Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jupiter_Column> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 84 of
84
with 100 triples per page.
- Jupiter_Column abstract "A Jupiter Column (German: Jupitergigantensäule or Jupitersäule) is an archaeological monument belonging to a type widespread in Roman Germania. Such pillars express the religious beliefs of their time. They were erected in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD, mostly near Roman settlements or villas in the Germanic provinces. Some examples also occur in Gaul and Britain.The base of the monuments was normally formed by a Viergötterstein (four gods stone), in itself a common monument type, usually depicting Juno, Minerva, Mercury and Hercules. This would support a Wochengötterstein (a carving depicting the personifications of the seven days of the week), which, in turn, supported a column or pillar, normally decorated with a scale pattern. The column was crowned with a statue of Jupiter, usually on horseback, trampling a Giant (usually depicted as a snake). In some cases (e.g. at Walheim), the column capital is decorated with four heads, usually interpreted as depictions of the four times of day (morning, midday, evening, night). The total height of a Jupiter Column is normally around 4 m, but some examples are taller, e.g. a famous example at Mainz with a height of more than 9 m.The columns in Upper Germany normally depict Jupiter defeating a Giant, as described above, and are thus known as Jupitergigantensäulen ("Jupiter-Giant-Columns"). In Lower Germany, Jupiter is normally depicted enthroned without the Giant; those monuments are commonly described simply as Jupitersäulen ("Jupiter Columns").The pillars were often placed within a walled enclosure and accompanied by an altar.No such monument has survived intact. They are known from excavated finds or from secondary use as spolia, e.g. in Christian churches. Recently, reconstructions of some Jupiter Columns have been erected at or near where they were found, e.g. in Ladenburg, Obernburg, Benningen am Neckar, Sinsheim, Stuttgart, Mainz and near the Saalburg.According to the historian Greg Woolf, the pillars depict the victory of Jupiter Optimus Maximus over the forces of Chaos, the god himself being raised high above the other gods and humankind, but closely linked with them. Woolf sees most such monuments as dedications by individuals.".
- Jupiter_Column thumbnail Jupitersaeule.jpg?width=300.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageExternalLink jupitergigantensaule.html.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageExternalLink iupitersaeulen.htm.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageExternalLink jupitergiga01.htm.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageID "14017331".
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageLength "4318".
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageOutDegree "36".
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageRevisionID "661204942".
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Archaeology.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Benningen_am_Neckar.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Capitoline_Triad.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Category:2nd-century_Roman_sculptures.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Category:3rd-century_Roman_sculptures.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_Roman_buildings_and_structures_in_Germany.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_Roman_religion.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Category:Monument_types.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Chaos_(mythology).
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Excavation_(archaeology).
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Gallia.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Gaul.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Germania.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Germania_Inferior.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Germania_Superior.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_peoples.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Giants_(Greek_mythology).
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Gigantes.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Hercules.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Juno_(mythology).
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Jupiter_(mythology).
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Jupiter_Optimus_Maximus.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Kleine_Schriften.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Ladenburg.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Mainz.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Mercury_(mythology).
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Minerva.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Obernburg.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Britain.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Roman_villa.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Saalburg.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Sinsheim.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Spolia.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Stuttgart.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink Walheim.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink File:Jupitersaeule.jpg.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLink File:Stuttgart-jupitergigantensaeule.jpg.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLinkText "''Viergötterstein''".
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jupiter Column".
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jupiter-Giant-Columns".
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageWikiLinkText "godstones".
- Jupiter_Column hasPhotoCollection Jupiter_Column.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Jupiter_Column wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-de.
- Jupiter_Column subject Category:2nd-century_Roman_sculptures.
- Jupiter_Column subject Category:3rd-century_Roman_sculptures.
- Jupiter_Column subject Category:Ancient_Roman_buildings_and_structures_in_Germany.
- Jupiter_Column subject Category:Ancient_Roman_religion.
- Jupiter_Column subject Category:Monument_types.
- Jupiter_Column hypernym Monument.
- Jupiter_Column point "50.005 8.271".
- Jupiter_Column type Article.
- Jupiter_Column type Place.
- Jupiter_Column type Work.
- Jupiter_Column type Article.
- Jupiter_Column type Field.
- Jupiter_Column type Science.
- Jupiter_Column type Site.
- Jupiter_Column type Work.
- Jupiter_Column type SpatialThing.
- Jupiter_Column comment "A Jupiter Column (German: Jupitergigantensäule or Jupitersäule) is an archaeological monument belonging to a type widespread in Roman Germania. Such pillars express the religious beliefs of their time. They were erected in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD, mostly near Roman settlements or villas in the Germanic provinces.".
- Jupiter_Column label "Jupiter Column".
- Jupiter_Column sameAs عمود_جوبيتر.
- Jupiter_Column sameAs Jupitergigantensäule.
- Jupiter_Column sameAs Columna_de_Júpiter.
- Jupiter_Column sameAs m.03cr1y_.
- Jupiter_Column sameAs Q1546286.
- Jupiter_Column sameAs Q1546286.
- Jupiter_Column lat "50.005".
- Jupiter_Column long "8.271".
- Jupiter_Column wasDerivedFrom Jupiter_Column?oldid=661204942.
- Jupiter_Column depiction Jupitersaeule.jpg.
- Jupiter_Column isPrimaryTopicOf Jupiter_Column.