Copy of the Polykleitos sculpture once owned by the future Paul III
The Farnese Diadumenos is a 1st-century AD, slightly smaller than lifesize, Roman marble copy of Polyclitus's Diadumenos sculpture. Once in the Farnese collection, it is now in the British Museum.[1]
^Accession number GR 1864.10-21.4 (Cat. Sculptures 501)
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FarneseDiadumenos is a 1st-century AD, slightly smaller than lifesize, Roman marble copy of Polyclitus's Diadumenos sculpture. Once in the Farnese collection...
Herakles, Diadumenos. Mann, Berlin 1990, ISBN 3-7861-1623-7 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Diadumenos. 3D model of the Louvre's Diadumenos torso via...
Roman citizenry and their commitment to the ideals of Ancient Greece. FarneseDiadumenos, also in the British Museum View of the face and body of the statue...
American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts. p. 370. Skulpturhalle Basel Media related to Diadumenos at Wikimedia Commons v t e...
The so-called 'FarneseDiadumenos' is a Roman copy of a Greek original attributed to Polykleitos c. 440 BC, depicting an athlete tying a victory ribbon...
known as the Barber Cup and Crawford Cup (100 AD) Athlete statue, "Vaison Diadumenos", from an ancient Roman city in southern France (118–138 AD) A hoard of...
Constantinople, where they were later destroyed in fires. Copy of Polyclitus' Diadumenos, National Archaeological Museum, Athens So-called Venus Braschi by Praxiteles...