If you visit the museum for the first time, you will be surprised by the pyramid-shaped entrance. Use the time you lose to pass the bomb check and buy a ticket to look at it, because it is a monument of the first order.
I already mentioned the Egyptian department, where you can easily spend a full day. There are portraits of the Egyptian kings and objects from daily life, and what is even better: the full history is dealth with, so you will also find objects from the first millennium BCE. The Greek, Roman, and Coptic age are not ignored either, although you need to go to Greek department for the royal portraits of the Ptolemies.
The Egyptian department is deservedly famous, and attracts many visitors, who are usually exhausted when they are half-way their tour. Usually, they will take the shortest route to the exit, which brings them through the departments of Cypriote, Arab, Palmyrene, and Phoenician art – which are, as a consequence, full of people who are not interested in the objects. That is a pity, because these rooms alone justify a trip to Paris. Still, if you manage to ignore the crowd of tired visitors to the Egyptian department, you will certainly enjoy coffins from Sidon, Byblos, and Carthage, Nabataean inscriptions, and statues from Cyprus. One of my favorites is a relief of one of the divine triad of Palmyra. You will need half a day to study it well.
Next to it is the Oriental department. The most famous object is, of course, the Code of Hammurabi. Don’t concentrate on the diorite monolith only, but also look in the small display in the same room, because there you will see cuneiform tablets with the same text – one of them written more than a millennium later and proving that these laws had become some kind of Mesopotamian classic, and it is probably no coincidence that the division of these Old Babylonian laws returns in the Ten Commandments.
The Roman department is surprisingly small. Yet, there is a lot of fine sculpture, including a nice series of portraits of Roman rulers. Next to it is a comparatively small Etruscan department. A gallery of rather mediocre statues brings you to the room devoted to Roman art that was later restored, which is great fun: usually, you can immediately see which part is ancient and which is an addition. (Here, you will also find Canova’s famous Amor and Psyche.) You need about half a day to see it all, read the explanatory signs, and take your photos.
The Greek department is larger – you again need a full day to study it all. The two most famous pieces are the expressive Nike of Samothrake and the famous Venus of Milo. The latter is more or less the museum’s raison d’être. Napoleon had looted the Italian museums, but after he had found his Waterloo, all those works of art had to be returned. In an age in which it was believed that inspiration by great art created great minds, and that Greek art was the most inspirational, the emptying of the Louvre was believed to be a national disaster, but fortunately, the Venus of Milo was found. Now, France could compete again with the British, who had the Elgin Marbles. That the armless deity was a Hellenistic and not a Classical statue, was ignored – the inscription which proves it, is now conveniently lost.
The crowds are very large, and you may count yourself lucky that I did not bring you to the paintings. This makes a visit to the Louvre a bit difficult, and you must prepare yourself well; fortunately, the museum’s website is excellent. Four days is the minimum for the ancient departments.
Finally, I must mention one little gem that is often ignored and where you can, consequently, quietly look at the objects: the room with metal objects. There is some fine silver work, but you will also see the helmet of a gladiator, a nice statuette of the Tyche of Antioch, the head of Demetrius Poliorcetes, a hoplite’s panoply, a curse tablet from the Crimea, Roman military diplomas, and so on.
But unfortunately, that’s the only part of the museum where you will not meet many other people. In fact, the museum is too big, and I think that it would be wiser to split it into smaller museums.
This museum was visited in 1984, 1989, 2008, 2010, 2020.
 Byblos, Relief of a lion
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 Dibon, Mesha Stela
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 Rhodes, Mycenaean cup (LH IIIa2)
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief
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 Herodes Atticus
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 Ptolemy II Philadelphus
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 Aegis of Osorkon IV
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 Enkomi, Late Bronze pectoral with sphinxes
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 Horus, Osiris, Isis
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 Girsu, Tablet with a fragment of the Sumerian Creation Epic
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 Saba, the Arab warrior Mushayqat Hamayat ibn Yusuf on a dromedary
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 Khorsabad, Iron tool
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 Palmyra, Tombstone of a priest
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief, Flowers
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 Bishapur, Palace, Mosaic of a musician
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 Khorsabad, Relief of Sargon and Sennacherib, prince Sennacherib
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 Ur, Foundation statuette of Amar-Sin
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 Montuhotep II wearing the red deshret crown
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 Susa, Stone relief with a banquet scene
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 Smyrna, Honorific decree for an officer of VI Ferrata
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 Shabaqo
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 Bawit, Coptic church, Model
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 Smyrna, Attalus II Philadelphus
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief
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 Annius Verus
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 Demetrius I Poliorcetes
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 Khorsabad, Lion-taming spirit ("Gilgameš")
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 Babylonian map of the western Zagros. A road, a mountain, and a river are indicated.
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 Sippar, Contract from the reign of Xerxes about a canal
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 The Azara herm
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 Tayma, Dedication to Salm
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 Lascuta, Imperator inscription
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 Fragment of the sarcophagus of Sety II
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 Susa, Hellenistic or Parthian figurine of a harpist
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 Chalouf, Darius' DZb inscription
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 The Tyche of Antioch (figurine)
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 Susa, Weight from Didyma
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 Statuette of a Libyan
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 Susa, Gold plate with royal warrior
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 Pharsalus, Funerary stela with a relief of a flower offering
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 Rhagae, Dancers on a piece of pottery
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 Idalion, statue of Melqart
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 Susa, Dedication to Inšušinak
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 Crassus
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 The Albani Alexander
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 Taharqo venerating the falcon-god Hemen
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 Corinth, Small painting of Poseidon
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 Apollonia, Relief of two hoplites
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 Cleopatra II or III as Isis
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 Susa, Middle-Elamite model of a sun ritual
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 Assos, Temple of Athena, Relief of two bulls
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 Susa, Apadana, Capital
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 Domitian
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 Ajax and Cassandra.
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 Messalina
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 Cartouche of Osorkon I
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 Hadrumetum, Sanctuary of Baal Hammon, Punic stela with three baetyls
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 Susa, The Awan King List
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 Megara, Figurine of two hoplites
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 Bawit, Icon of Christ and St.Menas
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 Ptolemy IV Philopator
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 Salonina
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 Susa, Achaemenid administrative document
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 Bowl from Tepe Hesar I
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 Mithridates VI Eupator of Pontus
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 Alexander I Balas
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 Susa, Battle axe
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 Nimrud, Relief of an Anatolian fort
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 Pompey the Great. Louvre, Paris (France)
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 Relief of a Roman officer
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief, Immortal, Counterweight of a spear
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 Greek plate with a picture of the Chimaera. Louvre, Paris (France)
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 Mithridates V Euergetes
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 Kition, Egyptianizing capital
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief
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 Bawit, Portrait of a lady
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 The Azara herm
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief
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 Nineveh, Palace of Aššurbanipal, Relief of Arbela
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 Aššur, Annals of Tikulti-Ninurta II
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 Susa, Apadana, Inscription DSf (Old Persian)
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 Gladiator helmet
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 Eshnunna, Relief of Ištar
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 Boy with hoop and rooster
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 Thyatira, Relief of a gladiator (thraex)
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 Susa, Sasanian cup
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 Ptolemy XI Alexander, gold sealing ring
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 Susa, Letter from Artabanus II, requesting the appointment of one Hecataeus as treasurer
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 Ugarit, Alphabet tablet
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief with inscription
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 Keki, the courtier
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 Tayma, Relief of a sacrifical meal; Assyrian influence
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 Nefertiti and Akhenaten
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 Nicomedia, Hellenistic Funerary relief
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 Wadi Miyah, Palmyrene triad: Aglibol (Moon), Ba'al Šamem (Lord of Heaven), and Malekbel (Sun)
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief
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 Relief of a scribe
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 Bosra, Nabataean altar
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 Yemen, Dromedary pendant
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 Susa, Funerary portrait
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 Baalbek, Mosaic of the Birth of Paris
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 Antiochus VI Dionysus
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 Furnos Minus, Christian funerary mosaic
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 Aelius Caesar
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 Tayma, Nabataean votive stela
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 Cirta, Sanctuary of El-Hofra, Votive stela
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 Hadrumetum, Sanctuary of Baal Hammon, Punic stela
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 Senusret III
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 Sallustia Orbiana
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 Seleucus I Nicator
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 The Azara herm
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 Dedication by Ilîmagud Mayfa
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 Susa, Temple of the Šutrukids, Inscription
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 Susa, Rim of a cup with the name of Xerxes
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 Ramesses IV
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief with inscription DSm
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief
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 Tepe Sialk, Sherd from the fourth millennium BCE
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 Alexandria, Alexander the Great as City Founder
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 Edessa, Mosaic of a lady
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 Corbulo
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 Giza, Diner of Nefer
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 Susa, Stela of Adda-hamiti-Inšušinak
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief, Lion
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 Eretria, Two-headed phial
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 Faustina II
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 Susa, Temple of the Šutrukids, Relief
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 Caere, Banditaccia necropolis, Wall painting of an archer
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 Idalion, orientalizing gold dish
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 Bishapur, Palace, Mosaic of man dressed as an ostrich
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 Agrippa Postumus
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 Didia Clara
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 Leo I
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 An Egyptian poem about the battle of Kadesh
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 Byblos, Temple of Baalat, Figurine of a bull
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 Apollonia, Relief to commemorate the battle of Actium
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 Ptolemy X Alexander
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 Esarhaddon and his mother attend the restoration of Babylon
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 Livia (Paris)
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 Amulet of Darius
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief, Lion
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 Susa, Neo-Elamite decoration (dragon)
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 Portrait of a Roman man (CE 070-100)
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 Head of Croesus on a Greek vase
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 Khorsabad, Relief of Sargon and Sennacherib, king Sargon
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 Khorsabad, Relief of two courtiers
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 Byzantine, Dromedary-shaped lamp
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 Susa, Middle-Elamite basrelief of warrior gods
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 Cyrene, Statue of Antinous
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 Drawing of Amenhotep I
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 Lambaesis, Rules for the trumpetters of III Augusta
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 Cyprus, Bilingual Greek-Phoenician inscription
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 Sarcophagus with the body of Hector
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 Coptic jar with decoration of a woman with wild animals
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 Achmim, Funerary stela of Pamim
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 Timna, Dedication by Rathad'il
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 Bishapur, Palace, Mosaic of a Dionysiac head
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 POWs being led away on an Akkadian victory stele
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 Upper part of the Codex of Hammurabi; taken from Babylon to Susa, it was excavated in what is now Iran.
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 Utica, Oil lamp with a lion and a panther
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief, Mythological creatures
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 Uruk, Cuneiform tablet with first use of a zero
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 Berenice II
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 Olympia, Temple of Zeus, Model
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 Ugarit, Stele of the "smiting god"
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 Khorsabad, Relief of rafts on a great river
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 Arsinoe III
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 Khorsabad, Lamassu
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 Osorkon I
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 Kition, Figurine of a woman
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 Heraclius and Khusrau
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 Susa, Inscription of Nicocles
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 Tayma, Taymanite inscription
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 Ptolemy III Euergetes
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 Saqqara, Serapeum, Relief of Isis and Nectanebo II
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 Alexandria, Tombstone of Longinus of II Traiana
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 Utica, Funeral stela
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 Choga Zanbil, Ziggurat, Doorknobs (Paris)
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 Drawing of Ramesses VII
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief
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 Antiochus III the Great
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 Susa, Temple of the Šutrukids, Relief: the bull-man
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 Pittacus
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 Beirut, Tombstone of Valerius Rufus of VII Claudia
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 Psammetichus I
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 Moabite warrior god
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 Alexander, Statuette from Lower Egypt
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 Khorsabad, Foundation Tablet
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 Theodosius II
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 Julia Mamaea
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 King of the Eleventh/Twelfth Dynasty
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 Bishapur, Palace, Stucco apse
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 Tombstone of Iglum, son of Sa'adillat
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 Tayma, Aramaic funerary inscription
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 Susa, Temple of the Šutrukids, Goddess
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 Lagash, Vulture Stele, Sumerian phalanx
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 Cherchell, Inscription of Micipsa
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 Vase painting of an archaic Greek galley
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 Bottle from Tepe Hesar level II
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 Gortyn, Inscription with laws
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 Sardes, Temple of Artemis, Relief of the "Mistress of the animals". (The archer partly visible to the right must be Heracles.)
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 Valerian Jr
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 Susa, Stone fish
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 Ptolemy IV Philopator or Ptolemy VI Philometor
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 Charlemagne
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 Statues of Sekhmet
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 Nineveh, Palace of Aššurbanipal, Sumerian-Akkadian Dictionary
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 Caere, Sarcophagus of the Spouses
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 Assos, Temple of Athena, Relief of a symposium
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 Khorsabad, Relief of Sargon and Sennacherib
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 Utica, Oil lamp with a lion and a crocodile
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 Sobekhotep IV
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 Susa, Temple of the Šutrukids, Relief
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 Athens, Black-figured dish with a Scythian archer
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 Susa, Treaty between Naram-Sin and Elam
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 Soknopaiou Nesos, Stele of Isis, Horus, and Cleopatra VII Philopator
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 Marib, Dedication to Almaqah, detail
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 Portrait of a man, third quarter of the first century CE (the so-called "Vitellius")
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 Nimrud, Northwest Palace of Aššurnasirpal II, Foundation Inscription
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 Antinoopolis, Coptic textile, Nilotic scene (including nilometer)
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 The Azara herm
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 Yemen, Woman's head
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 Ugarit, Temple of Baal, Stele with the king of Ugarit in front of the god Baal Saphon
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 Informal portrait of Sobekhotep IV
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 Sippar, Cylinder with a building inscription from the reign of Hammurabi
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 Suovetaurilia
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 Alexander IV
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 Titus
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 Athens, Heliaia, Allotment plate
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 Geta
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 Ostracon with a Coptic Writing Exercise (Thebaid)
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 King Djedefra
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 Statuette of a hippopotamus
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 Alexandria Troas, Psyche on a dromedary
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 Cleopatra VII Philopator in Egyptian style
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 Old Paphos, Epitaph of King Echetimus
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 Nectanebo I wearing the war crown
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 Delos, Portrait of Alexander the Great
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 Matidia
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 Smyrna, Diadumenianus
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 Ladjvard, Sasanian king, perhaps Peroz
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 Mask of a Sumerian
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 Egypt, Byzantine textile, Erotes picking grapes
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 Ptolemy I Soter
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 Pupienus
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 Demetrius Poliorcetes
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 Rhodes, Head-shaped aryballos
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 The Azara herm
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 Susa, Statue of queen Napirasu, wife of Untaš-Napiriša
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 Susa, Apadana, Inscription DSf (Elamite)
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 Fausta
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 Justinian I (Barberini Ivory)
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 Julia Domna
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 Corinth, Hoplite battle (Tydeus painter)
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 Antioch, Judgment of Paris
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 Rome, S. Pietro, Sarcophagus with Christ as Lawgiver
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 Statuette of Raherka, inspector of the scribes, and his wife Merseanch
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 Persian nobleman; statue from Egypt
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 Hermopolis, Portrait of a Cleopatra I, Cleopatra II, or Berenice III
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 Marib, Dedication to Almaqah
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 Sphinx of king Siamun
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 Thelsae, Nabataean altar
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 Susa, Relief with the sacrifice of goat
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 Achaemenid jar with representation of Bes
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief, Sphinxes
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 Amasis
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 Statuette of Bes, dedicated by Pakher, chancellor of king Psamtek I
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 Tyre, Hellenistic building inscription from Al-Ma'shook
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 Pyla, Temple of Apollo, Portrait of a man
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 Arsinoe II
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 Fayyum, Coptic chalice
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 Antonia Minor
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 Choga Zanbil, Model
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 Tepe Sialk, Pot from the fourth millennium BCE, decorated with an ibex
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 Sobekhotep IV
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 Susa, Apadana, Inscription DSf (Babylonian)
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 Figurine from Bactria
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 Ptolemy XII Auletes
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 Socrates
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 Agrippa
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 Susa, Stela of Šutruru
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 Sippar, Victory stela of Naram-Sin
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 Assos, Temple of Athena, relief, Triton
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 Oea, Punic sphinx
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 Susa, Silver rhyton
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 Rhodes, Dish with a sphinx
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 Madaba, Funeral inscription of Itaybel
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 Yemen, Relief of a bird eating grapes
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 Coptic tunic
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 Apries
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 Senusret III
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 Susa, Soldiers' Relief
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 Byblos, Temple of Baalat, Figurines
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 Nectanebo I, wearing the crown of Upper Egypt
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 Antinoopolis, Coptic textile, Praying man with candelaber and ankh
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 Beirut, Christian phylacterium, invoking the protection of several celestial beings to protect one Alexandra
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 Rhodes, Mycenaean jar with a bull (LH IIIa2)
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 Artemis and Apollo killing the Niobids
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 Figurine of an Etruscan warrior
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 Merenptah
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