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VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Found 19th April 1766. Still life with fruit.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number 9612. Photo by Stanley A. Jashemski.
Source: The Wilhelmina and Stanley A. Jashemski archive in the University of Maryland Library, Special Collections (See collection page) and made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial License v.4. See Licence and use details.
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VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Upper part of central zone of portico. Two separate panels each with a peacock perched on a garland.
These may have come from the same panel or from two different panels.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number 9760.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Painting of two lionesses found in the zoccolo on the left part of the wall somewhere in the portico.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number 8544.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Cast of a woman’s head. Now in Boscoreale Antiquarium.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Guttering and roofing from temple. Now in Naples Archaeological Museum.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Antefixes with female heads, exact location unknown.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory numbers 171548, 171549, s.n. 6.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Drawing by Giovanni Elia Morghen of antefixes from temple.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number ADS 934.
Photo © ICCD. https://www.catalogo.beniculturali.it
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VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Location unknown. Roof gutter with theatrical mask spouts surmounted by a palmette and with two female caryatids.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory numbers 21613, 21614, 21615.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Roofing of the portico. Antefixes with Gorgon heads.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory numbers 21462, 21463, 21464.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Three antefixes from temple.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Drawing by Francesco La Vega of three antefixes from temple.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number ADS 924.
Photo © ICCD. https://www.catalogo.beniculturali.it
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VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Roof of portico.
Egyptian style antefix with Hathoric crown with bovine horns, solar disc and three stalks of wheat.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number 21193.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Antefix with a tuft of acanthus with a gorgoneion (gorgon’s head) in the centre.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number 21467.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Egyptian styled antefix with female bust, with naked breasts, and wearing a diadem.
Similar figures modelled in stucco were found on the walls of the purgatorium.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. The instrument was found on January 4th,
1766 in the Ekklesiasterion.
The sistrum is adorned on the top with a crouched cat and on the sides with
lotus flowers.
It was found together with some marble fragments of limbs, among which some of the hand that originally held it and of a marble head of Isis.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number 2397.
VIII.7.28 Pompeii. Drawing by Nicola Vanni of two sistrum from temple.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number ADS 928.
Photo © ICCD. https://www.catalogo.beniculturali.it
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Pompeii, Not from this temple. 1968. Examples of sistra, cymbals and Pan pipes used in Isiac processions and ceremonies.
Photo by Stanley A. Jashemski.
Source: The Wilhelmina and Stanley A. Jashemski archive in the University of Maryland Library, Special Collections (See collection page) and made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial License v.4. See Licence and use details.
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Pompeii, not from this temple. 1968. Pipes. Photo by Stanley A. Jashemski.
Source: The Wilhelmina and Stanley A. Jashemski archive in the University of Maryland Library, Special Collections (See collection page) and made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial License v.4. See Licence and use details.
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Pompeii, not from this temple. 1968. Pan pipes discovered in 1899. From Villa of Siminius Stephanus.
The Pan pipes are decorated with three aediculae that are supposed to represent a frons scaenae and, at the top, nine rods of different heights.
They are connected at the bottom and bear a hole near of the mouth.
The object, strongly restored in the nineteenth century, is large, so as to suggest that the operation needed the help of a special machine.
Its use was connected to the satyr play and the myth, but the instruments were also used during ritual ceremonies, such as Isiac processions, during which the faithful waved the sistrum.
It was also used during theatrical performances to entertain banqueters, as music as a separate discipline from acting does not seem to have existed in ancient times.
Now in Naples Archaeological Museum. Inventory number 125187 but shown on the MANN web site as 111055.
Photo by Stanley A. Jashemski.
Source: The Wilhelmina and Stanley A. Jashemski archive in the University of Maryland Library, Special Collections (See collection page) and made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial License v.4. See Licence and use details.
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Wall painting from VII.12.26 showing a satyr playing a syrinx.
DAIR 53.626.
Photo © Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Abteilung Rom, Arkiv.
Pompeii, Not from this temple. 1968. Examples of sistra in Naples Museum. Photo by Stanley A. Jashemski.
Source: The Wilhelmina and Stanley A. Jashemski archive in the University of Maryland Library, Special Collections (See collection page) and made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial License v.4. See Licence and use details.
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