LaurieAnnie's photos with the keyword: Dacian
Fragment of a Bronze Military Diploma in the Metro…
26 May 2011 |
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Fragment of a military diploma, Mid-Imperial, Trajanic, 113/14 a.d.
Roman
Bronze
Overall 3 1/16 x 2 3/4 x 1/16 in. (7.8 x 7 x 0.2 cm)
Rogers Fund, 1923 (23.160.52)
Most surviving Roman military diploma (see 23.160.32a,b) belonged to army veterans. These discharge papers, however, were issued by the emperor Trajan to sailors on a warship, a quadrireme, in the imperial fleet based in Misenum on the Bay of Naples. The ship may have formed part of the flotilla that escorted the emperor from Italy to the East for the Parthian War (114–117 A.D.).
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/23.160.52
Beaker with Birds and Animals in the Metropolitan…
30 Jul 2008 |
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Beaker with Birds and Animals
Silver
Thrace, lower Danube region
Thraco-Getian, 4th century BC
Accession # 47.100.88
The scene depicts a row of stags, a goat, a bird, and a bird of prey attacking a fish and a hare. On the base is a beast eating the leg of an animal while holding another in its claws. A vessel almost identical in form and representation to this example was excavated at Agighiol in Romania. The extraordinary and exotic stylization- for example birds' heads projecting from antlers- is foreign to Western concepts and powerfully reflects Central Asian sensibilities and ideology.
Text from the Metropolitan Museum of Art label.
Lead Votive Plaque in the Metropolitan Museum of A…
25 Sep 2010 |
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Title: Lead votive plaque
Medium; Technique: Lead
Culture: Roman
Period: Imperial
Date: probably 3rd century A.D.
Dimensions: H.: 3 3/4 x 3 1/16 in. (9.5 x 7.8 cm)
Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1921
Accession Number: 21.88.175
On View
Description:
The plaque contains a complex iconography of divine figures and symbols, probably to be associated with Thracian or Dacian beliefs of the Lower Danube region. Presiding over the whole scene is Sol Invictus (the invicible sun-god) in a quadriga (four-horse chariot). His cult originated in the Near East and gained increasing influence under imperial patronage during the third century A.D. The state worship of Sol was only supplanted by Constantine's adoption of Christianity in A.D. 312.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_Art/collection_database/greek_...
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