Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q12877248> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 30 of
30
with 100 triples per page.
- Q12877248 subject Q6483858.
- Q12877248 subject Q8181866.
- Q12877248 abstract "The Grave Stele of Hegeso, most likely sculpted by Callimachus, is renowned as one of the finest Attic grave stelae surviving (mostly intact) today. Dated from ca. 410 - ca. 400 BCE, it is made entirely of Pentelic marble. It stands 1.56m high and .97m wide, in the form of a naiskos, with pilasters and a pediment featuring palmette acroteria. The relief, currently on display at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens (NAMA 3624) was found in 1870 in the Kerameikos in Athens, which now houses a replica of it. In its current condition, it is almost complete, but has been restored around its edges. The plinth has mostly broken off and there is slight damage on the head of Hegeso.The main shows a mature Athenian woman (Hegeso) wearing a chiton and himation, seated on a chair with her feet resting on an elaborate footstool. In her left hand, she holds an open pyxis, and in her right she holds a piece of (missing) jewelry that was originally painted, at which she is directing her gaze. Opposite her, on the left, stands a maidservant wearing a tunic and a headdress described as either a snood or sakkos. The maidservant is presenting the pyxis, on the knees of Hegeso. On the epistyle there is an epitaph, ΗΓΗΣΩ ΠΡΟΞΕΝΟ, stating that the deceased is Hegeso, daughter of Proxenios.In general, stelae can be seen as a retrospective funerary art, that typically articulate a society's ideals of social living through their depiction of a domestic sphere. Compared to other non-civic art of the oikos (home), such as non-funerary red-figure painted pottery, stelae were obviously more fixed/permanent monuments, displayed outdoors for public viewing, and are constructed by a family for a specific person, making them far more expensive and exclusive than pottery. While their medium, context, and style associate stelae with the polis (city), their iconography is of the oikos. This paradox, as well as the prominence of women on gravestones, has led many scholars to focus on an analysis of the virtues designated to different genders on the stelae.".
- Q12877248 thumbnail Kerameikos_Tombs.jpg?width=300.
- Q12877248 wikiPageExternalLink classic11-en.html.
- Q12877248 wikiPageExternalLink artifact;jsessionid=69AD115FDD1CFE63BE8C773EE61CC769?name=Athens%2C+NM+3624&object=Sculpture.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q10473.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q1125206.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q1524.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q178743.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q183448.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q188906.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q190996.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q1972777.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q2213651.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q268205.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q421214.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q553631.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q630974.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q637187.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q6483858.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q672490.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q677655.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q7451781.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q781731.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q8181866.
- Q12877248 wikiPageWikiLink Q830031.
- Q12877248 comment "The Grave Stele of Hegeso, most likely sculpted by Callimachus, is renowned as one of the finest Attic grave stelae surviving (mostly intact) today. Dated from ca. 410 - ca. 400 BCE, it is made entirely of Pentelic marble. It stands 1.56m high and .97m wide, in the form of a naiskos, with pilasters and a pediment featuring palmette acroteria.".
- Q12877248 label "Grave Stele of Hegeso".
- Q12877248 depiction Kerameikos_Tombs.jpg.