Roma'daki anıtlar
- en.wikipedia.org Column of Antoninus PiusThe Column of Antoninus Pius (Italian: Colonna di Antonino Pio) is a Roman honorific column in Rome, Italy, devoted in AD 161 to the Roman emperor Antoninus Pius...
- thebyzantinelegacy.com antoninus-columnThe Column of Antoninus Pius was erected in Rome to commemorate Antoninus and his wife Faustina by his adoptive sons and heirs...
- colosseumrometickets.com column-antoninus-pius/The base of the Column of Antoninus Pius was found in 1703 in Via della Missone, near Montecitorio. Now in the Vatican Museums.
- medium.com @codexaugustorum/emperor-antoninus-…His affinity for monumental art is perhaps best remembered in the Column of Antoninus Pius, a tribute erected posthumously that, despite its loss to time...
- worldhistory.biz ancient-history/58825-column-of-…Column of Antoninus Pius. Placed in the Campus Martius; a monument that adhered closely to Antoninus’s firm belief in the preservation of classicism in art.
- museivaticani.va content/museivaticani/en/…Shortly after the death of Antoninus Pius in 161 D.C., the column was dedicated to him by his adoptive sons, the emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus.
- gjclarthistory.blogspot.com 2016/04/the-column-of…Of Rome’s three major commemorative columns, that of Antoninus Pius is perhaps the least appreciated.
- imperiumromanum.pl en/roman-art-and-culture/roman…The column was created after the death of Antoninus Pius in 161 BCE, commissioned by the co-managers of Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus.
- archive.org details/…the column of antoninus pius. Bookreader Item Preview. remove-circle.
- penelope.uchicago.edu Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/…Columna Antonini Pii: a column, erected in memory of Antoninus Pius by his two adopted sons, Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus (CIL VI.1004).
- Rome.us ancient-rome/columns.htmlColumn of Antoninus Pius in Vatican Museums. Today, you can admire the memorial of Antonius Pius during a visit to the Vatican Museums (Musei Vaticani).
- hup.harvard.edu books/9780674143258In addition, she re-evaluates the meaning of the column of Antoninus Pius in the context of the development of second century Roman imperial sculpture.