Browse Items (12 total)

Darius the Great Tomb.PNG
This Persepolis tomb (in modern day Iran) shows a Faravahar relief in the stone. It corresponds to the practice of placing avian images on the funerary objects of elite deceased.

Simurgh on Sasanian Silver Plate.jpg
With the body of a dog and the wings of a bird, this creature shown on a Sasanian silver plate comes from Iranian mythology.

N3-22-Shi-Jun-detail-bird-man-1600x1568.jpg
The tomb of Shi Jun (Wirkak) and his wife Wiyusi is more like a storyboard. Each wall depicts an event in a greater journey. The bird priests depicted here are in grisly detail and have well-hidden scarves coming off their necks, similar to Sasanian…

Sasanian Silver Plate.PNG
This silver plate depicts a Sasanian king, either Peroz or Kavad. Like many other examples, this silver plate shows the king in a hunting scene. We are most interested in the scarf which denotes royalty and the soul.

Bablyonian Bird Man British Museum 90858.png
This boundary stone far predates the other bird priest objects in our collection, but it links to them through the interesting image of the half man, half bird archer depicted alongside the cuneiform. It it notable for showing a bird man hybrid…

Mullah Kurgan Ossuary.PNG
This ossuary depicts two priests with highly birdlike beaks (padams). It is probably a reproduceable mold.

Kurdish Tribal Rug.jpg
This is a Kurdish tribal rug depicting some sort of avian mythological creature. It looks more consistently bird-like than Simurgh like, as there are no canine features, so it is possible it is the mythological Simsiyar bird, which is said to live…

Boundary Stone2.PNG
This is a boundary stone with ceremonial purposes. It shows Babylonian King Marduk-nadin-ahhe. Significant to us is the depiction of a king as an archer, much like the image from the earlier boundary stone.

Huma Mosaic.jpg
This mosaic of the Iranian mythological Huma (most famously discussed in Sufi traditions) is located in Uzbekistan. Most interestingly, it features dual birds, much like the Sogdian examples of bird priests.

Tomb of An Jia.PNG
Over the doorway of An Jia's tomb, one can see dual bird priests wearing padams and performing some sort of Zoroastrian fire ritual. H. 66 x W. 128 cm. This was excavated in Xi'an in 2000.
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