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  Baby - Elephant Head - Lamps- Herculaneum

 Piroli 1804 Copper Plate Engraving

An Original Historical Print from HistoryOnPaper

(Below is a rough translation from the French of the engraving's description.)

VOLUME (TOME) VI  --  PLATE 17

FIG. I. On this lamp, we see a winged young man wearing a pointed cap, holding an object taken for a rural instrument, but which could also be a kind of standard (vexillum).

FIG. II. Lamp with two wicks, having for ornament two figures placed on pedestals. Their attitude is that which we have considered on other antiques, as being proper to the Lares gods. This lamp was, no doubt, intended to burn before these domestic deities.

FIG. III. We see in this one a rather badly figured elephant's head, but whose tusks and trunk are clearly distinguishable. The elephant's head can be the emblem of a victory or a conquest.

FIG. IV. Lamp with two wicks, characterized by the crescent and by the figure which is that of Diana, or of a nymph of her retinue. The head has a stern expression; neglected hair is held back by strips; the shoulder is bare; the arc is treated with the greatest care, and one notices at the end, between two buttons, the place intended to receive the cord.

FIG. V. The character, dressed in ample drapery and armed with a thyrsus, gives this lamp a bacchanalian character.

FIG. VI. This one, of the same form as the fourth, has for its subject a Cupid or a Genie holding two apples or two balls, glorious trophies of beauty, or emblems of the games of childhood.

Read Historical Note Below.

          


Type of Print       Lithograph - Wood Engraving - Steel Engraving - Copper Engraving - Photogravure
Printing Year      1804
Artist - Engraver - Publisher      Piroli- Piroli or Leblanc -  P. Piranesi      Printed in Paris
Print Size (Approx)     8  inches  X  11  inches             IMAGE(S) BELOW MAY BE ENLARGED  TO SHOW DETAIL
Paper weight/type     Thin - Medium - Heavy - Other
Reverse side     Blank - Related text/pictures -  Unrelated text/pictures 
Condition      Excellent - Very Good - Good - Fair - Poor (but of historical interest)  
Description    Some expected age & foxing;  a great print with only minor surface faults and handling wear;       Please inspect image
Notes   


This Is An Original Print from History-On-Paper

HISTORICAL INFORMATION:  This copper plate print (engraving) is from Tommaso


Piroli's (Italian engraver, 1752-1824)  Antiquités d'Herculanum gravées par Th. Piroli avec


une explication par S-Ph Caude, 1804-1806, Paris, F et P Piranesi, T.


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Herculaneum was an ancient Roman town, located in the modern-day comune of Ercolano, Campania, Italy. Herculaneum was buried under volcanic ash and pumice in the Eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.

Like the nearby city of Pompeii, Herculaneum is famous as one of the few ancient cities to be preserved nearly intact, as the ash that blanketed the town protected it against looting and the elements. Although less known than Pompeii today, it was the first and, for a long time, the only discovered Vesuvian city (in 1709). Pompeii was revealed in 1748 and identified in 1763. Unlike Pompeii, the mainly pyroclastic material that covered Herculaneum carbonized and preserved more wooden objects such as roofs, beds, and doors, as well as other organic-based materials such as food and papyrus.


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Volumes 1 - 3 of this classic work on Herculaneum contained plates of art work (pictures) found at the site.

Volume 4 contained engravings of discovered Busts and Reliefs that were created in bronze.  

Volume 5 was of statues found.

Volume 6  contained 50 engravings by Piroli of ancient lamps found in the excavations. 

Herculaneum; a town in Italy which was destroyed along with Pompeii by Mt Vesuvious’ eruption in 79ce. Damaged by an earthquake in A.D. 63, it was completely buried, along with Pompeii Pompeii, ancient city of S Italy, a port near Naples and at the foot of Mt. Vesuvius, by the volcanic eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in A.D. 79. Before the earthquake, it was a popular Roman resort and residential town with fine villas. The first discovery of ruins was made in 1709, and excavations have continued since. Important early finds were the sumptuous so-called Villa of the Papyri (with a large library, and bronze and marble statues), a basilica with fine murals, and a theater. The modern towns of Resina and Portici are on the site.

CONDITION:    Please INSPECT PHOTO. May be Enlarged for viewing.

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This is an original print, not a reproduction.  

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Item #0823-1519