Since the beginning of serviceman imagination, we have fabricated the idea of major motive through imaginative creatures for protection. The origin of this idea dates back forrader the death of Christ with bas relief animals attached to gate walls. During the Assyrian Era, Lamassu keep an eye on the gates of Sargon II in Bet-Nahrain.
        Lamassu is a Neo-Assyrian and/or Akkadian marge used to designate a creature, combined of a travel lion or bull figure with a human head. As preventive deities, it was a larger than life statue englut that was placed on either side of a juvenile Assyrian palace. It was usually depicted as a double-aspect figure, apparently possessing tail fin separate legs when viewed from an oblique angle. This allowed for two simultaneous depictions. It appeared to be stand guard when viewed from the front. When viewed from the side, Lamassu appeared to be striding forward. The high relief creature was situate at adjacent sides of the gate at Khorsabad and served as a guardian to the King from all evil. Erected in 720 BC, its size is tenner times as massive as humans. Each colossus was carved in the round from a single stem of stone, measuring up to 5.50 m2 in size. Initially carved roughly in the quarry, each statue-block was transported to its final location, where it would be set in place and be subjected to fine carving.![]()
        Lamassu was a characteristic of this after-hours phase in the development of Assyrian art when sculpture was otherwise rare. Lamassu were powerfully evocative of strength, speed, and intelligence. It was considered by the Assyrians as a protective guardian of their houses, palaces, gateways, and cities. It also symbolized as a sign of Assyrian power which was displayed to foreign dignitaries and ambassadors. There is no historical evidence exhibit that Lamassu was...
really cool but i like dragons more
maybe i should have a essay bout dragons...
oh well
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