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iafeh: heinzplomperg: Schöne Dinge, .. two bronze statues from the 1st century BC (which are Roman replicas of the original Greek statues from the 4th century BC), now housed in the Naples National Archaeological Museum, after being found in the
ancientpeoples: Woven medallion with a nude womanCoptic Egypt, 3rd–4th century; 20cm (8in) high; probably an orbiculus once appliquéd onto a tunicSource: The Metropolitan Museum of Art
archatlas: The Astoundingly Complex Ancient Indian Stepwells Ancient Indian stepwells captured by Victoria S. Lautman. Rudimentary stepwells first appeared in India between the 2nd and 4th centuries A.D., born of necessity in a capricious climate
ancientpeoples: Wreath Gold 4th Century BC Greek Source: Dallas Museum of Art
ganymedesrocks: Marble of Hermes, so called “Hermes Richelieu” Roman copy of the 2nd century CE after bronze, original of the 4th century BC. (Also viewable with other Pins by Hoorain Kazemi on Pinterest). The so-called “Hermes Richelieu” owes
boysnmenart: The Marathon Boy, bronze, 4th century BC, discovered in a shipwreck in 1925, this sculptor is working in a sexualized style with exaggerated contrapposto created by the sculptor Praxiteles.
virtual-artifacts: Silver mirror Period: Imperial Date: 4th century A.D. Culture: Roman Medium: Silver
giwatafiya:systlin:museum-of-artifacts: Lead sling bullet, inscribed with DEXAI, (meaning in greek"Catch!“) 4th Century Greece It’s been 2400 years and humanity has changed very little.I cannot fucking believe this.
Voodoo doll, 4th century, Egypt
hadrian6: Herakles with his club and the lion skin. Coarse-grained crystalline marble, Roman copy of the 2nd century AD after a Greek original of the 4th century attributed to Lysippus. Palazzo Altemps. Rome. http://hadrian6.tumblr.com
likeavirgil: The Lycurgus Cup Late Roman, 4th century AD “This extraordinary cup is the only complete example of a very special type of glass, known as dichroic, which changes colour when held up to the light. The opaque green cup turns to a glowing
yeaverily: Gold wreath of oak leaves and acorns, Greek, Late Classical or Early Hellenistic Period, 4th century B.C.
boneandpapyrus: Textile fragment Coptic Egypt, 3rd–4th century Source: The Metropolitan Museum of Art (89.18.5)
museum-of-artifacts: An outline overlay reconstructs the damaged Heidentor, a 4th century AD roman victory monument in Austria
rejectedprincesses: Timoclea (4th century BCE): the Woman Who Threw Her Rapist in a Well This was not the post that was scheduled. But it was one that spoke to the moment. If you’re in the US, please vote. Full post, with footnotes and whatnot,
giwatafiya: systlin: museum-of-artifacts: Lead sling bullet, inscribed with DEXAI, (meaning in greek"Catch!“) 4th Century Greece It’s been 2400 years and humanity has changed very little. I cannot fucking believe this.
lesbianshepard: lesbianshepard: there’s evidence that ancient roman curse tablets were mass produced and that’s honestly the funniest thing in the world to me. oh to be born in 4th century BC Rome and wake up every morning to head out to my shift
fuckyeahvikingsandcelts: archaicwonder: Scythian Griffin-headed Iron Sword, c. 7th century BC - 4th century AD This is so awesome and beautiful. I want one.
visualtraining: Saint Philomena is a controversial figure because nothing is known about her or was ever written about her. She was a corpse from the 4th century found in 1802 that had appeared to have been given the burial of a virgin martyr. There
dreamsofsilverandgold: Wreath of oak leaves and acorns Greek, Late Classical or Early Hellenistic Period, 4th century B.C. (via Wreath of oak leaves and acorns | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
wasbella102: The horses of St. Mark. Bronze. Attributed to the Greek sculptor Lysippos, 4th century B.C. Venice, Italy, Basilica of St. Mark.
hismarmorealcalm: The Townley Venus Proconnesian marble Excavated from Ostia 1st Century - 2nd Century Adapted from a lost Greek 4th century B.C. original detail
wasbella102: Marble head of HeraklesCopy of a Greek statue of the second half of the 4th century B.C. attributed to Lysippos.
centuriespast: Terracotta antefix (roof tile) with head of a maenadPeriod: Late ClassicalDate: late 4th century B.C.Culture: Etruscan, Cerveteri The Met
ephemeral-elegance: Gold Oak Leaf and Acorn Wreath, late Classical or early Hellenistic Period, 4th century B.C.via MFA
antiquitystuff: A pelike is a Greek pottery type that is similar to an amphora. This particular example is from the late 4th century BC from Southern Italy and is decorated with a swan and lines. Image from LACMA via their online collection: 50.8.13
via-appia: Glass goblet Roman, 4th century A.D. or later
art4gays: amare-habeo: Gilded Bronze statue of a beardless Hercules cast in the Greek Lysippic style of the 4th century BCE Found in the remains of the Forum Boariu via Mary Harrsch & desimonewayland (via TumbleOn)
via-appia: Silver coins, Athena and Pegasus Greek, Syracuse and Corinth, 4th century BC
historyfilia: Earring with inscribed gemstone. Roman, Late Imperial Period, 4th century A.D. The earring is inset with sardonyx intaglios. It has one square stone inscribed (in Greek) TI KALE (“To the beautiful one”) and one teardrop-shaped pendant
desimonewayland: Tunisia. Roman civilisation. Mosaic Uzitta. Peacock feathers arranged to form a geometric pattern. Sousse Museum. 4th century A.D. via: chaudron
verdeste: Three hundred Roman gold coins dating around the 4th century AD have been found today (7/9/2018) during an excavation in Como, Italy.
ancientjewels: 4th century CE Roman gold bracelet depicting sea life. From the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
ancientpeoples: Marble head of a young woman Head is from a funerary stela. It is 40.6cm high (16 inch.) Greek, Classical period, 4th century BC. Source: Metropolitan Museum
ancientpeoples: Seated Goddess 4th Century BC Cypro-Classical II (Source: The Met Museum)
An abandoned Roman villa: The Otford site which was systematically demolished in the 4th century
archaicwonder: Greek Gold Phiale, Mid-4th Century BCPhiale (libation bowl) decorated with repetitive images of gorgons, the god Pan, fish, dolphins, lion heads and boar heads. Found in the Kul Oba Barrow near Kerch, Crimea in 1830. Modern Kerch was the
worldhistoryfacts: Hellenistic plate depicting Cybele in a chariot, found in Ai-Khanoum in modern day Afghanistan, 2nd century BCE. Greek culture spread in this area after the conquests of Alexander the Great in the 4th century BCE
bloghqualls:Roman portrait head of Hercules (Herakles), 1st century CE, copy of Lysippos’ 4th century BCE original.
marmarinos: The so-called Kaufmann head, a Roman copy of Praxiteles’s Aphrodite of Knidos, which dates to the mid 4th century BCE. The Kaufmann head dates to the first half of the 2nd century BCE and was found in Tralles (modern Aydın, Turkey), and
hismarmorealcalm:Torso of a youth Marble. Roman period (First—Second century CE) copy from a Greek original from the 4th century BCE
seducingeros: Detail of bronze statue of Hercules Gilded bronze. 2nd century B.C. Roman, based on Greek models from the 4th century B.C. Height: 2.41 m (7 ft. 10 ¾ in.). Found in the Forum Boarium, Rome, 15th century. Palazzo dei Conservatori, Capitoline
marmarinos: Roman bust of a youth, 1st or 2nd century CE. Marble.Roman copy of a Greek original, which dated to c. 4th century BCE.
marmarinos: Detail of the Farnese Hermes, 1st century CE. Roman copy of a Greek original by Praxiteles or his school, dated to the 4th century BCE.
aucelo:A Marble Torso of a God or Athlete, Roman Imperial, circa 1st/2nd Century A.D. after a Greek sculpture of around the 4th Century B.C. Sotheby’s, Dec. 2012
hermesandmercury: Mercury 1757–1758 After Roman 2nd century, after Greek 4th century BC Richard Hayward (1728–1800) Painted plaster Kedleston Hall ** My Other Blogs & Facebook Pages Keep reading
salomi:Ludovisi AresThe Ludovisi Ares is an Antonine Roman marble sculpture of Mars, a fine 2nd-century copy of a late 4th-century BCE Greek original, associated with Scopas or Lysippos: thus the Roman god of war receives his Greek name, Ares.Ares/Mars
starpaintedskinmuse:Warrior, the so-called Protesilaos2nd century AD copy of a Greek original of the mid 4th century BCMuseo Archeologico Nazionale di NapoliIn the ‘Iliad’ Protesilaos was the first Greek to leap ashore to Troy, and thus the
theancientwayoflife:~ Ganymede and the Eagle.Culture/Date: Roman copy of the second half of the 2nd century of a late Hellenistic model of Greek figurative repertoir of the 4th century B.C.Medium: White marbleProvenience: Naples, National Archaeological
ganymedesrocks:Sotheby’s July 2020 - Pothos (Desire) - A Roman Marble Torso - Circa 2nd Century AD. The present torso, a reduced-sized copy after a larger original, which dated to the late 4th Century BC, based on stylistic grounds, commonly identified
greekromangods: HeraklesRoman; Imperial, 1st–2nd century ADAfter Greek original of the 1st half of the 4th century BCBronze, hollow castBrigetio (Place found)Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien** Visit my Links page for my other blogs & Facebook Pages
ganymedesrocks: Hermes, a 1st or 2nd century, Roman Pentellic Marble Statue, after the Classical Greek Original, dating to the late 5th or early 4th century BC, which is attributed to Polykleitos - Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, NY, USA.
ganymedesrocks: Marble head of Herakles - Copy of a Greek statue of the second half of the 4th century B.C. with attribution to Lysippos, a Greek sculptor of the 4th century BC. Together with Scopas and Praxiteles, Lysippos is considered one of the three
marmarinos:Ancient Roman bust of Demeter from the 2nd century CE, a copy of a Greek original, which would have dated to the 4th century BCE. Marble. Currently located in the Museo Nazionale Romano.
ancientjewels: Egyptian silver bracelet dating from 4th century BCE through the 4th century CE. From the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
historyarchaeologyartefacts: Scythian golden comb, circa 4th century BC [1080 x 1341]Source: https://reddit.com/r/ArtefactPorn/comments/dvvhhk/scythian_golden_comb_circa_4th_century_bc_1080_x/
cafeinevitable:13th Century Byzantine Iconshowing the sword-wielding spiritual warrior Archangel St Michael, in gold and enamel with semi-precious stones. Apparently taken from Constantinople during the 4th century crusade.Treasury, Basilica di San Marco,