Ancient art and its remains, or, A manual of the archaeology of art / By C.O. Müller.
- Karl Otfried Müller
- Date:
- 1852
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Ancient art and its remains, or, A manual of the archaeology of art / By C.O. Müller. Source: Wellcome Collection.
605/664 page 587
![quarrel with Odysseus, on gems; an explanation is still wanting of the scene M. Flor. ii, 31, 1. G. di Fir. Int. 25, 2. (see however R. Rochette M. I. p. 200.); on vases, MiUin i, 14. (where the theft is placed simultaneous- 'y with the voyage to Leuce) and Millingen Tin. Mon. i, 28. (where Diomed and Odysseus carry off two Palladia, as in the terracotta reUef in Berlin, and according to Ptolem. Heph. in Photius p. 148 B.); Ann. d. Inst. ii. p. 95. tv. d. ?; R. Rochette M. I. pi. 63. 56. ? Theft of the Palla- dium on vases from Ruvo, Intell. der HaU. LZ. 1837. no. 30. Od. at the theft of the Palladium Impr. d. I. iii, 80. Od. and Diomedes ? iii, 79. Dioraed's theft of the Palladium and Od. with names along with Helen EA. Vase-painting M. d. I. ii, 36. Ann. viii. p. 295. [Griech. Trag. i. s. 147 f. 0. Jahn in Schneidewin's Philologus i. s. 55. A previous or inter- mediate scene is presented on a vase in 0. Jahn's Vasenb. Tf 3.] Destruction of Rion, §. 134. R. 3. Picture described by Petronius 89. Chief groups on a helmet, Neapel's Ant. s. 216. Ingeniously represented in the figure of one Trojan woman, Libanius p. 1093. Epeus with He- phaestus making the Trojan horse, Etr. mirror, MicaK tv. 48. The wooden horse introduced, on a vase from Volci, in reliefs, Marm. Oxon. i, 147.; on Etr. urns, R. Rochette pi. 57, 1. 2.; Pitt. Ere. iii, 40. comp. §. 335. R. 9. The heroes coming out of it, G. M. 606. Laocoon §. 156. The outrage on Cassandra, on vases (Bottiger and Meyer Ueber den Raub der Kassandra, 1794.), especially Laborde ii, 24. Maisonn. pi. 15. R. Rochette pi. 60. 66. (at the same time other women and old men flying for refuge) ; on mirrors in R. Rochette 20. comp. p. 321.; gems, W. Worsl. iv, 23. Impr. d. Inst, i, 92. (Cassandra after being violated, M. Flor. ii, 31, 2.); reUefs L. 288. Winck. M. I. 141. Clarac pi. 117. (comp. Ann. d. Inst. v. p. 158.), Gerhard Ant. Bildw. 27. (similar to the kneeling Maenad §. 388. R. 3.). Death of Priam Mon. de' Conti Giusti, Verona tv. 3. [Gerhard Vasen iii, 213. and Pyrrhus throwing at him the murdered Astyanax Tf 214.] Astyanax killed at the altar of the Thym- brfean Apollo, vase from Volci, M. I. d. Inst. 34. comp. Ambrosch Ann. iii. p. 361. (Death of Troilus? Welcker Ann. v. p. 253.) [§. 99. R. 3, 10.] Farnesian group of statues (so-called Commodus), Cavaler. 1, 29. R. Rochette pi. 79. (Hector, who has wrested from Achilles the dead body of Troilus, according to Welcker Zeitschr. f. Alterth. 1834. s. 54.). Mo- saic from Tivoli, R. Rochette p. 325. Burial of Astyanax? G. M. 611. Hecuba (of Euripides) and Polymester M. d. I. ii, 12. Ann. vii. p. 222. [Emigration of iEneas Gerhard Vasen iii, 215—217. and very often on vases.] Sacrifice of Polyxena, often painted. Pans, x, 25. On the cista of Prseneste, where Astyanax is sacrificed at the same time, §. 173. R. 3. Group of statues, Liban. p. 1088. Walz, Rhet. i. p. 395. Stoschian gem (psyche of Achilles introduced), Winck. M. I. 144. Menelaus reconciled with Helen, Tischb. v. (Vases iv, 50.) and Millingen Un. Mon. i, 32. Destruction of the Locrian Ajax, a tempest-picture, perhaps after Apol- lodorus, Philostr. ii, 13. Andromache drawing water as a captive (after II. xi, 457.), on coins of Larissa, in the possession of Col. Leake. JEthra §. 412. R. 1. Dispute of the Atridse 1 Millin Vases i, 66. Welcker Ztschr f A. W. 1836. no. 29. 2. In antiquity Odysseus was known aTro rov (rTQv(pi)ov kxI lyQYiyo^oros, Menelaus rov iifit^ov, Agamemnon rov BuBeov, Tydeus by i-hev°iiQi'«, Ajax Te- lamon by the fi-hoav^ov, Ajax, Oileics'' son, the hoifcov, Philostr. ii, 7.—The](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b2178016x_0605.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


