The religious significance of this object is corroborated by the inscription on the base of a naturalistic statue of a standard-bearer found at Bassetki. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name this object that, uniquely, indicates its living subject’s deification by his horned helmet. On this artwork, eight-pointed stars resembling the dingir symbol hover over a king stomping on the Lullubi people.
ANSWER: Victory Stele of Naram-Sin [or Naram-Sin’s stele; prompt on partial answers]
[10e] Naram-Sin’s grandfather Sargon depicted himself with one of these usually divine objects, which the kings of Umma and Lagash swore on to end the “hundred years’ war.” Retiarii gladiators wielded tridents and these tools.
ANSWER: battle-nets [accept the battle-net of Enlil, casting nets, or fishing nets]
[10m] A king of Lagash with this prefix in his name looms over his subjects in a kaunakes skirt in the “perforated relief.” This prefix appears in the name of the founder of the Third Dynasty, who created the world’s oldest law code.
ANSWER: Ur- [accept Ur-Nanshe or Ur-Nammu]
<JB, Other History>