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SheerTerror
June 17th, 2005, 08:46 AM
Roman mosaic 'worthy of Botticelli'
By Dalya Alberge, Arts Correspondent




A SPECTACULAR Roman mosaic discovered in Libya has been hailed as one of the finest examples of the artform to have survived.
British scholars yesterday described the 2,000-year-old depiction of an exhausted gladiator as one of the finest examples of representational mosaic art they have seen — a masterpiece comparable in quality with the Alexander mosaic in Pompeii.



Mark Merrony, an archaeologist who specialises in Roman art, said: “What struck me was the realism of the depiction. It’s absolutely extraordinary.

“I have examined hundreds of mosaics across the Roman Empire, but I have never seen such a vibrantly realistic depiction of a human.

“The image of the recumbent gladiator is nothing less than a Roman masterpiece executed by the Sandro Botticelli of his day. The human expression is captured in a realistic manner hitherto unknown in Roman mosaics.”

Archaeologists from the University of Hamburg were working along the coast of Libya when they uncovered a 30-ft stretch of five multicoloured mosaics created during the 1st or 2nd century. The mosaics show with extraordinary clarity four young men wrestling a wild bull to the ground, a warrior in combat with a deer and a gladiator. The gladiator is shown in a state of fatigue, staring at his slain opponent.

The mosaics decorated the cold plunge pool of a bath house within a Roman villa at Wadi Lebda in Leptis Magna, one of the greatest cities of antiquity.

Although the discovery was initially made in 2000, by Dr Marliese Wendowski of the University of Hamburg, it has been kept secret until now, partly to ensure that the excavations were not disturbed by looters.

It was also initially difficult for archaeologists to enter Libya. But since a settlement with the families of the Lockerbie victims and the lifting of international sanctions, the situation has changed.

Libya is now keen to open the country to tourists and these mosaics are being placed on public display at the Leptis Magna Mosaic Museum.

The full story of the discovery will be told in the July-August issue of Minerva, a London-based international review of ancient art and archaeology, which is published this week.

Dr Merrony, the deputy editor, whose doctorate from Oxford University was on ancient mosaics, said: “The image of the gladiator is executed in a manner that is so convincingly realistic that it appears to have been painted.

“Works of Renaissance art by Botticelli and others are well-known for deriving their inspiration from the human form in Classical art, but to find a Renaissance image on the floor of a Roman villa is unique.”

Picture and article here: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0%2C%2C3-1651931%2C00.html

Herman van Houten
June 17th, 2005, 01:11 PM
Libya is in Africa so they will claim it was made by niggers.

Mr. T.H. Outis
June 18th, 2005, 12:10 PM
Libya is in Africa so they will claim it was made by niggers.

Caesar himself was a nigger. So was Hannibal. Races came about through the mixture of races, i.e. through their own genetic negation.

Chain
June 18th, 2005, 12:30 PM
THamilton said-
Caesar himself was a nigger.Really? I hadn't known this. Do tell us more details, THamilton. I, for one, am anxious to learn.

History will be made at Yorktown. Be there on June 25th.
http://www.nsm88radio.com/060305.wma
http://www.nsm88radio.com/wv061505.wma

Mr. T.H. Outis
June 18th, 2005, 01:46 PM
No, I was mocking people who say that! Caesar was a nigger, Socrates was a nigger, so-and-so was a nigger. So far as I know, Caesar was a bald Italian with gray eyes.

I did not know that.

I thought the Carthaginians were semites, like the Phoenicians?

Carthaginians were Phoenicians, though, and thus were Semites.

Mr. T.H. Outis
June 18th, 2005, 01:58 PM
Oh, that's right. Carthage was a Phoenician settlement, wasn't it?

Phcn "kard hadasht", new city, founded by Tyrians after the turmoil of the "dark age" from 1100-900BC. The Spanish "Cartagena" is from the same.

Herman van Houten
June 18th, 2005, 02:11 PM
The inhabitants of Leptis Manga were very probable Greeks.

But I bet the Hystery Channel or the BBC will present a "documentary" next year with the artist depicted as a nigger, just as they did with their documentary about the pharaos of Egypt.

Mr. T.H. Outis
June 18th, 2005, 02:16 PM
The inhabitants of Leptis Manga were very probable Greeks.

But I bet the Hystery Channel or the BBC will present a "documentary" next year with the artist depicted as a nigger, just as they did with their documentary about the pharaos of Egypt.

Right, I initially wanted to say the artist was probably a Greek. But of course they'll show some hazy dramatization of a nigger in a loin cloth with "tribal" muzak going in the background.

Herman van Houten
June 18th, 2005, 02:21 PM
Yes, some nigger with a bone through its nose will put the mosaic together, while quoting a verse of Ovidius.

Kind Lampshade Maker
November 8th, 2010, 06:13 AM
...a masterpiece comparable in quality with the Alexander mosaic in Pompeii...

http://bazonline.ch/ausland/europa/Die-Truemmer-der-Antike/story/28055517

http://files.newsnetz.ch/bildlegende/32650/409892_pic_970x641.jpg