Karen Carr

About Karen Carr

Dr. Karen Carr is Associate Professor Emerita, Department of History, Portland State University. She holds a doctorate in Classical Art and Archaeology from the University of Michigan. Follow her on Instagram, Pinterest, or Facebook, or buy her book, Vandals to Visigoths.
11 09, 2017

West Asian clothing – Mesopotamia and Iran

By |2019-09-05T05:43:00-07:00September 11th, 2017|West Asia|Comments Off on West Asian clothing – Mesopotamia and Iran

Tel Asmar, ca. 3000 BC Most likely people were already wearing clothing about 60,000 years ago when they first walked or sailed out of Africa to West Asia. Clothing must have been invented about this time [...]

11 09, 2017

Scythian art history – Central Asian art

By |2019-09-05T06:00:05-07:00September 11th, 2017|Central Asia|Comments Off on Scythian art history – Central Asian art

Scythian deer from about 700-500 B.C. It is made out of gold, and it's now in St. Petersburg. The Scythians were horse-riding nomads, who traveled around the western part of Central Asia taking care of [...]

11 09, 2017

Assyrian and Babylonian art – West Asia

By |2019-09-05T06:00:23-07:00September 11th, 2017|West Asia|Comments Off on Assyrian and Babylonian art – West Asia

Assyrian prisoners After the Dark Ages, by around 1000 BC, the Assyrians became the biggest power in West Asia, and they created many important works of art. The Assyrians continued the West Asian tradition of relief [...]

11 09, 2017

West Asian art history – Mesopotamia and Iran

By |2019-09-05T06:00:28-07:00September 11th, 2017|West Asia|Comments Off on West Asian art history – Mesopotamia and Iran

Building D, Gobekli Tepe. Southern Turkey, about 9000 BC West Asian art goes back to the earliest presence of people in West Asia, in the form of little stone or clay fertility figurines. Around 9000 [...]

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