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DFG-Network: New Perspectives on Monsters, Hybrids, and In-Betweens in Ancient West Asia

Principal Investigator:
  • PD Dr. Dahlia Shehata (Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg)
  • Dr. Johannes Bach (JMU Würzburg)
  • Dr. Benedetta Bellucci (JMU Würzburg)
  • Dr. Geraldina Rozzi (Universität Leipzig)
Term:
Feb 01, 2026
Logo Monsters, Hybrids, and In-Betweens

Logo Monsters, Hybrids, and In-Betweens
Image Credit: © FUB, H. Hamel nach Zeichnungen von E. Porada und F. Wiggermann

The scientific network aims to strengthen the study of hybrid beings in ancient Mesopotamia and neighbouring regions, and to deepen this research through interdisciplinary exchange. Hybrid beings — composite figures combining human and animal features — are central components of ancient Near Eastern thought, and appear in textual, material and visual sources.

Despite numerous individual studies, particularly in the field of demonology, there is still a lack of systematically coordinated, integrative research approaches. The network addresses this desideratum by reviving key research areas within Assyriology and Near Eastern archaeology, focusing on the definition, classification, origin, transformation, and perception of hybrid figures. This approach is complemented by substantive and methodological impulses from other areas of ancient studies as well as from anthropology, religious studies, sociology, psychology, and art history.

At the heart of the initiative are three thematically structured international workshops (Berlin 2026, Würzburg 2026, Berlin 2027), which give equal weight to archaeological and philological sources. The three core topics — (1) definition and classification, (2) identification, transmission and transformation, and (3) origins and perception — will be discussed both within and across disciplinary boundaries. Particular emphasis is placed on developing new research questions and approaches for future individual and collaborative projects.

The network brings together twelve core members from Near Eastern archaeology and ancient Near Eastern studies, alongside international guest scholars from adjacent disciplines. The outcomes of the joint work will be presented in a scholarly edited volume, a theory-driven co-authored article, and an internal digital wiki platform. The latter will serve both to structure existing research and to test new systems of classification and analytical tools.

The network's innovative potential lies in its targeted integration of textual, visual, and material sources with cultural theoretical approaches. Hybrid beings are thus not viewed as marginal phenomena, but as central expressions of religious and societal order. Through interdisciplinary exchange, the network will increase the visibility of a previously fragmented field of research and lay the foundation for its future systematic development.


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Keywords

  • DFG-Netzwerk, Vorderasiatische Archäolgie, Altorientalistik, Monster, Mischwesen, Zwischenwesen,