Telegram Group Search
Basilica of Sant' Apollinare Nuovo, erected by Ostrogoth King Theodoric the Great in 505 AD in Ravenna, Italy

Originally dedicated to the Saviour and consecrated to the Arian cult, after the Byzantine Empire conquered the city (mid 6th century), the church was converted to the Orthodox religion.

It was therefore dedicated to St. Martin, bishop of Tours, who stood out for the fight against the heretics.

According to tradition, in the 9th century the remains of the holy founder of the church of Ravenna, St. Apollinaris, were transferred here from Classe. On this occasion, the church was definitely named after Apollinaris, but with the suffix “Nuovo” (new).

Seen from the outside, the Basilica of Sant’Apollinare Nuovo is architecturally quite simple, but inside, the basilica boasts one of the most famous Early Christian and Late Antique mosaic cycles in the world.
"Ingolf Arnarson takes possession of Iceland", by Johan Peter Raadsig (1850)
"Lemnian Athena", roman copy from the original sculpted by Fidias.
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
The 'Lithophone':

Lithophone, originally a prehistoric musical instrument made of stones. Sound stones made of basalt, granite, marble and other minerals were used in many ancient cultures for ceremonial and religious purposes. They exist in various forms around the globe, some for thousands of years. It is one of the oldest musical instruments on earth.
"Finn Mccool Comes to Aid the Fianna"

Finn MacCool, last leader of the Fianna Éireann, in an illustration by Stephen Reid from The High Deeds of Finn, and other Bardic Romances of Ancient Ireland, by T.W. Rolleston, c. 1910.
"The Grunwald Monument" in Krakow, Poland.


The Grunwald Monument marks the Polish and Lithuanian victory over the Teutonic Knights at the eponymous battle in 1410. The battle, one of the largest in medieval Europe, marked the the beginning of the decline of the Germanic-Prussian order and the rise of the Polish-Lithuanian union’s dominance in Central and Eastern Europe.

The 79 ft. (24 m.) tall monument features King Władysław Jagiełło on top of the plinth. Below him on the sides are the figures of the Grand Duke of Lithuania with the mortally wounded Grand Master of the Teutonic Order, Ulrich von Jungingen. Also on the monument are a Polish knight and squire and a Lithuanian knight with a bound Knight of the Cross.
"Sverd i fjell" (Swords in the mountain), in Hafrsfjord, Norway

The monument was created by sculptor Fritz Røed from Bryne and was unveiled by King Olav V of Norway in 1983. The three bronze swords stand 10 metres (33 ft) tall and are planted into the rock of a small hill next to the fjord. They commemorate the historic Battle of Hafrsfjord which took place there in the year 872, when King Harald Fairhair gathered all of Norway under one crown.

The largest sword represents the victorious Harald, and the two smaller swords represent the defeated petty kings. The monument also represents peace, since the swords are planted into solid rock, so they may never be removed.
Portrait of the king of Pontus Mithridates VI as Heracles. Marble, Roman imperial period (1st century).


📸 Louvre Museum, Paris.
"Louis IX, dit Saint Louis, Roi de France (1215-1270)", Emile Signol
2024/12/27 05:38:17
Back to Top
HTML Embed Code: