Pagan Statuettes in Late Antique Corinth: Sculpture from the Panayia Domus

Excavations in 1999 at the Panayia Domus at Corinth uncovered nine statuettes representing Artemis (twice), Asklepios (twice), Roma, Dionysos, Herakles, Europa/Sosandra, and Pan, the contents of a probable domestic shrine in a small, plain room. The statuettes range in date from the late 1st to the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hesperia 2008-01, Vol.77 (1), p.89-161
1. Verfasser: Stirling, Lea M.
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description Excavations in 1999 at the Panayia Domus at Corinth uncovered nine statuettes representing Artemis (twice), Asklepios (twice), Roma, Dionysos, Herakles, Europa/Sosandra, and Pan, the contents of a probable domestic shrine in a small, plain room. The statuettes range in date from the late 1st to the mid-3rd or early 4th century A.D. Four are late products of Attic sarcophagus workshops. The figure of Roma is a unique domestic example of this divinity and may refer to a local monument and to the status of the owner. Other statuettes are typical of domestic assemblages in Late Roman Greece.
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subjects Adhesives
Archaeology
Arm
Deities
Dionysian mysteries
Draperies
Excavations
Greek civilization
Hair
Head
Historic artifacts
Rooms
Sarcophagi
Sculpture
Statues
title Pagan Statuettes in Late Antique Corinth: Sculpture from the Panayia Domus
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