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Photographer: Angela Kalinowski
Resource Type
Genre
Physical Form
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1 item
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Temporal Subject
Note
The images of boxing, chariot racing, duelling with weapons are interpreted as images of funeral games that were held in honour of the deceased. The images of the funeral games were painted on the two long sides of the tomb, occurred in tombs of both male and female deceased. They are comparable to the tomb paintings of Etruria in subject matter but the Etrurian examples cease at the end of the 5th century BCE. The tombs are of interest because some scholars have seen in the ones that depict men fighting with sharp weapons the origins of Roman gladiatorial combat, which originally took place in a funerary context.
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Attributed to Angela Kalinowski under the license CC-BY-NC 4.0
Abstract
This image is part of the north wall fresco that also depicts the lead charioteer. The charioteer wears a longer red belted tunic and appears to have a close fitting brown cap on his head. He rides a low chariot towards an ionic column that represents the meta, or turning post, around which the chariots raced. A continuous black line runs above the scene and rests on the column. It appears to represent the structure in which the scene took place- a formally laid out hippodrome. A swag above the scene may be a decorative cloth or awning. The five images in this series are from the south and north long walls of the same cist tomb, Tomb X of the Laghetto necropolis. They depict funerary games that were part of the rituals surrounding the burial of an elite man or woman in 4th century BCE Lucanian society.
Institution Name
Origin Place Name
Paestum (Poseidonia)
Origin Country
Italy