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Villa Boscoreale is an ancient Roman villa located in the town of Boscoreale, about one and a half kilometers north of Pompeii, southeast of Vesuvius, in Campania, southern Italy
Beautifully sculpted Trophy Head in volcanic stone. Strongly rendered head with prominent lower jaw. The coiffure carved in high ridges forming geometric patterns. Fine Condition. Atlantic Watershed Region, Costa Rica. 700-1000AD. Measures 4" long by 3 1/2" in height.
Writing the royal name inside a cartouche served to protect the bearer of the name from evil forces.
Psamtik I ruled during the 26th dynasty from 664 to 6610 BC. During his long reign, he expelled the Nubians, who had conquered Egypt, reunited the divided country and heralded Pharaonic Egypt into its last golden age.
Steatite
26th dynasty
Egypt of Glory exhibition, Amos Rex Art Museum, Helsinki
From the collection of Museo Egizio, Turin, Italy
9.10.2020-21.3.2021
Petroglyphs adorn a stone face near at the Puerco Pueblo ruins in Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona.
An ultra rare find. Burnished ceramic headrest with incised designs. Calderon, Manabi, Ecuador. 1800/300BC. Measures over 6" in length by 4" in height.
Oxford. Ashmolean Museum. Olpe àtic de figures negres. Àiax i Aquil·leu jugant mentre Atena s'ho mira. S. VI-V aC.
designed by me wikidley inked by mike at #ancientarts freshley #inked wid my own #graffiti a pain day6 and a half hours #tattoo #romannumerals
Psamtik I ruled during the 26th dynasty from 664 to 6610 BC. During his long reign, he expelled the Nubians, who had conquered Egypt, reunited the divided country and heralded Pharaonic Egypt into its last golden age.
Faience
26th dynasty
Egypt of Glory exhibition, Amos Rex Art Museum, Helsinki
From the collection of Museo Egizio, Turin, Italy
9.10.2020-21.3.2021
Finely made Valdivian Ceremonial Stone Hacha. Symmetric and high polished green stone. Custom display stand. Measures 6.25" (16.87cm) tall. 7" (17.78cm) mounted. Choice condition. Ecuador 4400-1450 B.C.
During the Late Formative period, there developed a great interest and desire for green stones in general. They were exotic in most areas and would have been sought in exchange over long distances as it became widespread use in domestic and mortuary contexts. The dramatic growth in popularity of green stones also occurred at about the same time in Mesoamerica.
Double-sided Mithraic Relief, 2nd-3rd century. Rome. Louvre Museum, Paris.
The Iranian deity Mithra is introduced to Rome during the second half of the 1st century AD. He became one of the most popular religion among the Romans for about three hundred years.
The Mandapeshwar caves perhaps have the most tumultuous history of all the Mumbai caves, or so it would seem from the scars the walls still bear. A Hindu temple, it was targeted by the Portuguese, who asserted their religious beliefs over it by literally building a monastery and a church dedicated to Our Lady of Immaculate Conception on top of the cave temple. Fr. Porto founded the monastery and church in 1544.The Mandapeshwar caves were hewn out of a hillock about 1,600 years ago. At one time, the Dahisar river ran in front of it, but over time the course of the river changed and the caves now face a main road.In the 18th century the church was desecrated after the Battle of Bassein in which the Marathas defeated the Portuguese. They uncovered and worshipped the rock-cut sculptures again, but towards the end of the 18th century the British defeated the Marathas and the caves once again functioned as a place of Christian worship. After the end of colonial rule the church fell into disrepair and the caves gradually reverted to the worship of Siva. The church, including its roof, has been destroyed, but older local residents recall playing among the aisles and the nave of the church when they were children.A three-foot-high symbol of the cross, hewn out of a stone panel that once depicted mythical Hindu figures, stands at the entrance. It is the only remaining proof of Mandapeshwar’s historical past.
Macedonian. Silver Alexander the Great tetradrachm coin. Reverse with seated Zeus, legs straight. 336-323 BC (1")
71 years ago..... Canadian encased coins
Encased coins are coins that have been inserted into a holder that changes the character of the coin from money to an advertising or souvenir device. The concept was really popularized at the Pan American Exposition in 1901 and was used extensively throughout the 20th century for advertising. This coin was produced in 1949 for Charles Ogilvy Ltd. For much of the 20th century, Charles Ogilvy Ltd., known as “Ogilvy’s”, was a top department store. Famous for tartan boxes, this was the place to shop for “quality” goods of every description, and where staff spent a lifetime.
Legend
Outer: Jas. A. Ogilvy's Limited 83ieme Anniversaire
Inner: 1 cent 1949 Canada
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Parthian Silver Vonones I drachm coin, obverse shows a bearded portrait of the ruler with inscriptions, reverse shows a standing winged Nike surrounded by Greek inscriptions. 8 - 12 AD (¾")
Mural fragment of a sea lion (hippocampus) and dolphins. Stucco. Roman, 1-2 st century.Taken at the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
XLIV: Trajan rewards his men. An auxiliary kisses Trajan's hand while another behind him goes off with his reward. In the foreground, two soldiers embrace.
XLV: The torture of Roman(?) prisoners. Nude men are being tortured by women. Are these Roman soldiers being tortured by Dacian widows? Or Dacians being tortured by widows of the Moesian raid? (cf. Gauer 1977: 17).
Museum of Roman Civilisation.
Rock surfaces act as a notebook for ancient artists of Puerco Pueblo in Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona. Creations range from geometric figures to naturalistic animal herds.
Marble head of a boy wearing a wreath, Roman, Antonine period, mid-2nd century A.D.
Metropolitan Museum of Art.
A massive hall filled with Classical statues, mostly Roman I think.
Must be hundreds of pieces there.
From the Musei Vaticani, Rome