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Face in art. --- Head in art. --- Terra-cotta figurines, Roman --- Vases, Roman
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Terra-cotta figurines, Roman --- Votive offerings --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Sacred space --- Capua (Italy) --- Antiquities, Roman.
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Pottery, Roman --- Terra-cotta figurines, Roman --- Votive offerings --- Catalogs --- Catalogs --- Catalogs --- Lucera (Italy) --- Antiquities, Roman --- Catalogs.
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Conferences - Meetings --- Terra-cotta figurines, Classical --- Terra-cotta figurines, Greek --- Terra-cotta figurines, Roman --- Figurines de terre cuite antiques --- Congresses. --- Congrès --- Terra-cotta figurines, Classical - Congresses --- Terra-cotta figurines, Greek - Congresses --- Terra-cotta figurines, Roman - Congresses
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Terra-cotta figurines --- Terra-cotta figurines, Greek --- Terra-cotta figurines, Roman --- Society in art. --- Egypt --- Civilization --- Religion --- Antiquities.
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Terra-cotta figurines, Hellenistic --- Terra-cotta figurines, Roman --- Terra-cotta figurines --- Private collections --- Sieglin, Ernst von, --- Schreiber, Theodor, --- Art collections --- Figurines --- Terra-cotta sculpture --- Roman terra-cotta figurines --- Hellenistic terra-cotta figurines --- Catalogs --- Private collections&delete& --- Von Sieglin, Ernst, --- Catalogs.
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The subject of this study is a relatively rare category of artefacts, bronze and terracotta statuettes that represent deities, human figures and animals. They were introduced in the northwestern provinces by Roman troops from the end of the first century BCE onwards. The statuettes have been recovered from military and non-military settlements, the surrounding landscape and, to a far lesser extent, from sanctuaries and graves. Until now, their meaning and function have seldom been analysed in relation to their find-spots. Contrary to traditional studies, they have been examined as one separate category of artefacts, which offers new insights into the distribution pattern and iconographic representation of deities. When studying a group of artefacts, a large research area or a large dataset is required, as well as dateable artefacts and find-contexts. These conditions do not apply to the Netherlands and to the majority of statuettes that are central to this study. Moreover, although the changing appearance of statuettes suggest a transformation of cults, the identities of the owners of these statuettes remain invisible to us. Therefore, the issue of Romanization is not put central here. Instead, the focus is on a specific aspect of religion, known as lived religion, within the wider subject of its transformation in the Roman period: how people used statuettes in everyday life, in the context of their houses and settlements. The subject of this study is a relatively rare category of artefacts, bronze and terracotta statuettes that represent deities, human figures and animals. They were introduced in the northwestern provinces by Roman troops from the end of the 1st century BCE onwards. The statuettes have been recovered from military and non-military settlements, the surrounding landscape and, to a far lesser extent, from sanctuaries and graves. Until now, their meaning and function have seldom been analysed in relation to their find-spots. Contrary to traditional studies, they have been examined as one separate category of artefacts, which offers new insights into the distribution pattern and iconographic representation of deities. When studying a group of artefacts, a large research area or a large dataset is required, as well as dateable artefacts and find-contexts. These conditions do not apply to the Netherlands and to the majority of statuettes that are central to this study. Moreover, although the changing appearance of statuettes suggest a transformation of cults, the identities of the owners of these statuettes remain invisible to us. Therefore, the issue of Romanization is not put central here. Instead, the focus is on a specific aspect of religion, known as lived religion, within the wider subject of its transformation in the Roman period: how people used statuettes in everyday life, in the context of their houses and settlements.
Roman period statuettes, distribution patterns, iconography. --- Archaeology by period / region. --- Social and cultural history. --- SOCIAL SCIENCE / Archaeology. --- HISTORY / Europe / Western. --- HISTORY / Ancient / Rome. --- Medieval European Archaeology. --- Classical Greek and Roman archaeology. --- Bronze figurines, Roman --- Terra-cotta figurines, Roman --- History
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Terra-cotta figurines, Egyptian --- Terra-cotta figurines, Roman --- Exhibitions --- Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg --- Terra-cotta figurines --- -Terra-cotta sculpture, Roman --- -Roman terra-cotta sculpture --- Terra-cotta sculpture, Classical --- Figurines --- Terra-cotta sculpture --- -Exhibitions --- Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg --- Terra-cotta sculpture, Roman --- Roman terra-cotta sculpture
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Céramique romaine --- Ostie (ville ancienne) --- Terra-cotta figurines, Ancient --- Ostia (Extinct city) --- Terra-cotta figurines, Roman --- Clay figurines --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Archaeological digs --- Archaeological excavations --- Digs (Archaeology) --- Excavation sites (Archaeology) --- Ruins --- Sites, Excavation (Archaeology) --- Archaeology --- Figurines, Clay --- Figurines --- Roman terra-cotta figurines --- Italy --- Ostia (Ancient city) --- Antiquities, Roman. --- Antiquities
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