Large relief of Mithras
Large relief of Mithras
Published 2017-03-29T18:12:13+00:00
This relief depicts the central episode of the myth of the god Mithras, according to an established iconography, illustrating the slaying of the bull inside a grotto. Traces of the original colouring can be seen on the original marble. The relief was found in 1964 at Tor Cervara during work to remove wartime debris and it was probably the explosion of a piece of ordnance that broke the relief into more than fifty pieces.
In the meantime the fragment depicting the deity's head had ended up in the Karlsruhe Museum where, at the end of the 1980s, it was identified as belonging to this relief. As part of a recent collaborative agreement, the Badisches Landesmuseum of Karlsruhe has provided on loan the fragment depicting the face of Mithras. This has allowed the relief to be reconstructed in its entirety.
Reconstruction was carried out at Karlsruhe with close collaboration. It was a particularly complex and difficult process due to the size and weight of the piece, and the position of the fragment, forming a sort of keystone between two large sections of the relief.
Date de publication | 29/03/2017 |
Complexité | Easy |
Titre | Large relief of Mithras |
Date | End of 2nd Century AD - Start of 3rd Century AD |
Medium | Marble |
Credit | Rome, Tor Cervara |
Localisation | Baths of Diocletian |