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G40 |
East Greek terracotta palmette fragment from Phrygia |
£120 |
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Sorry this item has sold A moulded terracotta semi-circular architectural antefix fragment decorated with a stylised palmette. Traces of black and white pigment decoration are clearly visible. This architectural revetment would have been attached at the lower end of a line of roof tiles so as to break the fall of rain water and channel it into a guttering system. These palmettes would have been mounted in a continuous line around the entire roof of a major building. This item originates from an important municipal building in the city of Duver which was part of the ancient state of Phrygia. The Phrygian state was established by Greek migrants moving to the Western Coast of Asia Minor some time after the Trojan War and was fabled to have been founded by King Midas. The Phrygians were fabulously rich due to extensive gold finds within their territory (hence the myth of Midas and his golden touch) and they were ruled from the capital of Gordion which was to be the site of Alexander the Great's cutting of the Gordian Knot in the late 4th Century BC. Despite vast wealth and a powerful army, Phrygia and neighbouring Lydia were lost to Cyrus The Great in around 546 BC and this opened the door to the Persian invasions of Greece and the Mediterranean Classical world. Western Asia Minor, Phrygia, Duver, 550-525 BC. Size: 15.4 x 11.2 x 4 cms Repaired from three pieces, fragment as shown Provenance: part of a large private collection of Phrygian terracotta fragments which we will be offering for sale for the first time in over 25 years. The earliest acquisition date of the pieces remains unclear although it seems very likely that they were bought at Sothebys or Spinks (London) in 1964 or 1965 in one of four auctions which dispersed a large number of similar fragments from the ancient site of Duver. The items which we are offering from this collection have remained in storage in the UK since 1983 and we are actively trying to confirm their earlier collection history. For a discussion of related pieces from the same buildings and diagrams of the revetments in situ please refer to "Die Architektonischen Terrakotten Kleinasiens" by Ake Akerstrom, Sweden 1966. (Swedish Institute in Athens, series 4, volume XI). Closely related terracotta fragments from the same buildings at Duver are now held by at least 20 major museums including Berlin, Louvre, Istanbul, Jerusalem and Ottawa. Antiquities |Books |Ordering |Postage |Contact us |Email |Links |Shopping cart |Mailing list |Home
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