The chronological distribution of roman funerary altars centres on the late first and the early second centuries ad evolving from the monumental altar tombs of the late republican period b c.
Marble funerary altar of cominia tyche.
There is a latin inscription that records.
Mid 2nd century ad.
A good example of the various aspects of roman funerary art is the marble funerary altar of cominia tyche.
This woman s name is known from the inscription below the portrait which reads.
To the spirits of the dead.
Metropolitan museum of art.
Marble funerary altar of cominia tyche.
Learn more about this artwork.
Marble funerary altar of cominia tyche at the metropolitan museum of art.
90 100 roman marble h.
Marble funerary altar of cominia tyche.
That of cominia tyche in the metropolitan museum new york.
To the spirits of the dead.
Marble funerary altar of cominia tyche roman imperial flavian or trajanic ca.
Marble funerary altar of cominia tyche.
Marble pediment of a funerary altar ca.
Marble funerary altar of cominia tyche flavian or trajanic ca.
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To the most saintly cominia tyche his most chaste and loving wife from lucius annius festus.
This funerary altar from the metropolitan museum s collection of roman art is dedicated to the memory and hair of cominia tyche a roman woman who died sometime during the flavian period in the late first century ad.
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101 6 cm stone sculpture this woman s name is known from the inscription below the portrait which reads.
101 6 cm villa gardens and peristyles courtyards were this woman s name is known from the inscription below the portrait which reads.
To the spirits of the dead.
To the most saintly cominia tyche his most chaste and loving wife from lucius annius festus.
Ewald funerary monuments in the oxford handbook of roman sculpture 2015 p.
Download this artwork provided by the metropolitan museum of art.
Marble funerary altar of cominia tyche ca.
On view at the met fifth avenue in gallery 162.
Roman flavian or trajanic period.
In addition to a fine portrait of the deceased in which she is depicted with the elaborate hairstyle that was fashionable among the ladies of the imperial court in the late first century a d.
This funerary altar from the metropolitan museum s collection of roman art is dedicated to the memory and hair of cominia tyche a roman woman who died sometime during the flavian period in the late first century ad standing at just over three feet the altar is rectangular in shape with both the top and bottom bracketed by moldings that lend an architectural finished quality to the monument.