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Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
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Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archa…
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Detail of the Alexander Mosaic in the Naples Archaeological Museum, July 2012


Battle of Issus between Alexander and Darius III
The mosaic, the largest in the House of the Faun in Pompeii, made with the use of about one million tesserae, depicts the battle of Issus fought between Alexander the Great and Darius III in 333 BC; it marked the end of the Persian Empire.
The mosaic, on the left side, shows Alexander who, astride his horse Bucephalus, leads his men against the fleeing Persians. Opposite Alexander towers the figure of Darius on his retreating war chariot. Between the two is a Persian prince who displays his loyalty by using his body to shield his king, while a soldier offers him his own horse, thus condemning himself to certain death.
The use of opus vermiculatum (a technique of mosaic which uses very small tesserae) enabled the craftsman to render all the effects of luminosity, the changes in colour, the details of the armour and the faces, and even the moods.
Text from: www.museoarcheologiconapoli.it/en/room-and-sections-of-the-exhibition/mosaics
The mosaic, the largest in the House of the Faun in Pompeii, made with the use of about one million tesserae, depicts the battle of Issus fought between Alexander the Great and Darius III in 333 BC; it marked the end of the Persian Empire.
The mosaic, on the left side, shows Alexander who, astride his horse Bucephalus, leads his men against the fleeing Persians. Opposite Alexander towers the figure of Darius on his retreating war chariot. Between the two is a Persian prince who displays his loyalty by using his body to shield his king, while a soldier offers him his own horse, thus condemning himself to certain death.
The use of opus vermiculatum (a technique of mosaic which uses very small tesserae) enabled the craftsman to render all the effects of luminosity, the changes in colour, the details of the armour and the faces, and even the moods.
Text from: www.museoarcheologiconapoli.it/en/room-and-sections-of-the-exhibition/mosaics
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