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Autor principal: Scan-the-World
Formato: Recurso digital
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Publicado em: Zenodo 2026
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Acesso em linha:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20170041
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_version_ 1866901927876362240
author Scan-the-World
author_facet Scan-the-World
contents Two marshals stand at the head of the procession. One looks towards it while the other turns and seems to beckon with his (now damaged) right to the other branch of the procession on the other side of the gods. The east frieze is comprised of eight or nine blocks (research has shown that VII and VIII formed a single block) that are considerably longer than the blocks of the other sides. The middle block V is 4.50 m. in length, whereas the corner blocks are narrow because they are in fact the narrow ends of block I of the north frieze and block XLVII of the south frieze. The surviving blocks and fragments are scattered among various museums: in the Acropolis are blocks II and VI, in the British Museum blocks I, III-V, VIII and in the Louvre block VII. In addition a number of fragments are in the British Museum and others are in the Archaeological Museum of Palermo. In contrast to the west frieze, the east frieze has a certain symmetry of composition, since it is the focal point of the processions of the other sides.The frieze of the Parthenon forms a continuous band with scenes in low relief that encircles the upper part of the cella, the main temple, within the outer colonnade. The theme represented was the procession toward the Acropolis that took place during the Great Panathenaia, the commemoration of the birthday of the goddess Athena.Numbering taken from I. Jenkins, The Parthenon Frieze, 1994. Frieze slabs are marked in Roman numerals, People are marked in arabic numerals.
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spellingShingle Parthenon Frieze _ East VI, 47-48
Scan-the-World
man
Marshal
Parthenon
frieze
block
east
gods
cloth
slab
procession
Two marshals stand at the head of the procession. One looks towards it while the other turns and seems to beckon with his (now damaged) right to the other branch of the procession on the other side of the gods. The east frieze is comprised of eight or nine blocks (research has shown that VII and VIII formed a single block) that are considerably longer than the blocks of the other sides. The middle block V is 4.50 m. in length, whereas the corner blocks are narrow because they are in fact the narrow ends of block I of the north frieze and block XLVII of the south frieze. The surviving blocks and fragments are scattered among various museums: in the Acropolis are blocks II and VI, in the British Museum blocks I, III-V, VIII and in the Louvre block VII. In addition a number of fragments are in the British Museum and others are in the Archaeological Museum of Palermo. In contrast to the west frieze, the east frieze has a certain symmetry of composition, since it is the focal point of the processions of the other sides.The frieze of the Parthenon forms a continuous band with scenes in low relief that encircles the upper part of the cella, the main temple, within the outer colonnade. The theme represented was the procession toward the Acropolis that took place during the Great Panathenaia, the commemoration of the birthday of the goddess Athena.Numbering taken from I. Jenkins, The Parthenon Frieze, 1994. Frieze slabs are marked in Roman numerals, People are marked in arabic numerals.
title Parthenon Frieze _ East VI, 47-48
topic man
Marshal
Parthenon
frieze
block
east
gods
cloth
slab
procession
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20170041