LOT 171 Byzantine Theodosian Type Corinthian Capital
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4th-5th century A.D. A marble capital of Theodosian type, the foliate base covered with small acanthus leaves followed by a row of eight drooping thorny acanthus leaves, placed between the smaller acanthus leaves arranged below the circular kalathos, wide abacus above, decorated with a foliage frieze of intertwining branches and vines. Cf. Mendel, G., Catalogue des sculptures grecques, romaines et byzantines, Constantinople, 1914, no.741 (2367), vol.II, p.537; Widrig, W., Two Churches at Latrun in Cyrenaica in Papers of the British School at Rome, Vol. 46 (1978), pp.94-131, pls.XVIII, XIX,a, XX, lett.a,c; Ermi?, Ü.M., The reuse of the Byzantine spolia in the Green Mosque of Bursa in Art Sanat, 6, 2016, pp.99-108, ff.1ff.; Khrushkova, L., Byzantine Capitals of the Architecturalplex of the Basilica of 1935 in Chersonesos in Crimea, in Moreau, D. et al. (eds.), Archaeology of a World of Changes. Late Roman and EarlyByzantine Architecture, Sculpture and Landscapes: Selected Papers from the 23rd International Congress of Byzantine Studies (Belgrade, 22-27 August 2016) - In memoriam Claudiae Barsanti - British Archaeological Reports International Series, 2020, p.291-301, figs.3-5, 8. 98.1 kg, 44.5 cm high (17 1/2 in.). Acquired 1970s-1996. Property of a North American collector. London collection, 2016. Apanied by an academic expertise by Dr. Raffaele D'Amato. This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is apanied by AIAD certificate no.11331-192904. The features of this capital are consistent with the type of the so-called Theodosian capital, theposite capital with fine-toothed acanthus leaves'. The exterior appearance of these capitals, developed from the late 4th century A.D., featured a high level of sculptural decoration which often takes the form of vines, fleur de lis, or grapes, reminiscent of the Christian words of the Gospel of John (15:1:8): I am the vine; you are the branches. Stone works like this from the Byzantine period of the Roman Empire were reused even in the successive Islamic monuments, as in the Green Mosque of Bursa, and mainly the Corinthian andposite capitals, columns and Attic column bases. These stone works, dated to the 5th and 6th centuries, are among widespread examples of the early architecture of the Eastern Roman Empire.
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