Visual Languages and Religious Expression
Images and symbols on seals, pottery, cultic objects, and architectural decoration form a visual language that communicates religious ideas, social status, and cultural connections. Motifs such as trees, bulls, winged figures, and geometric patterns recur across the Near East and appear in Israelite contexts as well. Iconography can reveal theological emphases—royal power, fertility, divine protection—but interpreting images requires careful attention to context, patronage, and audience. A seal used by a merchant communicates different things than a cultic relief on a temple wall; archaeology helps place images within their social and ritual settings.
Iconography Polemic and Religious Change
Iconographic evidence sheds light on religious negotiation and polemic. Biblical texts that condemn certain images often reflect debates over acceptable representation; archaeology shows both continuity with Canaanite motifs and deliberate reworking of symbols in Israelite contexts. The coexistence of aniconic tendencies and richly decorated objects suggests contested visual regimes. This section examines how iconography participates in identity formation, resistance to foreign cults, and the articulation of emerging monotheistic sensibilities.
From Image to Interpretation
Iconography and symbolism are indispensable for understanding the religious and social imagination of the ancient Near East. Images rarely yield single, unambiguous meanings, but when read alongside texts, inscriptions, and archaeological context they reveal a dynamic interplay of continuity, adaptation, and critique that shaped religious expression in the biblical lands.
Sources
Zevit, Z. (2001). The Religions of Ancient Israel. Routledge.; Dever, W. G. (2001). What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It? Eerdmans.; Wacholder, B. Z. (1979). The Iconography of the Ancient Near East. Journal of Near Eastern Studies.
Selected seal corpora and iconographic catalogues (Israel Museum; IAA reports).
Other Information About Iconography and Symbolism in Ancient Israel
Zevit, Z. (2001). The Religions of Ancient Israel. Routledge.; Dever, W. G. (2001). What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It? Eerdmans.; Wacholder, B. Z. (1979). The Iconography of the Ancient Near East. Journal of Near Eastern Studies.
Canaanite Religion and Its Material Evidence