商用無料の写真検索さん
           


The Derveni krater, late 4th century B.C., Snake framing the rising handle and wrapping their bodies around a mask of an underworld deity, Archaeological Museum, Thessaloniki, Greece : 無料・フリー素材/写真

The Derveni krater, late 4th century B.C., Snake framing the rising handle and wrapping their bodies around a mask of an underworld deity, Archaeological Museum, Thessaloniki, Greece / Following Hadrian
このタグをブログ記事に貼り付けてください。
トリミング(切り除き):
使用画像:     注:元画像によっては、全ての大きさが同じ場合があります。
サイズ:横      位置:上から 左から 写真をドラッグしても調整できます。
あなたのブログで、ぜひこのサービスを紹介してください!(^^
The Derveni krater, late 4th century B.C., Snake framing the rising handle and wrapping their bodies around a mask of an underworld deity, Archaeological Museum, Thessaloniki, Greece

QRコード

ライセンスクリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示-継承 2.1
説明The Derveni krater is a volute krater, the most elaborate of its type, discovered in 1962 in a tomb at Derveni, not far from Thessaloniki, and displayed at the Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki. Weighing 40 kg, it is made of an alloy of bronze and tin in skillfully chosen amounts, which endows it with a superb golden sheen without use of any gold at all.The krater was discovered buried, as a funerary urn for a Thessalian aristocrat whose name is engraved on the vase: Astiouneios, son of Anaxagoras, from Larissa. Kraters (mixing bowls) were vessels used for mixing undiluted wine with water and probably various spices as well, the drink then being ladled out to fellow banqueters at ritual or festive celebrations. When excavated, the Derveni krater contained 1968.31 g of burnt bones that belonged to a man aged 35–50 and to a younger woman.The vase is composed of two leaves of metal which were hammered then joined, although the handles and the volutes (scrolls) were cast and attached. The top part of the krater is decorated with motifs both ornamental (gadroons, palm leaves, acanthus, garlands) and figurative: the top of the neck presents a frieze of animals and most of all, four statuettes ( two maenads, Dionysus and a sleeping satyre) are casually seated on the shoulders of the vase, in a pose foreshadowing that of the Barberini Faun. On the belly, the frieze in low relief, 32.6 cm tall, is devoted to the divinities Ariadne and Dionysus, surrounded by revelling satyrs and maenads of the Bacchic thiasos, or ecstatic retinue. There is also a warrior wearing only one sandal, whose identity is disputed: Pentheus, Lycurgus of Thrace, or perhaps the "one-sandalled" Jason of Argonaut fame.The exact date and place of making are disputed. Based on the dialectal forms used in the inscription, some commentators think it was fabricated in Thessaly at the time of the revolt of the Aleuadae, around 350 BC. Others date it between 330 and 320 BC and credit it to bronzesmiths of the royal court of Philip II of Macedon.The funerary inscription on the krater reads: ΑΣΤΙΟΥΝΕΙΟΣ ΑΝΑΞΑΓΟΡΑΙΟΙ ΕΣ ΛΑΡΙΣΑΣThe inscription is in the Thessalian variant of the Aeolian dialect: Ἀστιούνειος Ἀναξαγοραίοι ἐς Λαρίσας (Astioúneios Anaxagoraīoi es Larísas), "Astiouneios, son of Anaxagoras, from Larisa. If transcribed in Attic, the inscription would read: Ἀστίων Ἀναξαγόρου ἐκ Λαρίσης (Astíōn Anaxagórou ek Larísēs).
撮影日2012-04-01 12:40:58
撮影者Following Hadrian , FRANKFURT, Germany
タグ
撮影地Thessaloniki, Central Macedonia, Ελλάδα 地図
カメラSP800UZ , OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP.
露出0.25 sec (1/4)
開放F値f/4.0


(C)名入れギフト.com