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Quicknation The Dying Gaul
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The Dying Gaul is an ancient Roman marble copy of a lost ancient Greek statue, thought to have been executed in bronze, that was commissioned some time between 230 BC-220 BC by Attalos I of Pergamon to honor his victory over the Galatians. The present base was added after its rediscovery. The identity of the statue's sculptor is unknown but it has been suggested that Epigonus, the court sculptor of the Attalid dynasty of Pergamon, may have been its author.
The statue depicts a dying barbarian with remarkable realism, particularly in the face. He is represented as a Gallic warrior with a typically Gallic hair and moustache. The figure is naked save for a neck torc. The statue serves both as a reminder of the barbarians' defeat, thus demonstrating the might of the people that defeated them, and a memorial to their bravery as worthy adversaries. It also provides evidence to corroborate ancient accounts of the Gallic fighting ; Julius Caesar records in his account of the Gallic War that the Gauls went into battle naked save for their weapons. The became one of the most celebrated works to have survived from antiquity and was endlessly copied and engraved by artists and sculptors. It is thought to have been rediscovered in the early 17th century during excavations for the foundations of the Villa Ludovisi and was first recorded in 1623 in the collections of the powerful Ludovisi family of Rome. The artistic quality and expressive pathos of the statue aroused great admiration among the educated classes in the 17th and 18th centuries. It was widely copied, with kings, academics and wealthy landowners commissioning their own reproductions of the . The less well-off could purchase copies of the statue in miniature for use as ornaments and paperweights. During this period, some misinterpreted the statue's theme as representing a defeated gladiator, leading to the coining of several (entirely erroneous) alternative names for the statue: the 'Dying' or 'Wounded Gladiator', 'Roman Gladiator', and 'Myrmillo Dying'. It was looted by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1797 during his invasion of Italy and taken to Paris, where it was put on display. It was returned to Rome in 1815 and is currently on display in the Capitoline Museums. Copies of the statue can be seen in the Museum of Classical Archaeology at Cambridge University, as well as in Berlin and Stockholm. |
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