Prywatna apoteoza w Syrii okresu rzymskiego. Uwagi nad tondem brązowym znalezionym w Caesarei Paneas
Streszczenie
This tondo was found in 1964 in a tomb in Caesarea Philippi (Caesarea Paneas),
a foundation by Philippus, son of Herod the Great, on the site of Baalgad by the sources
of the river Jordan. It is cast in thick bronze (0.5-1 cm thickness) and measures: Diam:
40 cm, H (of the bust): 34 cm, W (of the bust): 24 cm. It was fixed in a roughly lentoid
shaped opening in the tondo, size 19 cm x 11 cm. The female represented in the tondo is
young and carries a variant of the hairstyle often interpreted as proper to a goddess. She
also wears a diadema. She has been interpreted either as a princess or as a goddess, probably
Aphrodite. The present author considers the bronze as representing a young deceased female
in the guise of a nymph. In literature such women who died young are often said to have
been abduced by the nymphs.
Found in a funerary context, the representation would be interpreted as a case of private
apotheosis. There are several cases among the funerary portraits in Syria, suggesting deification
post mortem.
The type of representation belongs to the Greco-Roman repertory, but the tondo has
both stylistic and technical features pointing to a local manufacture. A Trajanic-Hadrianic
date is a possibility considering the chronology of this item.
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