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A Sasanian Seal Collection
in Context: Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative Publication of the Edward
Gans Collection at University of California, Berkeley
Guitty Azarpay and Jeanette Zerneke
May 2002
This Internet publication provides online access to the collection of
Sasanian sealstones in the collection of the University of
California at Berkeley’s Near Eastern Studies Department and
contextual information on the Sasanian Empire.
The study offers a comprehensive analysis of some 370
sealstones attributed to the Persian Sasanian empire (AD 224-641) in
Western Asia during the period of Late Antiquity. The database for the
present publication contains information about the seal's pictorial theme
and motifs, shape, material of manufacture, iconography and inscription.
It is hoped that this database of Sasanian seals may be enriched by the
future addition to it of other Sasanian seal collections that may be
cataloged according to the relatively simple format adopted for the
present study.
Electronic publication of the Seal Collection enhances the value of
the collection in the following ways. It provides global access to
enlarged images of the objects and of their impressions and it
enables users to search the collection with multiple criteria. The
user may quickly compare seals not only within this publication but
also with seals from other collections. Detailed information on the
history of the collection, its content, and cataloging methodology
is included.
Contextual information on the history of the Sasanian Empire, maps
of the empire’s extent, a gazetteer of important sites in the
Empire, and images of archaeological sites are included. A map
interface allows interactive viewing of the context of the empire
and access to the seal collection and background information. The
map interface and contextual information is provided to enhance the
research and teaching value of the publication. It is hoped that by
presenting a spatio-temporal context for the seal collection,
research on the provenance of the seals, and other spatio-temporal
patterns will be encouraged. Placing the seals in their historical
context creates a cultural resource for use in teaching about the
rich heritage of the Middle East.
1,176 images, 1 pdf file, 5 maps. ISBN: 0-9722712-0-1
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