an ancient Roman!
an ancient Roman!
He was in pre-christian Italy. So he was a pagan.
In France.
They can be made out of many materials. The most common material is limestone.
1899 by John Bell
an ancient Roman!
He was in pre-christian Italy. So he was a pagan.
He made plans and preparations for a giant equestrian statue in Milan. But the metal was instead used to make weapons. So the only horse sculpture he made is a very small one in the National Museum of Budapest.
I have researched 30:- The Washington Memorial in Washingtion DC. The Boonsboro memorial. Part of the Mt Rushmore Memorial. George Washington Masonic National Memorial in Alexandria. Many places and entities have been named in honor of Washington. Equestrian statue in Washington Circle, Washington, D.C. There is another equestrian statue of him statue of him in Richmond, Virginia. There is also Jean Antoine Houdon's original marble statue in the Rotunda of the State Capitol in Richmond and 22 copies of this made in bronze, one of which is in London and stands in front of the National Gallery at Trafalgar Square.
when decided to be a republic (500bc) greace was on the golden age of pholosophy or getting into it. all the roman literature was made taking the greek literature as a base. Also the philosophy was ineteresting for people like Cicaeron and Marcus Aurelius.
Pygmalion made the statue of Galatea
Skanderbeg Statue is made of bronze
A marble statue is a statue made of marble :)
In 137, Hadrian had announced that his eventual successor would be Lucius Ceionius Commodus, renamed L. Aelius Caesar. Marcus had already attracted the attention of Hadrian (who had nicknamed him verissimus, which translates as "truest") and had been made a member of the equestrian order when he was six; he was subsequently engaged to Ceionia Fabia, Commodus' daughter. The engagement, however, was annulled later after the death of Commodus, as Marcus was betrothed to Antoninus' daughter. Therefore, on the death of Hadrian's first adopted son L. Aelius Verus, Hadrian made it a precondition of making Antoninus his successor that Antoninus would adopt Marcus (then called Marcus Aelius Aurelius Verus) and Lucius Ceionius Commodus (Lucius Aelius' son, ten years junior than Marcus, renamed Lucius Aurelius Verus), and arrange for them to be next in the line. This Antoninus did, adopting and designating them as his successors on February 25, 138, when Marcus was only seventeen years of age. He would become emperor at 40. It has been suggested that Commodus and Antoninus Pius were designed by Hadrian only as "place warmers" for the young Marcus and Verus. Marcus received an education from some of the greatest scholars of his day: Euphorion for literature, Geminus for drama, Andron for geometry, Caninius Celer and Herodes Atticus in Greek oratory, Alexander of Cotiaeum for Greek, and Marcus Cornelius Fronto for Latin. It is through Marcus' correspondence with Fronto that we have many of the details of his life during the reign of Antoninus. Through these letters Marcus appears as an intelligent, serious-minded and hardworking youth. They also show the growing importance of philosophy for the future emperor: showing impatience for the unending exercises with Greek and Latin declamations, he later became fond of the Diatribai ("Discourses") of Epictetus, an important moral philosopher of the Stoic school. Marcus also started to have an increasing public role at the side of Antoninus, holding the place of consul in 140, 145 and 161 and increasing collaboration in decisions. In 147 he received the proconsular imperium outside Rome and the tribunicia potestas, the main formal powers of emperorship.
A marble statue is a statue made of marble :)
The exterior of the Statue of Liberty is made of copper which is 3/32 inches thick. The interior of the Statue is made from wrought iron and steel.
it is made out of copper but the statue's pedestal is made of concrete covered by blocks of granite.