This paper attempts to put the Gorgon from the pediment of the Temple of Sulis Minerva at Bath into a wider provincial context, by arguing for links between the Gorgon and first- and early second-century imitations in Gaul and Spain of the iconography of the Forum of Augustus in Rome. These imitations, part of what might be called a ‘visual language of empire’, served to connect the urban spaces of the provinces to Rome; by linking the Gorgon to this trend and setting aside interpretations of the Gorgon which have focused on his perceived status as a ‘Romano-Celtic’ masterpiece, we can justify more satisfactorily his position as the centrepiece of a pediment dominated by imperial imagery
Depictions of architecture in the official state reliefs, coins, and medallions of the Roman emperor...
Roman-style bathhouses are often used as markers to study processes of ‘Romanisation’, or, more gene...
The Tropaeum Traiani was one of two trophy monuments known to be erected on foreign soil since the t...
This paper attempts to put the Gorgon from the pediment of the Temple of Sulis Minerva at Bath into ...
This paper attempts to put the Gorgon from the pediment of the Temple of Sulis Minerva at Bath into ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
This paper attempts to put the Gorgon from the pediment of the Temple of Sulis Minerva at Bath into ...
This paper provides a concise analysis of the Gorgon image as it has been featured on temples throug...
The head of the gorgon Medusa is known to have been regarded as an apotropaion in the Greek era, but...
The Roman City of Bath, also known as Aqua Sulis, lies in the modern British county of Somerset in t...
This is a regional study of the continuous use of the gorgoneion in Greek architecture from the Arch...
This thesis gives some much-needed attention to the art of Rome’s most North-Westerly province, the ...
Two damaged, weathered marble portraits, both discovered in the 1780s at opposite ends of Roman Brit...
International audienceThe face of the Gorgon is a mythological figure of the margins. This mask face...
The Gorgon is a creature described as terrible in ancient literature. It was depicted with glaring e...
Depictions of architecture in the official state reliefs, coins, and medallions of the Roman emperor...
Roman-style bathhouses are often used as markers to study processes of ‘Romanisation’, or, more gene...
The Tropaeum Traiani was one of two trophy monuments known to be erected on foreign soil since the t...
This paper attempts to put the Gorgon from the pediment of the Temple of Sulis Minerva at Bath into ...
This paper attempts to put the Gorgon from the pediment of the Temple of Sulis Minerva at Bath into ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
This paper attempts to put the Gorgon from the pediment of the Temple of Sulis Minerva at Bath into ...
This paper provides a concise analysis of the Gorgon image as it has been featured on temples throug...
The head of the gorgon Medusa is known to have been regarded as an apotropaion in the Greek era, but...
The Roman City of Bath, also known as Aqua Sulis, lies in the modern British county of Somerset in t...
This is a regional study of the continuous use of the gorgoneion in Greek architecture from the Arch...
This thesis gives some much-needed attention to the art of Rome’s most North-Westerly province, the ...
Two damaged, weathered marble portraits, both discovered in the 1780s at opposite ends of Roman Brit...
International audienceThe face of the Gorgon is a mythological figure of the margins. This mask face...
The Gorgon is a creature described as terrible in ancient literature. It was depicted with glaring e...
Depictions of architecture in the official state reliefs, coins, and medallions of the Roman emperor...
Roman-style bathhouses are often used as markers to study processes of ‘Romanisation’, or, more gene...
The Tropaeum Traiani was one of two trophy monuments known to be erected on foreign soil since the t...