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8.5 inch W X 5 inch D X 13.5 inch H - statue - bonded stone - National Museum, Athens, Greece, 100 B.C. This reproduction depicts Aphrodite and Pan with Eros just above them. Pan, goat-footed, is trying to embrance the nude goddess _who has removed her left sandal with which she teasingly threatens to strike him as Eros (Cupid) hovers above them. It was found on the island of Delos (famous as the... |
$81.95
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5 X 5 X 14 - statue - bonded stone - Aphrodite was the symbol of female beauty and Goddess of Love, identified in Rome with Venus. Although Homer describes Aphrodite as the daughter of Zeus and Dion, the more popular view was that she was conceived in the foam of the ocean from the seed of Uranus. Dropped there when he was castrated, her name meaning "foam-born". Aphrodite was married to... |
$67.95
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9.5 x 5 x 3.25 - Statue - bonded marble, marble base - Aphrodite was the symbol of female beauty and Goddess of Love, identified in Rome with Venus. Although Homer describes Aphrodite as the daughter of Zeus and Dion, the more popular view was that she was conceived in the foam of the ocean from the seed of Uranus. Dropped there when he was castrated, her name meaning "foam-born". Aphrodite was... |
$53.95
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9 inch H (23 cm) - statue - bonded stone - Louvre Museum, Paris. 200 B.C. Aphrodite was the symbol of female beauty and Goddess of Love, identified in Rome with Venus. Although Homer describes Aphrodite as the daughter of Zeus and Dion, the more popular view was that she was conceived in the foam of the ocean from the seed of Uranus. Dropped there when he was castrated, her name meaning... |
$37.95
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3 in. H x 7.5 in. D - vase - terracotta - Hand painted terracotta vase imported from Greece. - code: - Weight: 0.8 |
$86.95
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11.5 inch H x 6.25 inch W x 4.75 inch L - statue - bonded stone - The Louvre Museum, Paris, 4th Century B.C. Artemis, also known by her Roman name Diana, was the Greek goddess of hunting and archery. She is often represented as a huntress with bow and quiver on her shoulder and dogs or deer at her side. The Greeks worshiped Artemis as the goddess of chastity and the guardian of youths and... |
$60.95
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10 inch H x 4 inch W x 4 inch D - statue - bonded stone - Asclepios was the Greek god of medicine and healing (called Aesculapius in Rome). He was the son of Apollo and the nymph Coronis according to legend, but most probably a mortal who originally practiced healing in the area of Trikkala on the Thessalian plain of central Greece and came later to be considered a god. Heís most famous sanctuary... |
$55.95
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25 inch H x 7.5 inch W x 6 inch D - Statue - bonded stone - Asclepios was the Greek god of medicine and healing (called Aesculapius in Rome). He was the son of Apollo and the nymph Coronis according to legend, but most probably a mortal who originally practiced healing in the area of Trikkala on the Thessalian plain of central Greece and came later to be considered a god. Heís most famous... |
$161.95
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26 inch H (66cm) - statue - solid bonded stone - The Acropolis, Athens. 465 B.C. A caryatid is a sculpted female figure serving as an architectural element such as a column or a pillar supporting an entablature on its head. Some of the earliest known examples were found in the treasuries of Delphi, dating to about the 6th century BC, but their origins can be traced back even further to ritual... |
$140.95
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17 inch H x 10 inch W x 1 inch D (43 x 25cm) - wall plaque - bonded stone - Acropolis Museum, Athens. 460 B.C. Athena was the Goddess of wisdom and women's crafts in the mythology of the Greeks. She was also a defender against evil and as such she was a warrior Goddess par excellence. She was the daughter of Zeus and Metis. When Metis became pregnant, Gaia and Uranus told Zeus that after giving... |
$75.95
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5.5 inch H (14cm) - Statue - cultured marble - Museum of Cycladic Art, Athens, 2800-2300 B.C. During the period between 3200 and 2000 B.C. the small Cycladic islands (Cyclades, Greece) in the Aegean became home to a flourishing pre-Greek culture. The most prominent craft in Cycladic culture was stone-cutting, especially marble sculpture. The abundance of high quality, white marble on the islands,... |
$46.95
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8.5 x 4 x 2.75 - Statue - bonded stone - During the period between 3200 and 2000 B.C. the small Cycladic islands (Cyclades, Greece) in the Aegean became home to a flourishing pre-Greek culture. The most prominent craft in Cycladic culture was stone-cutting, especially marble sculpture. The abundance of high quality, white marble on the islands, encouraged its wide use for the creation of a wide... |
$49.95
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6.5 x 2.5 x 3.5 - Statue - bonded stone - During the period between 3200 and 2000 B.C. the small Cycladic islands (Cyclades, Greece) in the Aegean became home to a flourishing pre-Greek culture. The most prominent craft in Cycladic culture was stone-cutting, especially marble sculpture. The abundance of high quality, white marble on the islands, encouraged its wide use for the creation of a wide... |
$39.95
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11.5 inch H (29cm) - wall plaque - bonded stone - Ephesus Museum, Turkey. 150 A.D. Greek / Roman. Known in Rome as Diana and in Greece as Artemis, she is the twin sister of Apollo and daughter of Zeus and Leto. Artemis was always a virgin, an eternally young, untamed girl, nourishing all life. Thus Diana has many breasts because she has many children to feed. Her hands form the gesture of... |
$48.95
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11.5 inch H x 10.5 inch W (29 x 27cm) - wall plaque - bonded stone - This relief represents Dionysos. His name meaning ìGod in Manî, was also known as Bacchus in Rome, God of wine and the mystic deliriums. He is wearing on his head one of his most characteristic attributes, grapes and grape leaves. In the old Greece, Dionysos was celebrated with processions evoking, by means of masks, the genies... |
$52.95
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6 in. H x 3.5 in. D - vase - terracotta - Greek Vase based on historical archives of pattern and scene designs from Ancient Greek times. Made from terracotta in Greece. - code: - Weight: 2 |
$58.95
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9 inch H (23cm) - statue - bonded stone - Delphi Museum, Greece. 460 B.C. The Greek Sphinx had a woman's head, lion's body, serpent's tail and eagle's wings. Sent by Hera to punish Thebes for displeasing the Goddess, she settled on Mount Phicium, near the city and asked everyone who passed by to answer a riddle she had learned from the three Muses: "What being, with only one voice, has sometimes... |
$56.95
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10 inch H (25cm) - statue - bonded stone - Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. 540-530 B.C. This sphinx was a part of a Attic grave monument of the middle archaic period that reflected the opulence of the wealthy class of that time. The sphinx was placed atop a tall shaft, decorated with high relief sculpture and crowned by a cavetto capital. The shaft was supported by a rectangular base. All... |
$56.95
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18 inch H x 9.5 inch W x 6.5 inch D - statue - cultured marble - In Greek mythology, Athena is associated with offering an olive branch in a contest with Poseidon who offered the horse, useful in warfare. The Gods challenged them to a contest in which the winner would be awarded the city of Athens for the most useful offering to the mortals. Athena won this challenge. Here the goddess grasps with... |
$90.95
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16 inch W x 5 inch H x 10 inch D - Display - bonded stone - Greek Theater flourished in ancient Greece between c. 550 and c. 220 BC. The origins of Western Theatre can be traced back to Ancient Greece. Dramas, comedies, and satyrs were the main showcases in the theatre. It all began as a festival, honoring the Greek god of fertility and wind Dionysus. Eventually the theatre would get exported to... |
$58.95
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