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Reflection and Analysis of the Tree of Life and its Transformation into the Flower of Life in the Near East

Publish Year: 1398
Type: Journal paper
Language: English
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Document National Code:

JR_EIJH-27-2_006

Index date: 11 March 2025

Reflection and Analysis of the Tree of Life and its Transformation into the Flower of Life in the Near East abstract

For a long time, humans have used plant motifs on objects such as pottery, goblet, and others, which sometimes have a symbolic appearance and were very important in the relics of a particular period. One of the most important motifs, that has a Mesopotamian origin, is the tree of life. The tree of life is a plant that is found in many mythical traditions of the Near East such as Mesopotamia, Anatolia and Egypt. The flower of life or the motif of geometric rosette is another valuable motif with six petals. In this paper, the authors first discuss the symbols and symbolism and then investigate the background of the tree of life and then discuss the motif of geometric rostte or flower of life, and later focus on the Golden, Silver and Bronze findings at the sites of Marlik, Amarlu in Gilan and Kelardasht in Mazandaran related to iron age of Iran and investigate the impact of this symbolic motif on archaeological findings in the surrounding sites that have probably transformed the motif of the tree of life into the flower of life. This motif emerged among the communities of northern Iran during a period almost identical to the Assyrian era at the bottom of the Golden and Silver and Bronze goblets and is a kind of symbol of the tree of life that then the artists replaced the sacred tree with six petal rosette.

Reflection and Analysis of the Tree of Life and its Transformation into the Flower of Life in the Near East Keywords:

Reflection and Analysis of the Tree of Life and its Transformation into the Flower of Life in the Near East authors

Seyed Rasoul Mousavi Haji

Professor of Archaeology, Faculty of Art and Architecture, University of Mazandaran, Mazandaran, Iran.

Seyed Mehdi Mousavi

Associate professor of Archaeology, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran.

Shahin Aryamanesh

PhD of Archaeology, Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies, Tissaphernes Archaeological Research Group. Tehran. Iran