Cauldron with Siren and Demon Attachments, Bronze, found in the "Midas Mound" at Gordion Turkey, 740 BCE.

Cauldron with Siren and Demon Attachments, Bronze, found in the "Midas Mound" at Gordion Turkey, 740 BCE.

This large cauldron, found inside the tomb known as the Midas Mound was likely built by King Midas for his father and was used to store liquids for the funerary feast.  The siren and demon figurines are not only decorative but also symbolic, probably intended to inspire awe and to offer protection to the deceased.  Part of the collections of the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations photographed at the Penn Museum in Philadellphia.






 Cauldron with Siren and Demon Attachments, Bronze, found in the "Midas Mound" at Gordion Turkey, 740 BC photographed at the Penn Museum by Mary Harrsch.




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