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Representations of Gender: Recognizing the Role of Feminine Sacrificial Attendants in the Column of Trajan Sacrifice Scenes

American Journal of Archaeology
This article offers an analysis of the Feminine Sacrificial Attendant figure type on the Column of Trajan frieze in Rome. We first present a detailed study of the Column of Trajan examples, focusing on both composition and broader narrative context.
E. Thill   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

TRAJAN’S NOSE: ANTHOLOGIA PALATINA 11.418 AND PLUTARCH’S REGVM ET IMPERATORVM APOPHTHEGMATA 172E

Classical Quarterly
Anth. Pal. 11.418 is traditionally attributed to Trajan. The distich mocks a man’s large nose and is a typical example of a scoptic epigram. Even though the attribution to Trajan looks suspicious, scholarship has been inclined to accept his authorship ...
Laurens van der Wiel
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Trajan’s Army on Trajan's Column

Papers of the British School at Rome, 1935
The best illustrations of the army which extended and protected the Roman Empire are to be seen on Trajan's Column. They are not, however, thoroughly known to classical students, for reasons which are worth stating. The primary reason is undoubtedly the scarcity of Cichorius's reproductions of the reliefs and the still greater rarity of plaster casts ...
openaire   +1 more source

RPC IX: the provincial coinage of Trajan Decius, Trebonianus Gallus, Aemilian and Uranius

Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2019
This volume is one of a series that, when completed, will provide a corpus of the coins struck by cities, provincial authorities and client kings of the Principate.
K. W. Harl
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Trajan « Kosmokrator » ?

Revue des Études Anciennes, 1940
Cumont Franz. Trajan « Kosmokrator » ?. In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 42, 1940, n°1-4. Mélanges d'études anciennes offerts à Georges Radet, sous la direction de Fernand Chapouthier, William Seston et Pierre Boyancé. pp. 408-411.
openaire   +2 more sources

Trajan's Engines

Greece and Rome, 2000
It was never a foregone conclusion that the Roman Empire should have made any significant use of steam power. The basic principles of the steam engine were certainly known by the mid-first century A.D., as seen in the ‘wind-ball’ ( aiölipile ) described by Hero of Alexandria in his treatise ...
openaire   +1 more source

Trajan

2013
Marie-Claire Ferriès, L.
  +4 more sources

Trajan's Army on Trajan's Column

Britannia, 1983
Valerie A. Maxfield, Ian Richmond
openaire   +1 more source

Trajan

1993
Pelletier André. La Civilisation gallo-romaine de A à Z. Lyon : Les Presses Universitaires de Lyon, 1993. pp. 207-208. (Galliæ Civitates)
openaire   +1 more source

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