A ROMAN MARBLE HERM OF A HELLENISTIC RULER
VARIOUS PROPERTIES
A ROMAN MARBLE HERM OF A HELLENISTIC RULER

CIRCA 1ST CENTURY A.D.

Details
A ROMAN MARBLE HERM OF A HELLENISTIC RULER
CIRCA 1ST CENTURY A.D.
With youthful face, wearing a royal Macedonian helmet adorned with ram's horns flanking central crest, with sharply defined frontal ridge, remains of a ram's head or horn over each ear, the cheek pieces fastened at the chin, the ends of his diadem falling over his shoulders, wearing a cuirass

7 ½ in. (18.5 cm.) high
Provenance
Private collection, France, acquired 1970s.

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Georgiana Aitken
Georgiana Aitken

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Lot Essay

The young Hellenistic ruler depicted here wears a royal Macedonian helmet, with the ram's horns associated with Zeus Ammon, and an aegis-like cuirass, another connection to the divine. Through this iconography, the ruler forges links both with the god and with Alexander the Great, the self-declared son of the deity. Upon his death in 323 B.C. Alexander was an instant icon, and later Hellenistic rulers often sought to emphasise their connection to the great conqueror. This herm therefore presents the Hellenistic ruler, who cannot be identified with certainty, though must have been known in the 1st Century A.D., as the just and natural successor to Alexander's empire.

There are at least twenty other herms of this type; all were executed in the early Roman Imperial period by copyists, possibly as decorative sculpture for the home. Cf. L. Budde and R. Nicholls, A Catalogue of the Greek and Roman Sculpture in The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 1964, pp. 55-58, pl. 30, no. 88, inv. no. G.R.S.3.

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