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DEAL OF THE DAY

Beato Angelico

Firenze, Palazzo Strozzi, September 26, 2025 - January 25, 2026.
Edited by Carl Brandon Strehlke.
Testi di Stefano Casciu, Marco Mozzo, Angelo Tartuferi.
Venezia, 2025; bound, pp. 456, 300 col. ill., cm 24x29.

cover price: € 80.00

Beato Angelico

Total price: € 80.00 € 189.00 add to cart carrello

Books included in the offer:

Beato Angelico

Firenze, Palazzo Strozzi, September 26, 2025 - January 25, 2026.
Edited by Carl Brandon Strehlke.
Testi di Stefano Casciu, Marco Mozzo, Angelo Tartuferi.
Venezia, 2025; bound, pp. 456, 300 col. ill., cm 24x29.

FREE (cover price: € 80.00)

Beato Angelico

Marche e Toscana. Terre di grandi maestri tra Quattro e Seicento

Ospedaletto, 2007; bound, pp. 320, col. ill., col. plates, cm 25,5x29.

FREE (cover price: € 77.00)

Marche e Toscana. Terre di grandi maestri tra Quattro e Seicento

Segni dell'Eucarestia

Edited by M. Luisa Polichetti.
Ancona, Osimo, Loreto Jesi, Senigallia, Fabriano e Metelica, 23 giugno - 31 ottobre 2011.
Torino, 2011; paperback, pp. 221, b/w and col. ill., cm 24x28.

FREE (cover price: € 32.00)

Segni dell'Eucarestia

chiudi

Portraits of the Vestal Virgins, Priestesses of Ancient Rome

University of Michigan Press

English Text.
Jackson, 2018; hardback, pp. 424, ill., cm 17x24.

ISBN: 0-472-11895-1 - EAN13: 9780472118953

Subject: Sculpture

Period: 0-1000 (0-XI) Ancient World

Languages:  english text  

Weight: 0 kg


Molly M. Lindner's new book examines the sculptural presentation of the Vestal Virgins, who, for more than eleven hundred years, dedicated their lives to the goddess Vesta, protector of the Roman state. Though supervised by a male priest, the Pontifex Maximus, they had privileges beyond those of most women; like Roman men, they dispensed favours and influence on behalf of their clients and relatives.

The recovery of the Vestals' house, and statues of the priestesses, was an exciting moment in Roman archaeology. In 1883 Rodolfo Lanciani, Director of Antiquities for Rome, discovered the first Vestal statues. Newspapers were filled with details about the huge numbers of sculptures, inscriptions, jewellery, coins, and terracotta figures.

Portraits of the Vestal Virgins, Priestesses of Ancient Rome investigates what images of long-dead women tell us about what was important to them. It addresses why portraits were made, and why their portraits--first set up in the late 1st or 2nd century CE--began to appear so much later than portraits of other non-imperial women and other Roman priestesses. The author sheds light on identifying a Vestal portrait among those of other priestesses, and considers why Vestal portraits do not copy each other's headdresses and hairstyles. Fourteen extensively illustrated chapters and a catalogue of all known portraits help consider historical clues embedded in the hairstyles and facial features of the Vestals and other women of their day. What has appeared to be a mute collection of marble portraits has been given a voice through this book.

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design e realizzazione: Vincent Wolterbeek / analisi e programmazione: Rocco Barisci