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San Antonio Museum of Art, gift of the Estate of Ethel T. Drought.

Cone of Sin-kashid

San Antonio Museum of Art, gift of the Estate of Ethel T. Drought.
San Antonio Museum of Art, gift of the Estate of Ethel T. Drought.
Contact us at copyright@samuseum.org for rights and reproduction of this image.

Cone of Sin-kashid

Place made:Uruk, Asia
Culture: Babylonian
Date: ca. 1865/60-1833 B.C.
Medium: Clay
Dimensions:
h. 2 3/8 in. (6 cm); diam. 1 3/8 in. (3.5 cm)
Credit Line: San Antonio Museum of Art, gift of the Estate of Ethel T. Drought
Object number: 44.98.23.7
Inscribed: Inscribed (in Sumerian): "Sin-kashid, mighty man, king of Uruk, king of the Amnanum, provider of Eanna, built his royal palace." [trans. after J. García Recio, ed., Textos Cuneiformes de Texas. San Antonio Museum of Art (León and Estella, Spain: Instituto Bíblico y Oriental and Verbo Divino, 2021), 37]
Provenance: Dr. Edgar J. Banks (1866-1945), by gift to Ethel Tunstall Drought (1864-1943), San Antonio, by 1937; gift of her estate to the Witte Museum, San Antonio, 1944; by transfer to the San Antonio Museum of Art, 1994
Label Text
Group label for 44.98.23.1-7:
The cuneiform writing system consisted of wedge-shaped marks and was used to write the ancient languages of western Asia for several thousand years. These clay objects from cities in southern Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq) are inscribed with Sumerian texts, and they were recently translated by Dr. Jesús García Recio of the Instituto Bíblico y Oriental in Spain. The foundation cone commemorates the construction of a palace by Sin-Kashid, king of Uruk. The six tablets are administrative documents that record the receipt of livestock and the distribution of food rations to messengers.
The cone and tablets came to San Antonio via Dr. Edgar J. Banks (1866–1945), a colorful archaeologist and antiquities dealer who may have been one of the historical role models for the movie character Indiana Jones. Banks distributed large numbers of cuneiform tablets to American universities and museums. He gave this group to Ethel Drought, who was a prominent patron of the arts in San Antonio and a longtime president of the San Antonio Art League.
(J. Powers, 2021)
Not on view


The San Antonio Museum of Art is in the process of digitizing its permanent collection. This electronic record was created from historic documentation that does not necessarily reflect SAMA's complete or current knowledge about the object. Review and updating of such records is ongoing.