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munzen antike bis romische imperial und republik antoninian postumus ric v 4 314 r1
munzen antike bis romische imperial und republik antoninian postumus ric v 4 314 r1
munzen antike bis romische imperial und republik antoninian postumus ric v 4 314 r1
munzen antike bis romische imperial und republik antoninian postumus ric v 4 314 r1
munzen antike bis romische imperial und republik antoninian postumus ric v 4 314 r1

Antoninian, Köln, 267.

IMP C POSTVMVS P F AVG. Drap. Panzerbüste mit Stkr. rechts.

VIRTVTI AVGVSTI. Hercules, die Rechte in die Hüfte gestemmt, mit auf Boden gestützter Keule n. rechts stehend.

C 452. AGK 114. Elmer 390 var. Cunetio 2442

ex. CNG

This reverse type is modelled after, or based on the same subject as, the famed marble Farnese Hercules statue that was discovered in the excavations of the Baths of Caracalla in 1546. It stood for over 200 years in the Palazzo Farnese in Rome, from whence it gained its name, and was moved to Naples in 1787, where it is now displayed in the Museo Archeologico Nazionale. The statue is thought to be an enlarged copy sculpted in the early 3rd century AD by Glykon based on an original by Lysippos dating to the 4th century BC. The statue depicts Hercules at rest after completing his Labors: he is shown standing with his club, draped in the skin of the Nemean Lion, set upright on a rock, propped under his left arm supporting the weight of his muscular frame, his head slightly nodding forward in a weary attitude, and he holds the apples of the Hesperides behind his back in his right hand. The sculpture was apparently well-liked by the Romans, and copies have been found in Roman palaces and gymnasiums.

Collezione : Gallic Empire/Empire Gaulois/Gallisches Sonderreich

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