girdle of the priest king as seen on the vase Itself. 33 Llovd and Sauk 1943. 34 This could be the divine sign lor Knkl, if the assigned value of sign 421 as F.ridu in Green and Nissen 1987 is correct. The procession of Hie boat always approaches the temple with this ringed standard, The association with water reinforces such an Interpretation. 35 Frankfort 1939. p. 22 suggests that these scenes have what he terms an "historical" character 36 The fact that the "colonies" are indeed contemporary with Uruk fV is finally proven by the close analysis of seal impression which allows us to be unequivocal in our opinion that llabuha Kibira; Susa level 18-17 and Uruk IV are contemporary regardless of the fact that neither Habuba Kibira nor Susa have proto-c jnelfnrm script at that point. See SuRENHat.fn 1986 for another opinion. 37 PrrrHA> 1993. 38 These are images that Dittmaxn 1986 assigned to differenl sertors of the economy, an interpretation that is generally consistent with the one olfereri here, excepting the variable ot hierarchy. 39 Following Nissen, Dittmann 1986, pp. 338-39 includes these in a group thai would denote the lowest level of the administrative hierarchy. 40 This enigmatic form could denote either a fence or a neck stock used to control animals. 41 Out km 1981, p. 346. 1 rely entirely on the work of other scholars for the origin and early development ol the proto-cunetform script. In particular the positions elaborated by Powell 1981 and Green 1981 are central lo my understanding. 42 Powell 1981, pp. 121-23for adlscussion of the concepliml background of the proto-cuneilorm script 43 Grfin 1981, p. 356. 44 For example see Amct 10841. 45 Although as Gf.ijw 1963, p. 67 shows that is the case in the heraldic device for the towns ol Oxford, Berlin and Munich. In all three rases there is a phonetic transler involved in I he emblematic devices. 46 Harris 1986, pp. 145-46; p. 155 for a discussion of "slotting" in writing systems. 47 Green and Nissen 1987; sign no. 29 and 30 compare to Fig. 20 b. 48 Green and Nissen 1987: sign no. 375 which is the gate post of Inanna see Fig. 6 d. 49 Green and Nbsen 1987; sign nos. 88; 93-124; 190 are vessel types that are us«?d as design elements. 50 Precisely the same relationship exists between the designs clement used In the glazed steatite seals and the prolo-cLamite system (if writing. See PrrrvtAN 1990. 51 This is diametrically oppiwed to the Interpretation offered by Lt Brun and Vaijat 1978. Their analysis which is based on the assumptions developed by Nisso 1977 ]x]sits a market economy in which individuals are documenting private transactions through the administrative tools of Ihe hollow clay balls and numerical tablets. Abbreviations ATU Archaische Texte aus Uruk, Leipzig. MDAI Menioires de la Delegation Archeologique en Iran UVB Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. Berlin. Vorläufiger Bericht über die von der Notgemeinschaft der deutschen Wissenschaft in Uruk-Warka unternommenen Ausgrabungen, Berlin ZA Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und verwandte Gebiete, Leipzig. BlBUOCKAPHY Adams, R.McC. 1966. The Evolution of Urban Society. Chicago. Algaze G. 1989. The Uruk Expansion: Crosx-cuHnrat Exchange in Early Mesopotaniian Civilization, In "Current Anthropology'7, 30, pp. 571-607. Towards an Understanding Of the Role of Glyptic Imagery 199 AuZADEii. A. 1988. SoeioEconomic Complexity in Southwestern Iran during the Fifth and Fourth Millennia B.C.: The Evidence Imm Tall-i Bukun A. in "Iran ", 26, pp. 17-34. Amet, P. 1972. Clypttque sasienae, des origines ä l'epoque des Femes Achemenides, in "MDAI", 43. 2 vols.. Paris. — 1980. Laglyptique mesopotamienne urchaique, 2,ld ed.. Paris. — 1985. A propos de l'usage et de Tkonographie des sceaux ä Suse, in "Paleorient". 11, no. 2. pp. 37-38-Bkanües, M.K. 1979. Siegelabrollungen aus den archaischen Bauschichten in Uruk-Warka. Freiburg Altorientallsche Studien, vol. 3, Wiesbaden. -1980a. Modelage et imprimerie aux debuts de Tecriture en Mesopotamia, in "Akkadiea", 18, pp. 1-30. — 1980b. Waffenkammer — ein neues Siegelthema der liruk-Zeit, Forschungen und Funde: Festschrift Bernhard Neutsch, pp. 77-87, Innsbruck. -1986, Commemorative Seats?, in Kelly Buccellati. M., (ed. in collaboration with P. Matthiae and M. van Loon), Insight through Images: Studies in Honor of Edith Porada, in "Bibliotheca Mesopotamia", 21, pp. 51-56, Malibu, Calif. Chakvvu.P. 1988. Archaeology and Social History: The Susa Sealing*, ca. 4000-2350 B.C.. in "PalSorient" 14. pp. 57-63. CoujON. D. 1981-82. Review of MX. Brandes 1979, in H.4rchiv fur Orientforsdmng", 28, pp. 177-181. ÜJDN, I).. Keade. J. 1983. Archaic Nineveh, in "Baghdader Mitteilungen", 14, pp. 33-41. Coulmas. F. 1989. The Writing Systems of the World, Oxford. Dixoijgaz, P. and Kantok, H.J. 1969. New Light on the Emergence of Civilization in the Near East, in "UNESCO Courier" (November ), pp. 22-28. -1972. Sew Evidence for the Prehistoric and Protoliterale Culture Development of Khuzestan., in "The Memorial Volume of the Vth International Congress of Iranian Art and Archaeology", vol. 1, pp. 14-33, Tehran. DrrrUAf«.R. 1986. Seats. Sealings and Tablets: Thoughts on the Changing Pattern of Administrative Control from the Late-Vruk to the ProtoElamile Period at Susa, in Flnkbfineh, U.. Röllig, W. (eds.), Gamdat Nasr Peritxi or Regional Style?, pp. 332-366, Wiesbaden. Dollris, (i. 1973. Cachets en lerrtj cuite de Djaffarabad et 'cachets' apparentees, in "Revue d'Assyriologie", 67, pp. 1-19. 200 Holly Pittman Falkenstein, A. 1936. Archaische Texte aus Uruk. Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft in Uruk-Warka, band 2. Berlin. Finkbelner, U.. köllig, W. eds. 1986. Gamdat Nasr: Period or Regional Style?, Beihefte zum Tübinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients, Reihe B. no. 62, Wiesbaden. Frankfort, H. 1939. Cylinder Seats: A Documentary Essay on the Art and Religion of the Ancient Near East, London. —1955. Stratified Cylinder Seals from the Diyala Region, in "Oriental Institute Publications", 72, Chicago. Gelb, IJ. 1963. A Study of Writing: The Foundations of Grammatology. rev. ed. Chicago, (first published 1952). —1980. Principles of Writing Systems within the Frame of Visual Communciation, in Kolers, P.A., Wrolstad, M.E., Bouma, H. (eds.). Processing of Visible Language, 2, pp. 7-24, New York. Gibson, Mc G.. Biggs, R.D. (eds.) 1977 Seals and Sealing in the Ancient Near East, in "Bibliotheca Mesopotamia", 6, Mallbu. Goff, B.L., Buchanan, B. 1956 A Tablet of the Uruk Period in the Goucher College Collection, in "Journal of Near Eastern Studies", 15, pp. 231-235. Green, M.W. 1981. 77ie Construction and Implementation of the Cuneiform Writing System, in "Visible Language", 153, pp. 45-72. Green. M.W., Nlssen. H.J. 1987. Zeichenliste der Archaischen Texte aus Uruk, Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft in Uruk-Warka , vol. 11, ATU, vol. 2. Berlin. Hansen, D.P. 1976. Frühsumerishce und Friihdynastiche Flachbildekunst, In Ortumann, W. (ed.), Propyleän Kunstgeschichte, vol. 14.. Der Alte Orient Harris, R. 1986. 77ie Origin of Writing, La Salle, Illinois. Johnson. G. 1978. Information Sources and the Development of Decision-making Organizations, in Redman C.L., et alii, feds.), Social Archaeology: Beyond Subsistence and Dating, pp. 87-122. New York. Kantor, HJ. 1976. The Excavations at Choga Mish. 1974-75, In Bagherzadeh. F.B., "Proceedings of the fVth Annual Symposium on Archaeological Research in Iran ", pp. 23-41. Tehran. — n.d. Excavations at Choga Mish, in "The Oriental Institute Annual Report for 1974-75", pp. 17-26. Towards an Understanding of the Role of Giyptic Imagery UM Lanüdon, S. 1931. New Texts from Jcrndet .\'asr, in "Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society ". pp. 837-844. U Brun. A. 1971 Ret lurches stratioraphiques « TAcropole de Suse, 1969-1971, in "Cahiers de la Delegation Archeologique Francaise en Iran". I, pp. 163-216. — 1978a La glyptique du niveau 17B de TAcropole (Campagne de 1972), in "Cahiers de la Delegation Archeologique Francaise en Iran" ,8, pp. 61-79. —1978b. U tttaeau 17B de TAcropole de Suse < Campagne de 1972), "Cahiers de la Delegation Archeologique Francaise en Iran", 9, pp. 57-98. -1985. Lf niivau 18de iAcropote de Suse. Memoires d'argile, memoire du temps, in "Paleorient" 11. no.2, pp. 31-36. Ii Brün, A., Vallat, F. 1978. Vorigine de lecriture ä Suse, in "Cahiers de la Delegation Archeologique Francaise en Iran", 8, pp.11-59. LlUilKMANN, S. 1980, Ol Qay Pebbles. Hollow Clay Balls, and Writing: A Sumerian View, in "American Journal of Archaeology", 84, pp. 339-358, Ltovn, S„ Safar, F. 1943. 7Wf Vquir Excavations by the Iraqi Government Directorate of Antiquities in 1940 and 1941, in "Journal of Near Festem Studies" 2, pp. 131-158. Nesen. HJ. 1976. Zur Trage der Arbeitorganisation in Babylonien während der Spaturuk Zeit, in "Acta Antiqua Hungerica", 22. pp. 5-14, — 1977, Aspects of the Development of Early Cylinder Seals, in Gibson, Mc G., Bjggs, R.D. (eds.), Seals and Sealing in the Ancient Near East, in "Bibliotheca Mesopotamia", 6, pp. 15-23, Malibu. — 1986. The Development of Writing and Glyptic Art, in Finkbeiner, U., Röujg, W. (eds.), Gamdat Nasr: Period or Regional Style?, Beihefte zum Tübinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients, Reihe B, no.62, pp. 316-331, Wiesbaden. Nbsen, HJ., Damerov, P., Engluno, R.K. 1990. Truhe & hrift und Techniken der Wirtschaftsverwaltung im alten Vorderen Orient, Berlin. rTTTMAN. H. 1987 Ancient Art in Miniature, New York. — 1990. The Glazed Steatite Style: ffte Structure and Function of an Image System. (PhD. diss. Columbia University), -1993 Pictures of an Administration: the Late Uruk Scribe at Work, in Franlities. PITTMAN There are many people who are far more qualified to speak about the political structure of the Late Uruk period than 1 am and so I appreciate your objection and 1 hesitate to get Into a discussion on it. The one think that 1 will say is that I do not agree that these seal images have "diffused" into the region. The imagery is not a single line on a pot nor it is a series of dots. It is a very specific, very complicated system of imagery that you do not see before Susa 19 level. It starts in the middle of the Uruk period and by the time we get to the Late Uruk period it is very specific and I think quite short lived. And we can see the fact that Habuba Kibira and Susa and Jebel Aruda and Uruk are sharing these Images, and all are separate one from the other. The imagery is used, I think, more than any other evidence other than administrative evidence as the basis of the argument for the existence of "colonies" in the Late Uruk period, certainly along with the pottery. So I think that we have to respect the specificity of the iconography and the specificity of the style just as we respect the specificity of a tablet showing up in a context. We must deal with what that it means. Discussion 209 FIANDRA Do you allow that some of these representations would be the "signature" of an individual person? PITTMAN I don't know how it would work. There are two or three seals of the Late Uruk period that have signs on them. Those might In fact be names. 1 don't deny the possibility any more than anything else. But 1 don't think that images exclusively denoted individuals. FIANDRA Bui how do you explain, for example, the seals which have an inscription and say "The seal of Addu, son of Asqudum"? That is a person and an official. PITTMAN I explained that a sealing is individualized through its relationship to an inscription, but if you think, for example, of the Early Dynastic combat scenes where in the Royal Cemetery for example only a small number of the combat scenes carved in lapis were inscribed. All of the seals are owned by individuals but there is no way to know who these individuals were both in antiquity and now unless they have an inscription associated with them. SCHMANDT-BES5ERAT I will discuss the cylinder seal featuring the priest-king. It is noteworthy that, wherever such seals occur, be it at Uruk, Mesopotamia; Susa and Choga Mish, Persia; or Habuba Kabira, Syria; they are part of an iirlmlnistrative assemblage that includes clay cone mosaics, beveled-rim bowls, nose-lugged jars, complex tokens, envelopes and impressed tablets. These artifacts depict a bureaucracy: its lavish buildings; the leader and his paraphernalia of power; the administrative kit, including measures, counters, record keeping devices and seals. The context makes it clear that the significance of the seals was their role in economic control. PITTMAN I do not disagree with any of that and I am not saying that this isn't a system of control. It Is absolutely a system of control, But what I am trying to do is to ask what role do the seal Images play In this system ol control. And I am suggesting that 1 do not see the administration as a system of control wtn.'re everybody in the Uruk community is having to pass through all of these controls just to get breaklasl I am seeing it as a way of channeling goods to the centralized institution, and so it is only alieclmg a particular segment of the centralized institution, It is only dealing with a particular segment of the economy and of production and transportation of raw materials. The other thing is that, of course there are Individuals, and of course there arc responsible individuals. I have no question about that. But I im n.ii I,ilking about individuals. I am talking about the imagery on the seals. And what I see there is, perhaps at least in part, a reflection of the mechanism through which this redistribution or control was achieved. It was achieved through religious sanctification and that is why we are seeing what we are seeing In the glyptic images. If they had wanted to add names to the Images though could have done that. They \w\ writing. They had rebus. If they had wanted to denote individuals by name, they would have done It. sj hmandt-BESSERAT Because the seals bearing the image of the priest-king, and the administrative assemblage to which they belong, are known to be of Uruk origin, their presence in Persia and Syria indicates the Mesopotamian temple zone of influence or, in other words, the extent of the Uruk priest-king's power. PITTMAN So we agree. 24 OCTOBER, AFTERNOON UVERANI The next one is a paper by Joan Aruz from the Metropolitan Museum. New York. Now we are crossing the Bosphorus, leaving the Near East to enter into the Aegean.