
Gold Bowl with Ritual Scene

Basse-Yutz Flagon

Basse-Yutz Flagon with Guardian Dogs

Early Bronze Age Gold Cape

Restored Early Bronze Age Gold Cape

Gold Ornaments from Oxus Treasure

Hollow Gold Head

Gold Chariot Model with Egyptian God Bes

Gold Roundel with Winged Figure

Gold Roundels with Divinities and Heroes

Gold Model Chariot
Feasting and Power in Celtic Iron Age Europe
Feasting in Celtic Europe
In Iron Age Europe, feasting was a key social and political act. Hosting lavish meals allowed elites to display wealth and generosity, reinforcing status and binding guests in networks of allegiance and obligation. Large quantities of meat, bread, beer, and mead were served, often in finely decorated metal cauldrons and flagons. These gatherings were occasions for celebration and, likely, for music, song, dancing, and religious rites. Through such feasts, Celtic leaders turned hospitality into a powerful instrument of authority and communal identity.
In Iron Age Europe, feasting was a key social and political act. Hosting lavish meals allowed elites to display wealth and generosity, reinforcing status and binding guests in networks of allegiance and obligation. Large quantities of meat, bread, beer, and mead were served, often in finely decorated metal cauldrons and flagons. These gatherings were occasions for celebration and, likely, for music, song, dancing, and religious rites. Through such feasts, Celtic leaders turned hospitality into a powerful instrument of authority and communal identity.

Mildenhall Great Dish

Gold Bracelet with Duck Heads

Oxus Treasure: Snake Head Bracelet

Gold Bracelet with Animal Finials

Double-Headed Serpent

Hoa Hakananaia Moai

Ooni

Colossal Statue of Ramesses II
The Parthenon Metopes: Myth, Conflict and Ideal Humanity
The Parthenon and Its Metopes
The Acropolis still dominates the skyline of Athens, just as it did in antiquity. At its heart stands the Parthenon, a great temple that once housed a colossal gold-and-ivory statue of the goddess Athena. The exterior of the building was richly adorned with marble sculpture depicting scenes from Greek myth and idealised moments of Athenian life.
Although the cult statue of Athena is lost, much of the external sculpture survives. Now divided mainly between London and Athens, these images of the human form have come to embody an ideal of humanity itself. Their display in the British Museum from 1817 transformed the study of ancient art and inspired generations of artists, designers and architects.
Above the outer colonnade, all four sides of the temple were decorated with metopes—panels carved in high relief with mythological battles. The west side showed Greeks fighting Amazons (legendary women warriors); the north, scenes from the sack of Troy; and the east, the struggle between the Olympian gods and the Giants. All the metopes now in the British Museum come from the south side and show a violent conflict between Lapiths and Centaurs.
This story probably refers to the wedding of Peirithoos, king of the Lapiths of northern Greece. Centaurs—creatures part-man, part-horse—were invited to the feast, but after drinking too much wine they tried to abduct the Lapith women. The savage battle that followed became a powerful image of the struggle between civilisation and brutality, carved here in stone high above the viewers’ heads.
The Acropolis still dominates the skyline of Athens, just as it did in antiquity. At its heart stands the Parthenon, a great temple that once housed a colossal gold-and-ivory statue of the goddess Athena. The exterior of the building was richly adorned with marble sculpture depicting scenes from Greek myth and idealised moments of Athenian life.
Although the cult statue of Athena is lost, much of the external sculpture survives. Now divided mainly between London and Athens, these images of the human form have come to embody an ideal of humanity itself. Their display in the British Museum from 1817 transformed the study of ancient art and inspired generations of artists, designers and architects.
Above the outer colonnade, all four sides of the temple were decorated with metopes—panels carved in high relief with mythological battles. The west side showed Greeks fighting Amazons (legendary women warriors); the north, scenes from the sack of Troy; and the east, the struggle between the Olympian gods and the Giants. All the metopes now in the British Museum come from the south side and show a violent conflict between Lapiths and Centaurs.
This story probably refers to the wedding of Peirithoos, king of the Lapiths of northern Greece. Centaurs—creatures part-man, part-horse—were invited to the feast, but after drinking too much wine they tried to abduct the Lapith women. The savage battle that followed became a powerful image of the struggle between civilisation and brutality, carved here in stone high above the viewers’ heads.

The Rosetta Stone
Brasscasting and Royal Power in Benin and Beyond
Brasscasting
Across Africa there are many traditions of casting metal, some using bronze (an alloy of copper and tin), others brass (copper and zinc). Although ancient bronze objects are found throughout the Lower Niger region, the earliest tradition known to have relied on local ore and technology is that of Igbo-Ukwu in southern Nigeria, dating to the 9th–10th centuries.
Brass was treated as a precious material. Its brilliance and durability made it ideal for royal regalia, and control over brass and its casting became a key element of royal power. The craft was closely linked to courts and hereditary guilds. The best-documented tradition is that of the Edo people of Benin, where, from at least the 14th century, brass insignia were distributed to court officials and vassal rulers, while craftsmen and foreign brassware were drawn back into the capital.
Brass itself was also an important trade commodity until the 19th century, when cheap European imports flooded local markets. Benin imported European brassware specifically to melt it down and recast it into objects for the royal court. Today, brasscasters in Benin still work for the palace but also serve a much broader clientele, and their cast objects circulate widely, including in international markets.
Across Africa there are many traditions of casting metal, some using bronze (an alloy of copper and tin), others brass (copper and zinc). Although ancient bronze objects are found throughout the Lower Niger region, the earliest tradition known to have relied on local ore and technology is that of Igbo-Ukwu in southern Nigeria, dating to the 9th–10th centuries.
Brass was treated as a precious material. Its brilliance and durability made it ideal for royal regalia, and control over brass and its casting became a key element of royal power. The craft was closely linked to courts and hereditary guilds. The best-documented tradition is that of the Edo people of Benin, where, from at least the 14th century, brass insignia were distributed to court officials and vassal rulers, while craftsmen and foreign brassware were drawn back into the capital.
Brass itself was also an important trade commodity until the 19th century, when cheap European imports flooded local markets. Benin imported European brassware specifically to melt it down and recast it into objects for the royal court. Today, brasscasters in Benin still work for the palace but also serve a much broader clientele, and their cast objects circulate widely, including in international markets.

Rosetta Stone Fragment

Leading Horseman Signals

The Lewis Chessmen

Royal Game of Ur

Mummy with Geometric Linen Wrapping

Mummy with Geometric Patterns

Ain Sakhri Lovers

Ain Sakhri Lovers Figurine Views
Medieval Chess: Strategy, Status, and Social Order
Medieval Chess and Social Order
Medieval Europeans prized chess as a game of strategy and skill. It was considered one of the seven knightly accomplishments and used to hone the tactical sense of warriors. The Church initially forbade clergy from playing but gradually relaxed this stance by around 1200. Men and women played together, and in courtly literature chess became associated with flirtation and the “battle of the sexes.”
Chess pieces mirrored feudal hierarchy. Kings sit with swords across their laps, queens adopt dignified poses, bishops appear in liturgical dress, knights ride on horseback, and foot soldiers stand for the lower ranks. Rooks biting their shields evoke fierce berserker heroes from Norse saga. Originating in India around 500 AD and spreading to Europe via the Islamic world in Spain and Italy, the game was reshaped to reflect the social and symbolic order of medieval Europe.
Medieval Europeans prized chess as a game of strategy and skill. It was considered one of the seven knightly accomplishments and used to hone the tactical sense of warriors. The Church initially forbade clergy from playing but gradually relaxed this stance by around 1200. Men and women played together, and in courtly literature chess became associated with flirtation and the “battle of the sexes.”
Chess pieces mirrored feudal hierarchy. Kings sit with swords across their laps, queens adopt dignified poses, bishops appear in liturgical dress, knights ride on horseback, and foot soldiers stand for the lower ranks. Rooks biting their shields evoke fierce berserker heroes from Norse saga. Originating in India around 500 AD and spreading to Europe via the Islamic world in Spain and Italy, the game was reshaped to reflect the social and symbolic order of medieval Europe.
Medieval Chess: A Mirror of Feudal Society and Ideals
Medieval Chess: Pieces and Society
Chess was conceived as a game of strategy and skill, and in the medieval period it was valued as a way to sharpen the tactical abilities of knights. It came to be seen as one of the seven accomplishments expected of an ideal knight. At first, the Church explicitly forbade clergy from playing chess, but by about 1200 this strict view had begun to soften. Men and women played together, and in medieval love poetry chess became linked with flirtation and the “battle of the sexes.”
The medieval European chess set mirrored the order of feudal society. Kings sit with swords across their laps, queens rest their chins thoughtfully in their hands, bishops appear in liturgical dress ready to say Mass, knights ride into play on horseback, and infantrymen—later called rooks—fight on foot. The queens’ dignified pose probably echoes contemporary images of the Virgin Mary as an ideal of noble femininity.
Some rooks, shown biting their shields, represent fierce mythical warriors known from Norse saga as Berserkers. While the game itself originated in India around AD 500 and reached Europe through the Islamic presence in southern Spain and Italy, the pawns often retain the abstract forms of the Islamic version. The whole set thus combines distant origins with distinctly European images of rank, piety and military power.
Chess was conceived as a game of strategy and skill, and in the medieval period it was valued as a way to sharpen the tactical abilities of knights. It came to be seen as one of the seven accomplishments expected of an ideal knight. At first, the Church explicitly forbade clergy from playing chess, but by about 1200 this strict view had begun to soften. Men and women played together, and in medieval love poetry chess became linked with flirtation and the “battle of the sexes.”
The medieval European chess set mirrored the order of feudal society. Kings sit with swords across their laps, queens rest their chins thoughtfully in their hands, bishops appear in liturgical dress ready to say Mass, knights ride into play on horseback, and infantrymen—later called rooks—fight on foot. The queens’ dignified pose probably echoes contemporary images of the Virgin Mary as an ideal of noble femininity.
Some rooks, shown biting their shields, represent fierce mythical warriors known from Norse saga as Berserkers. While the game itself originated in India around AD 500 and reached Europe through the Islamic presence in southern Spain and Italy, the pawns often retain the abstract forms of the Islamic version. The whole set thus combines distant origins with distinctly European images of rank, piety and military power.

Ain Sakhri Lovers

The Bow of Automation Ship

Automation Ship Close-Up

Automaton Ship for Court Banquets

Automaton Ship

Dressing the Rider
Brasscasting Traditions and Royal Power in Africa
Brasscasting in Africa
Across Africa there are many casting traditions, some working in bronze (copper and tin) and others in brass (copper and zinc). Ancient bronze objects are known from the Lower Niger region, but the earliest tradition identified with local ore and techniques is that of Igbo-Ukwu in southern Nigeria (9th–10th cc. AD). Brass, valued for its brilliance and durability, was often reserved for royal regalia, and mastery of brasscasting became closely tied to royal courts, hereditary crafts, and political authority.
The Edo kingdom of Benin developed one of the best-documented casting traditions. From at least the 14th c., its rulers distributed brass insignia to officials and vassal states while also absorbing specialist craftsmen and imported brassware. Brass itself was a staple of trade until cheap European imports flooded the market in the 19th c. Benin casters melted European brass objects to create works for the royal court and, today, continue to serve royal patrons while also producing for wider local and international audiences.
Across Africa there are many casting traditions, some working in bronze (copper and tin) and others in brass (copper and zinc). Ancient bronze objects are known from the Lower Niger region, but the earliest tradition identified with local ore and techniques is that of Igbo-Ukwu in southern Nigeria (9th–10th cc. AD). Brass, valued for its brilliance and durability, was often reserved for royal regalia, and mastery of brasscasting became closely tied to royal courts, hereditary crafts, and political authority.
The Edo kingdom of Benin developed one of the best-documented casting traditions. From at least the 14th c., its rulers distributed brass insignia to officials and vassal states while also absorbing specialist craftsmen and imported brassware. Brass itself was a staple of trade until cheap European imports flooded the market in the 19th c. Benin casters melted European brass objects to create works for the royal court and, today, continue to serve royal patrons while also producing for wider local and international audiences.

Lewis Chessmen Bishop with Crozier

The Lewis Chessmen

Sutton Hoo Drinking Horns

Sutton Hoo Helmet

Anglo-Saxon Sutton Hoo Helmet

Sutton Hoo Silver Bowls with Cross Motifs
The Parthenon Metopes: Mythic Battles in Marble
The Parthenon and Its Metopes
The Acropolis still dominates Athens, crowned by the Parthenon, built 450–430 BC as a temple to Athena that once housed a colossal gold-and-ivory statue of the goddess. Its exterior was richly decorated with marble sculpture depicting mythological scenes and idealized aspects of Athenian life. Although the cult statue is lost, much of the outer sculpture survives, now divided mainly between London and Athens. These images of the human form have come to symbolize a broader ideal of humanity and decisively shaped later views of ancient art.
Above the colonnade, the metopes were carved in high relief with mythic battles: Greeks versus Amazons on the west, scenes from the sack of Troy on the north, and gods against Giants on the east. The southern metopes show Lapiths fighting Centaurs, probably at the wedding of Peirithoos, where drunken Centaurs tried to abduct the Lapith women and a violent struggle broke out.
The Acropolis still dominates Athens, crowned by the Parthenon, built 450–430 BC as a temple to Athena that once housed a colossal gold-and-ivory statue of the goddess. Its exterior was richly decorated with marble sculpture depicting mythological scenes and idealized aspects of Athenian life. Although the cult statue is lost, much of the outer sculpture survives, now divided mainly between London and Athens. These images of the human form have come to symbolize a broader ideal of humanity and decisively shaped later views of ancient art.
Above the colonnade, the metopes were carved in high relief with mythic battles: Greeks versus Amazons on the west, scenes from the sack of Troy on the north, and gods against Giants on the east. The southern metopes show Lapiths fighting Centaurs, probably at the wedding of Peirithoos, where drunken Centaurs tried to abduct the Lapith women and a violent struggle broke out.

Gold Fish-Shaped Vessel

Hinton St Mary Mosaic of Christ

Hinton St Mary Mosaic of Christ

Platters with Bacchic Decoration

Attendants in Procession

Bearing the Spoils

Returning from Victory

Ashurbanipal and the Dying Lioness

Lion Attacks the Chariot Team

King Strikes from Chariot

Hand-to-Hand Combat

Dying Lion

The Final Blow

Ashurbanipal Strikes

Soldiers Forming the Arena Barrier

Centaur Resists Lapith
Celtic Feasts: Power, Hospitality, and Sacred Obligation
Celtic Europe: Feasting and Power
In Iron Age Europe, feasting was a central social and political act. Hosting a grand feast allowed elites to display wealth and generosity, reinforcing their status and binding guests to them through ties of allegiance and loyalty. Large quantities of meat, bread, beer and mead were served in finely made metal cauldrons and flagons, such as the ornate flagons from Basse-Yutz in France. These gatherings were not just banquets but occasions of celebration, likely accompanied by music, singing and dancing, and often intertwined with ritual or religious ceremonies. Through such events, power, hospitality and sacred obligation were woven together around the shared table.
In Iron Age Europe, feasting was a central social and political act. Hosting a grand feast allowed elites to display wealth and generosity, reinforcing their status and binding guests to them through ties of allegiance and loyalty. Large quantities of meat, bread, beer and mead were served in finely made metal cauldrons and flagons, such as the ornate flagons from Basse-Yutz in France. These gatherings were not just banquets but occasions of celebration, likely accompanied by music, singing and dancing, and often intertwined with ritual or religious ceremonies. Through such events, power, hospitality and sacred obligation were woven together around the shared table.

The Dying Lion

Keeper and Hound

Assyrian Lion Hunt Relief: Contained Chaos

Fallen Beasts

Ashurbanipal Strikes

Holy Thorn Reliquary


The Holy Thorn Reliquary

The Holy Thorn Reliquary (detail)

The Holy Thorn Reliquary

Lapith and Centaur Struggle

Cavalry Preparation

Reflective Riders

Riders in Motion

Cavalry Parade

Centaur and Lapith in Violent Struggle

Dionysos Reclining

Centaur Abducting a Girl

The Triumph of the Centaur
Ashurbanipal’s North Palace and the Assyrian Lion Hunt
The North Palace at Nineveh and the Assyrian Lion Hunt
Ashurbanipal (668–627 BC) built a new royal residence, the North Palace, on the citadel at Nineveh. Like earlier Assyrian palaces, its walls were lined with stone slabs carved in low relief and originally painted, illustrating the king’s achievements. Doorways still bore images of magical protective spirits, though the great winged bulls and lions of earlier reigns seem to have been absent.
Ashurbanipal took exceptional pride in his prowess as a hunter and sportsman. Large-scale reliefs of lion hunts, and of processions to and from the hunt, decorated interior corridors, while smaller, related scenes adorned some of the most important rooms. Other reliefs in the throne room (Room M) showed campaigns in Egypt, Elam, Babylon and the mountains of Iran or Turkey, and additional rooms focused on individual campaigns such as one against the Arabs.
In Assyrian ideology, the king’s duty was to protect his people from all enemies, human and animal alike. This responsibility is symbolised in the royal seal, which shows the king confronting a lion and driving his sword into it. After a period of abundant rainfall in the mid-seventh century BC, lions became especially numerous. Royal inscriptions describe them attacking cattle and people, leaving human and animal corpses “in heaps as if the plague had killed them,” and plunging villages into mourning.
It was the king’s task to destroy such dangerous beasts. In practice, rather than seeking them in the wild, lions were captured and brought to an arena, surrounded by soldiers and huntsmen, where they were released one by one for the royal hunt. The famous lion-hunt reliefs from Ashurbanipal’s palace depict these staged encounters in vivid detail.
The narrative carving is as intricate as that of earlier reigns and often more finely drawn. Strikingly, the artists devote almost as much attention to the suffering of the enemy—particularly the dying lions—as to the calm triumph of the Assyrian king. While Ashurbanipal appears as the untroubled embodiment of divine justice, the lions are rendered with intense realism, their wounds, struggles and final collapse observed with extraordinary sympathy. These scenes glorify royal power while also acknowledging the terrible cost of that power for its victims.
Ashurbanipal (668–627 BC) built a new royal residence, the North Palace, on the citadel at Nineveh. Like earlier Assyrian palaces, its walls were lined with stone slabs carved in low relief and originally painted, illustrating the king’s achievements. Doorways still bore images of magical protective spirits, though the great winged bulls and lions of earlier reigns seem to have been absent.
Ashurbanipal took exceptional pride in his prowess as a hunter and sportsman. Large-scale reliefs of lion hunts, and of processions to and from the hunt, decorated interior corridors, while smaller, related scenes adorned some of the most important rooms. Other reliefs in the throne room (Room M) showed campaigns in Egypt, Elam, Babylon and the mountains of Iran or Turkey, and additional rooms focused on individual campaigns such as one against the Arabs.
In Assyrian ideology, the king’s duty was to protect his people from all enemies, human and animal alike. This responsibility is symbolised in the royal seal, which shows the king confronting a lion and driving his sword into it. After a period of abundant rainfall in the mid-seventh century BC, lions became especially numerous. Royal inscriptions describe them attacking cattle and people, leaving human and animal corpses “in heaps as if the plague had killed them,” and plunging villages into mourning.
It was the king’s task to destroy such dangerous beasts. In practice, rather than seeking them in the wild, lions were captured and brought to an arena, surrounded by soldiers and huntsmen, where they were released one by one for the royal hunt. The famous lion-hunt reliefs from Ashurbanipal’s palace depict these staged encounters in vivid detail.
The narrative carving is as intricate as that of earlier reigns and often more finely drawn. Strikingly, the artists devote almost as much attention to the suffering of the enemy—particularly the dying lions—as to the calm triumph of the Assyrian king. While Ashurbanipal appears as the untroubled embodiment of divine justice, the lions are rendered with intense realism, their wounds, struggles and final collapse observed with extraordinary sympathy. These scenes glorify royal power while also acknowledging the terrible cost of that power for its victims.

Lapith and Centaur in Battle

Lapith and Centaur in Violent Combat

The Sloane Astrolabe

Zeus, Hera, and Iris

Demeter in Mourning

Hermes and Dionysos

Youthful Horseman

Mounted Cavalrymen

Lapith Driving Back a Centaur

Goddess Torso
Ashurbanipal’s North Palace and the Royal Lion Hunts
Ashurbanipal’s North Palace and Lion Hunts
Ashurbanipal (668–627 BC) built the North Palace on the citadel of Nineveh, lining its rooms and corridors with painted stone reliefs that celebrated his achievements. Large hunting scenes, especially lion hunts and associated processions, filled interior passageways, while key chambers showed campaigns in Egypt, Elam, Babylon, and the mountains of Iran or Turkey, including battles against Arab foes. Doorways still bore carved protective spirits, though colossal winged bulls or lions were no longer used.
As records describe, lions could devastate herds and even kill people in years when they were numerous, making their destruction a royal duty. Ashurbanipal’s reliefs show lions released from cages into an arena surrounded by soldiers and huntsmen so the king could confront them directly. These narrative sculptures match earlier Assyrian works in detail but often draw even greater attention to the suffering of enemies—human and animal—while the king remains the calm embodiment of divine justice.
Ashurbanipal (668–627 BC) built the North Palace on the citadel of Nineveh, lining its rooms and corridors with painted stone reliefs that celebrated his achievements. Large hunting scenes, especially lion hunts and associated processions, filled interior passageways, while key chambers showed campaigns in Egypt, Elam, Babylon, and the mountains of Iran or Turkey, including battles against Arab foes. Doorways still bore carved protective spirits, though colossal winged bulls or lions were no longer used.
As records describe, lions could devastate herds and even kill people in years when they were numerous, making their destruction a royal duty. Ashurbanipal’s reliefs show lions released from cages into an arena surrounded by soldiers and huntsmen so the king could confront them directly. These narrative sculptures match earlier Assyrian works in detail but often draw even greater attention to the suffering of enemies—human and animal—while the king remains the calm embodiment of divine justice.

Reclining Young God

Lapith Overwhelms Centaur
British Museum
The British Museum is one of the world’s great encyclopaedic museums, gathering outstanding objects from ancient civilizations and diverse cultures under one roof. Visitors can move from the carved stone reliefs of Assyrian palaces at Nineveh, alive with scenes of royal lion hunts and distant campaigns, to the marble sculptures of the Parthenon, whose idealised figures helped shape modern ideas of classical beauty and the human form.
Beyond its famous antiquities, the museum shows how people have lived, believed and played across time. African brass casting from royal courts in Benin, Iron Age feasting gear from Celtic Europe, and medieval chess pieces that mirror feudal society all reveal the richness of human creativity and power. Carefully arranged galleries encourage exploration, inviting visitors to trace connections between empires, rituals and everyday life across continents and centuries.
Beyond its famous antiquities, the museum shows how people have lived, believed and played across time. African brass casting from royal courts in Benin, Iron Age feasting gear from Celtic Europe, and medieval chess pieces that mirror feudal society all reveal the richness of human creativity and power. Carefully arranged galleries encourage exploration, inviting visitors to trace connections between empires, rituals and everyday life across continents and centuries.
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