This floor mosaic depicting an athlete, discovered in 1879 near Santa Croce in Jerusalem and now housed in the Capitoline Museums in Rome, originally adorned a bath complex built under Emperor Septimius Severus around the early 3rd century CE. The mosaic represents one panel from a larger floor design that likely featured other athletes, charioteers, or wrestlers, reflecting the Roman cultural emphasis on physical strength, competition, and athletic prestige in public bathhouses and athletic centers.
深掘り
前提条件
- データがありません。
次のステップ
- データがありません。
深掘り
Floor Mosaic with the Bust of an Athlete追加:
This floor mosaic known as the bust of an athlete comes from the capine museums in Rome. It was discovered in 1879 near the area between Santa Crochce in Jerusalem and Porter Major. [music] Originally, it belonged to a bath complex built during the reign of Emperor Septimius Seis around the early 3rd century CE. The mosaic shows an athlete one panel from what was once a much larger floor. The surrounding panels likely depicted other athletes, maybe charioters or wrestlers, but those pieces have been lost to time. Scenes like this were common in ancient bathous and athletic centers, celebrating physical strength, competition, and the prestige of sport in Roman culture.
関連おすすめ
क्या भगवान शिव हारिती की नकल हैं? झूठे दावे का पर्दाफाश | हारिती बौद्ध देवी बनाम भगवान शिव
sanatansamiksha
1K views•2026-05-30
This is one of the biggest street art exhibitions in London but there’s a twist 👀 Danish
ExploringLondonCity
1K views•2026-05-30
They stole his entire life on his deathbed #history #art
Nocthera
1K views•2026-06-01
How Hollywood Body Art Changed the Way America Sees the Human Body Forever
Ink_and_Instinct
213 views•2026-06-02
Praying Hands — Albrecht Dürer (c. 1508) #shortvideo
ArtMysteries-r2d
276 views•2026-05-30
[ 🇸🇪 ] Sveriges Television (SVT 1 & SVT 2) ident history
bekdesign
1K views•2026-05-31
Between Heaven and Earth: The Art of Ancient Assyria -- Dr. Kiersten Neumann -- #ARCC26
AssyrianCulturalFoundation
849 views•2026-06-04
William Kentridge on Max Beckmann’s 1938 painting ‘Death (Tod)’
HauserWirth
163 views•2026-06-04











