• The Colossus of Constantine (Italian: Statua Colossale di Costantino I) was a many times life-size acrolithic early-4th-century statue depicting the Roman emperor...
  • The so-called Colossus of Constantine, which dates to the early 4th century, was a monumental statue erected to celebrate Constantine’s reign.
  • Until the end of 2025, tourists and residents of Rome have the unique opportunity to witness the grandeur of the Colossus of Constantine for free.
  • It has also been argued that Maxentius first reused a second-century colossus, perhaps originally of Hadrian, which Constantine later reworked to resemble...
  • A digital scaffold was established using advanced 3D technology, ensuring each curve and contour of the Colossus of Constantine was faithfully reproduced.
  • The detailed features of the head and face are somewhat uncharacteristic for a colossus (Jonathan Bardill, Constantine, p. 204).
  • A colossal statue of the Roman emperor Constantine has been reconstructed by a leading British art expert with the help of marble fragments that survived...
  • Fourth-century ruler Constantine, who was the first Roman emperor to convert to Christianity, is living up to his moniker of "Constantine the Great" with a...
  • The Colossus of Constantine, c. 312–15 (Palazzo dei Conservatori, Musei Capitolini, Rome).
  • A huge replica of the Colossus of Constantine stands in the garden of Villa Caffarelli, at the Capitoline Museums.