A GREEK BRONZE PSEUDO-CORINTHIAN HELMET
A GREEK BRONZE PSEUDO-CORINTHIAN HELMET
A GREEK BRONZE PSEUDO-CORINTHIAN HELMET
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A GREEK BRONZE PSEUDO-CORINTHIAN HELMET
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A GREEK BRONZE PSEUDO-CORINTHIAN HELMET

MAGNA GRAECIA, CLASSICAL PERIOD, CIRCA 5TH CENTURY B.C.

细节
A GREEK BRONZE PSEUDO-CORINTHIAN HELMET
MAGNA GRAECIA, CLASSICAL PERIOD, CIRCA 5TH CENTURY B.C.
8 11⁄16 in. (22 cm.) high
来源
Japanese private collection, acquired prior to 1988.

荣誉呈献

Claudio Corsi
Claudio Corsi Specialist, Head of Department

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拍品专文

The incised decoration on each cheekpiece includes a boar and possibly a lion, with lotus buds on the rim behind and at the outside corner of each eye. A fringe of hair is represented by two rows for scrolling tendrils arching above the brows.

The pseudo-Corinthian helmet type developed in South Italy during the 6th-5th Century B.C. at the time when its mainland Hellenic cousin, the Corinthian helmet, became extinct in Greece. Unlike its Corinthian counterpart, it was not used to cover and protect the face, but rather it was worn at the top of the head with the front portions serving as a visor. The eye slits and nose-guard were purely decorative. For a similar example see Chamay, et al., The Art of the Italic Peoples from 3000 to 300 B.C., pp. 364-365, no. 241.

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