29 research outputs found
Last Men Standing: Chlamydatus Portraits and Public Life in Late Antique Corinth
Notable among the marble sculptures excavated at Corinth are seven portraits of men wearing the long chlamys of Late Antique imperial office. This unusual costume, contemporary portrait heads, and inscribed statue bases all help confirm that new public statuary was created and erected at Corinth during the 4th and 5th centuries. These chlamydatus portraits, published together here for the first time, are likely to represent the Governor of Achaia in his capital city, in the company of local benefactors. Among the last works of the ancient sculptural tradition, they form a valuable source of information on public life in Late Antique Corinth
Traiano, 98-117 d.C. Magnifici quegli anni ...
Articolo dedicato alle opere di Traiano in Italia nell'anniversario della morte dell'imperatore
La necropoli tardoantica di Porta a Lucca (Pisa): studio antropologico preliminare dei resti inumati
La necropoli tardoantica di Porta a Lucca (Pisa
