Bactrian bronze stamp seal - Swastika - 21 mm

11
days
11
hours
16
minutes
06
seconds
Starting bid
€ 1
Reserve price not met
Peter Reynaers
Expert
Selected by Peter Reynaers

Has nearly 30 years’ experience and moderated multiple online art research groups.

Estimate  € 200 - € 250
No bids placed

Catawiki Buyer Protection

Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details

Trustpilot 4.4 | 133613 reviews

Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.

Bactrian bronze stamp seal with a swastika motif, dating to the c. 2nd millennium B.C., measuring 21 × 19 mm, in good condition and authenticated as original.

AI-assisted summary

Description from the seller

Ancient West Asian Bronze Stamp Seal with Swastika Motif
Culture / Period: Bactrian / Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex
Date / Period: c. 2nd millennium B.C.
Material: Bronze
Dimensions: 21 x 19 mm
Condition: Good condition
No shipping outside the European Union. Due to complex export regulations concerning cultural goods, this item cannot be shipped outside the EU. Please ensure you have a delivery address within the European Union before placing a bid.
Provenance information:
Object Registration ID: 34
The current owner purchased the Ancient West Asian Bronze Stamp Seal with Swastika Motif from a private collector, N.N., in France.
The previous owner, a private collector from France, stated that the object had been in his collection since an unknown date.
According to the previous owner, the object had previously been part of a private collection in the Netherlands since the 1980s.
No further information concerning the earlier ownership history of the object is available.
Background Information:
This bronze stamp seal is attributed to the Bactrian cultural sphere of the 2nd millennium B.C., a period associated with the Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex, also known as the Oxus Civilization. This cultural region occupied parts of present-day Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and surrounding areas, forming an important Bronze Age zone of settlement, craftsmanship, exchange, and symbolic expression.
Stamp seals of this kind were practical and symbolic objects. They were likely used to impress designs into clay, possibly for marking containers, goods, closures, or administrative materials. At the same time, such seals may also have functioned as personal objects connected with identity, status, ownership, or ritual meaning. The looped handle allowed the seal to be held, suspended, or carried, making it both functional and portable.
The underside bears a geometric swastika motif, a symbol widely attested in many ancient cultures long before its modern misuse. In the Bronze Age context, the swastika is generally understood as a revolving solar or cosmic sign, associated with movement, continuity, vitality, creation, or the turning cycle of time. Its appearance on a seal suggests that the image was intended to be repeated as an impressed design, giving the object a strong visual and symbolic character.
Bronze seals from the Bactrian and related Central Asian traditions were often produced by casting, with lost-wax casting being an important technique for creating detailed and individual forms. The combination of a raised handle, circular sealing surface, and carefully arranged geometric design reflects an organised craft tradition rather than an accidental or purely decorative object. Such pieces belong to a broader Bronze Age world in which metallurgy, trade, and symbolic systems developed alongside increasingly complex societies.
Objects of this type circulated within a cultural landscape connected by exchange routes between Central Asia, Iran, the Indus region, and Mesopotamia. Although the exact find location of this seal is not recorded, comparable bronze seals are associated with the wider Bactrian and BMAC tradition, where geometric, animal, and symbolic motifs formed part of a shared visual language.
Dating to the 2nd millennium B.C., this seal represents a period of remarkable artistic and technological development in ancient Central Asia. It forms a tangible connection to the Bronze Age world, in which objects of this kind played a practical role in administration, ownership, and identity, while also carrying symbolic meanings that were deeply embedded in the visual culture of their time.

Ancient West Asian Bronze Stamp Seal with Swastika Motif
Culture / Period: Bactrian / Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex
Date / Period: c. 2nd millennium B.C.
Material: Bronze
Dimensions: 21 x 19 mm
Condition: Good condition
No shipping outside the European Union. Due to complex export regulations concerning cultural goods, this item cannot be shipped outside the EU. Please ensure you have a delivery address within the European Union before placing a bid.
Provenance information:
Object Registration ID: 34
The current owner purchased the Ancient West Asian Bronze Stamp Seal with Swastika Motif from a private collector, N.N., in France.
The previous owner, a private collector from France, stated that the object had been in his collection since an unknown date.
According to the previous owner, the object had previously been part of a private collection in the Netherlands since the 1980s.
No further information concerning the earlier ownership history of the object is available.
Background Information:
This bronze stamp seal is attributed to the Bactrian cultural sphere of the 2nd millennium B.C., a period associated with the Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex, also known as the Oxus Civilization. This cultural region occupied parts of present-day Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and surrounding areas, forming an important Bronze Age zone of settlement, craftsmanship, exchange, and symbolic expression.
Stamp seals of this kind were practical and symbolic objects. They were likely used to impress designs into clay, possibly for marking containers, goods, closures, or administrative materials. At the same time, such seals may also have functioned as personal objects connected with identity, status, ownership, or ritual meaning. The looped handle allowed the seal to be held, suspended, or carried, making it both functional and portable.
The underside bears a geometric swastika motif, a symbol widely attested in many ancient cultures long before its modern misuse. In the Bronze Age context, the swastika is generally understood as a revolving solar or cosmic sign, associated with movement, continuity, vitality, creation, or the turning cycle of time. Its appearance on a seal suggests that the image was intended to be repeated as an impressed design, giving the object a strong visual and symbolic character.
Bronze seals from the Bactrian and related Central Asian traditions were often produced by casting, with lost-wax casting being an important technique for creating detailed and individual forms. The combination of a raised handle, circular sealing surface, and carefully arranged geometric design reflects an organised craft tradition rather than an accidental or purely decorative object. Such pieces belong to a broader Bronze Age world in which metallurgy, trade, and symbolic systems developed alongside increasingly complex societies.
Objects of this type circulated within a cultural landscape connected by exchange routes between Central Asia, Iran, the Indus region, and Mesopotamia. Although the exact find location of this seal is not recorded, comparable bronze seals are associated with the wider Bactrian and BMAC tradition, where geometric, animal, and symbolic motifs formed part of a shared visual language.
Dating to the 2nd millennium B.C., this seal represents a period of remarkable artistic and technological development in ancient Central Asia. It forms a tangible connection to the Bronze Age world, in which objects of this kind played a practical role in administration, ownership, and identity, while also carrying symbolic meanings that were deeply embedded in the visual culture of their time.

Details

Culture
Bactrian
Century/timeframe
c. 2nd millennium B.C.
Name of object
stamp seal - Swastika
Acquired from
Private collection
Year acquired
2026
Material
bronze
Country acquired from
Netherlands
Condition
Good
Previous owner acquired from
Private collection
Height
21 mm
Previous owner - year acquired
1990
Width
19 mm
Previous owner - country acquired from
Netherlands
I verify that I have obtained this object legally and that I am allowed to sell it
Yes
Authenticity
Original/official
The NetherlandsVerified
New
on Catawiki
Private

Disclaimer

The seller was informed by Catawiki about documentation requirements and guarantees the following: - the object was legally obtained, - the seller has the right to sell and/or export the object, as relevant, - the seller will provide the necessary provenance information and arrange required documentation and permits/licenses, as applicable and as per local laws, - the seller will notify the buyer of any delays in obtaining permits/licenses. By bidding, you acknowledge that import documentation may be required depending on your country of residence and that obtaining permits/licenses may cause delays in the delivery of your object.

The seller was informed by Catawiki about documentation requirements and guarantees the following: - the object was legally obtained, - the seller has the right to sell and/or export the object, as relevant, - the seller will provide the necessary provenance information and arrange required documentation and permits/licenses, as applicable and as per local laws, - the seller will notify the buyer of any delays in obtaining permits/licenses. By bidding, you acknowledge that import documentation may be required depending on your country of residence and that obtaining permits/licenses may cause delays in the delivery of your object.

Similar objects

For you in

Archaeology