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ultrawolvesunderthefullmoon: Cleomenes of Athens, “Marcellus as Hermes Logios (Mercury)”, 20 BCE, Marble, Musee du Louvre, Paris, FranceThis sculpture of Marcellus the Younger was executed by Cleomenes the Athenian two years after Marcellus’ death
aucelo:Discobolus. Marble. Roman copy of a bronze original of Myron of ca. 450 BCE. Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum
marmarinos: Hellenistic statuette of a hunter, perhaps specifically Alexander the Great, dated to 250-100 BCE. Bronze. Currently located in the British Museum.
fuckyeahhistorycrushes: The Sleeping Satyr or Barberini Faun from Rome, Italy ca. 230-200 BCE Represents a semi-human follower of Dionysos.
lfratino: Ambrosius Painter, red figure kylix with boy fishing, c. 510-500 BCE
iafeh: ‘Munich Diomedes’. Roman copy after a Greek original from ca. 440–430 BCE, attributed to Kresilas
marmarinos:Detail of an ancient Roman marble bust of the Eros of Centocelle, dated to c. 120-180 CE. The Eros of Centocelle type is likely a copy after a lost bronze of Praxiteles (4th century BCE). Source: Sotheby’s.
hadrian6: Satyr with Cymbals and Kroupezion. Roman copy after a Greek original. 1st.century BCE. marble. National Gallery of Ancient Art. Corsini Palace. Rome. http://hadrian6.tumblr.com
kohlhase: Marble statue known as the Barberini Faun or Drunken Satyr, copy by a Hellenisticsculptor of the Pergamene school of a bronze original, circa 220 BCE. (Glyptothek, Munich)
lionofchaeronea:The head of Hera/Juno. Roman copy (made of Pentelic marble) from a lost Greek original by Agoracritus (ca. 420 BCE). Found near the Via Labicana, Rome; now in the Capitoline Museum. Photo credit: Marie-Lan Nguyen.
hadrian6: Sleeping Endymion. fragment of the group of Selene and Endymion. Marble. Roman, after a Greek original of the 2nd century BCE. http://hadrian6.tumblr.com
historyarchaeologyartefacts: Close up on The Charioteer of Delphi (bronze: 180 cm), Greece 478 or 474 BCE[2288x1712]
salomi:Head of Alexander the GreatBronze. Greek or Roman. Late Hellenistic to Hadrianic, ca. 150 BCE — 138 CE.(New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art.)
salomi:Ludovisi AresThe Ludovisi Ares is an Antonine Roman marble sculpture of Mars, a fine 2nd-century copy of a late 4th-century BCE Greek original, associated with Scopas or Lysippos: thus the Roman god of war receives his Greek name, Ares.Ares/Mars
lionofchaeronea: The head of Ares/Mars. Roman copy (early 3rd cent. CE) after a lost bronze original by the Greek sculptor Alcamenes (ca. 420 BCE). Now in the Capitoline Museum.
italianartsociety: Archaeologists discovered the Seated Mercury on 3 August 1758 in the peristyle of the Villa of Papyri at Herculaneum. The statue seems to be a first-century BCE copy of an original dating from the late fourth or early third century
lionofchaeronea:Statue of Hermes,carved from Pentelic marble. Roman-period copy (1st or 2nd cent. CE) after a lost bronze original by Polykleitos the Elder (5th cent. BCE). Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
s-c-r-ee-ch:Apollo Omphalos Marble copy of 2 century AD, after bronze from 450 BCE.
designedfordesire: Phallic rhyton with erotic representations (1st century BCE), unknown artisthttps://arteefalo.tumblr.com/
lionofchaeronea:Sculpture (Carrara marble) of a satyr leaning against a tree trunk. Roman-era copy (ca. 130 CE) after a 4th cent. BCE original by Praxiteles; restored in 1999. Now in the Capitoline Museums, Rome.
charlesreeza: The Miletus Torso (likely Apollo), marble, 480-470 BCE, Cycladic Islands Louvre Museum, ParisPhotos by Charles Reeza
gayartists:Barberini Faun, late 3rd or early 2nd century BCE
cavetocanvas: Hypostyle Hall, Temple of Amun at Karnak, 1290-1213 BCE
ancientart: Ancient Greek helmets from the Archaic period (800 BC – 480 BCE). The first shown is of the Corinthian-type, and was found in Leivadia. The second is a Illyrian-type helmet from Leivadia. Also a Illyrian-type helmet, the third is
lucienballard: Celtiberian helmet Celtiberian helmet unearthed at an archaeological site in the region of Zaragoza, Spain. They were Celtic-speaking people of the Iberian Peninsula in the final centuries BCE. via Elperiodico de Aragon
asianartmuseum:Sadly, Roads of Arabia ends TOMORROW. We’ve got the sad, but just don’t have the words to say goodbye to this Anthropomorphic stele (4000–3000 BCE) from Saudi Arabia. Hurry in before the exhibition leaves the US in the dust.
mini-girlz: Great Mothers 6300-5300 BCE
magictransistor: Venus Figurines from the European Paleolithic Era; c. 25,000-40,000 BCE. Venus of Dolní Věstonice, Venus of Kostenki, Venus of Kostenki (Rear), Venus of Willendorf and The Venus of Hohle Fels. (top to bottom)
josh-dun-with-your-shit: bemusedlybespectacled: jewishzevran: keetongu: did-you-kno: Ancient Egyptians were using 20-sided die as early as 200 BCE. Source i cant believe ancient egyptians were FUCKING NERDS imagine ancient egyptian d&d tho
marmarinos:Detail of the Marathon Youth, an ancient Greek bronze perhaps of the Praxiteles School, dated to c. 340-330 BCE. Found in the Bay of Marathon, the bronze is currently located in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens. Source: Ancient
marmarinos: Detail of the Barberini Faun, either a Hellenistic statue dating to the 3rd to 2nd centuries BCE, or a later Roman copy. Marble. Currently located in the Glyptothek in Munich, Germany. Photo taken by F. Tronchin.
rosewater1997:wish i were alive in 2000 BCE so i could have devoted my life to the moon goddess and die at the old age of 28
anthropologyofgenesis: A Scythian griffin-headed sword made of iron, 7th c. BCE. The Scythians were Iranians who lived north of the Caucasus, and directly east of the Germanic tribes. When Rome fell they joined the Germans in moving south and west into
art-of-swords: Bronze Sword Dated: 2nd-1st millenium BCE Place of Origin: Iran, Luristan Medium: bronze Measurements: overall length 65.80 cm (25 7/8 inches) Source: Copyright © 2016 Cleveland Museum of Art
art-of-swords: Obsidian Sword Medium: Black Obsidian Dated: late Pre-Classic to Terminal Classic Period (250 BCE - 900 AD) Provenance: Central America Measurements: 35.5 cm x 4.7 cm This obsidian sword is made on a very large and narrow struck flake
spaceshipsandpurpledrank: gardenoffish: calamitouserebus: writing-prompt-s: You’re teleported to 44 BCE Rome in your everyday street clothes. You’re brought before Caesar and he believes you might be from the future, hoping to bring him fortune.
mythicalmessenger: space-feminist: inthannon: oylmpians: a list of current immortals florence welch: probably like 200 BCE celtic queen keeanu reeves: 1500 renaissance hoe jeff goldblum: late 1800′s i would guess harry styles: fairly new immortal,
merelygifted: Image of Egyptian Pharoah Ramses II (The Great) (reigned ca 1290 -1224 BCE), offering incense to the god Amon —Illustration by H. Tom Hall/National Geographic Society Representations of cannabis use in early history are still somewhat
virtual-artifacts:Bull sculpture, Achaemenid period ca. 550 - 330 BCE
bemusedlybespectacled: jewishzevran: keetongu: did-you-kno: Ancient Egyptians were using 20-sided die as early as 200 BCE. Source i cant believe ancient egyptians were FUCKING NERDS imagine ancient egyptian d&d tho “You have crossed into
gardenoffish: calamitouserebus: writing-prompt-s: You’re teleported to 44 BCE Rome in your everyday street clothes. You’re brought before Caesar and he believes you might be from the future, hoping to bring him fortune. One day he questions you,
fakehistory: First known attempt at making a Caesar salad, circa 43 BCE
iahfy: charlesreeza: Dead Guy - Roman, c. 300 BCE, terra cotta Part of a tableau depicting a battle between the Greeks and the Amazons. Photo by Charles Reeza at the Museum of Art and History, Geneva. #rest in booty my dude
gemma-antiqua:Ancient Egyptian amethyst pendant in the shape of a cat, dated to the Late to Ptolemaic period, or 664-30 BCE. Image found on flickr.
bunjywunjy:The Domestication of Cats, 7500 BCE
lesbianshepard:lesbianshepard:love how wikipedia’s “List of unsolved deaths” starts at 11,000 BCE. like, I don’t think we’ll be cracking that cold case anytime soon. the entire way this list is set up is VERY funny to me. like, yes, I guess
calamitouserebus: writing-prompt-s: You’re teleported to 44 BCE Rome in your everyday street clothes. You’re brought before Caesar and he believes you might be from the future, hoping to bring him fortune. One day he questions you, asking “How
lackystur-deactivated20220909:Hunts and gathers you
worth-beyond-a-number-scale:It’s still so strange to me how apparently taboo it is to like a post on someone’s Instagram from a month ago when there are posts still circulating on Tumblr from 1550 BCE
honorthegods: Colonna-Barberini Palace/Sanctuary of Fortuna Primigenia, Palestrina (Praeneste ), Italy. 2nd century BCE/1050 CE. The model of the Sanctuary is located at the Archaeological Museum of Palestrina. The Sanctuary of Fortuna Primigenia
ahencyclopedia: THE ODYSSEY: Homer’s Odyssey is an epic poem written in the 8th century BCE which describes the long voyage home of the Greek hero Odysseus. The mythical king sails back to Ithaca with his men after the Trojan War but is beset by all
lionofchaeronea: Limestone head of the 12th Dynasty pharaoh Amenemhat III (r. 1843-1798 BCE), broken off from a Sphinx-form statuette. Now in the Louvre. Photo credit: Guillaume Blanchard/Wikimedia Commons.
marmarinos: Roman statue of a youth, known as the “Dresdner Knabe,” c. early 1st century CE. Marble.Roman copy of (likely) a Greek original, which dated to c. 420 BCE.
fakehistory:The Assassination of Julius Caesar (44 BCE)
theonlygayinoulu: charlesreeza: Dead Guy - Roman, c. 300 BCE, terra cotta Part of a tableau depicting a battle between the Greeks and the Amazons. Photo by Charles Reeza at the Museum of Art and History, Geneva. me arching my back to make sure my
hadrian6: Bust of Hades. 5th.century. BCE. Roman copy of a Greek original. http://hadrian6.tumblr.com