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Cybele Riding a Lion in the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, June 2018


Cybele Riding a Lion (Primary Title)
Kybele Riding a Lion (Alternate Title)
Unknown (Artist)
Date: Late 2nd Century AD
Culture: Roman
Category: Sculpture
Medium: alabaster
Collection: Ancient Art
Dimensions: Overall: 6 3/4 × 8 × 2 1/2 in. (17.145 × 20.32 × 6.35 cm)
Object Number: 49.10.31
“If ever a foreign-born enemy brings war to Italian lands, he can be driven from Italy and defeated if the Idaean Mother [Kybele] is brought from Pessinus to Rome.” – Livy, History of Rome
During Rome’s war against the Carthaginian general Hannibal, a prophecy was discovered in Rome’s sacred texts, the Sybillene books, that the Romans could defeat a foreign enemy only if they brought the goddess Kybele from Anatolia (in modern Turkey). Thus, in 205 BC, the cult of Kybele (including her priests) was introduced into Rome. This small-scale statue of Kybele (Magna Mater or “Great Mother”) riding on her frequent companion, a lion, was perhaps a votive offering or part of a household shrine.
Text from: www.vmfa.museum/piction/6027262-110994873
Kybele Riding a Lion (Alternate Title)
Unknown (Artist)
Date: Late 2nd Century AD
Culture: Roman
Category: Sculpture
Medium: alabaster
Collection: Ancient Art
Dimensions: Overall: 6 3/4 × 8 × 2 1/2 in. (17.145 × 20.32 × 6.35 cm)
Object Number: 49.10.31
“If ever a foreign-born enemy brings war to Italian lands, he can be driven from Italy and defeated if the Idaean Mother [Kybele] is brought from Pessinus to Rome.” – Livy, History of Rome
During Rome’s war against the Carthaginian general Hannibal, a prophecy was discovered in Rome’s sacred texts, the Sybillene books, that the Romans could defeat a foreign enemy only if they brought the goddess Kybele from Anatolia (in modern Turkey). Thus, in 205 BC, the cult of Kybele (including her priests) was introduced into Rome. This small-scale statue of Kybele (Magna Mater or “Great Mother”) riding on her frequent companion, a lion, was perhaps a votive offering or part of a household shrine.
Text from: www.vmfa.museum/piction/6027262-110994873
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