• r2-215-10
    Captive against pillar, front view. (Telif hakkı Sart Amerikan Hafriyat Heyeti / Harvard Üniversitesi)

    Sütuna karşı tutsak

    Dönem
    Late 2nd or early 3rd C. AD, Roma
    Müze
    Manisa, Arkeoloji ve Etnografya Müzesi, 4097
    Müze Envanter No.
    4097
    Sardeis veya Müze Env. No.
    NoEx59.003
    Malzeme
    Mermer, Taş
    Eserin Türü
    Heykel
    Heykelin Türü
    Diğer Mimari, İnsan Figürü
    Yerleşim
    Sardis?
    Bulunduğu Yeri
    Findspot unknown.
    Tanım
    A captive barbarian is tied with his back against a pillar. His arms are bent at the elbows and bound behind his back. He wears a tunic girt below his chest with a broad belt. His cloak, fastened at the r. shoulder, falls in an arc across the front of his chest and passes over the shoulders to fall down the back. Traces remain of the long flap from a “Phrygian” cap which identifies him as a Parthian. Workmanship is rough; straight channels indicate drapery folds.
    Condition

    White local marble with gray veins.

    Shoulders to above knees preserved. Iron dowel on top of pillar.

    Boyutlar
    H. 0.235; W. 0.185; D. 0.195
    Yorum
    Ayrıca bakınız
    Kaynakça
    Similarly dressed captives can be seen on numerous Imperial monuments from the time of Augustus onwards. For a captive tied to an architectural pillar, see Brilliant, Severus Arch, pl. 58b.
    Yazar
    NHR