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Granada, Spain - May 29, 2015: The fresco of scene as St Peter Healing the Cripple in the church Monasterio de San Jeronimo by Juan de Medina from 18.cent.
Inside the church of Santa Maria della Scala, Siena, Tuscany, Italy
The Trevi Fountain is the largest of the famous fountains in Rome. Begun in 1732, it was finally entrusted in 1759 to Pietro Bracci helped by his son Virginio.
A detail of the majestic fountain of Neptune in Piazza del Popolo in the historic center of Rome near Via del Corso. In neoclassical style, Piazza del Popolo it was the work of the Roman architect Giuseppe Valadier, who in the early 19th century redesigned the entire square and fountains. image in High Definition format.
Inside view in the ancient  Catacombs of Kom el Shoqafa Alexandria Egypt
(469–399 BC), ancient Athenian philosopher. This is his statue, located before the Academy of Athens, Greece.
Colosseum amphitheatre in Rome, Italy
Fontana Pretoria detail , look sideways sculptures at \nPiazza Pretoria (Palermo). Piazza della Vergogna , Italia. As you can see no sculpture look in  your eyes, is called the shamefulness, embarrassment  square.
According to Doro Levi's chronology, Antakya mosaics are dated to the beginning of the 2nd century AD and just after the great earthquake of 526 AD.
Views of the great beauty of Rome: the Capitoline Hill
Venus statue inside a niche, Trieste - Italy
Python, in Greek mythology, a huge serpent that was killed by the god Apollo at Delphi either because it would not let him found his oracle, being accustomed itself to giving oracles, or because it had persecuted Apollo's mother, Leto, during her pregnancy.\n\nThe fresco shows the Omphalos stone covered with a net and the Python wrapped around it. A priestess stands at left with a sacrificial bull.\n\nA detail from a sacrificial scene shows a bull being brought to the omphalos - Made up of a stone and a snake it represents the navel of the world - Apollo plays the zither.\n\nThe ancient Greeks also used omphalos to refer to a sacred, rounded stone in the Temple of Apollo at Delphi that was supposed to mark the center of the earth.
Fountain Zeus in Bernini's, dei Quattro Fiumi in the Piazza Navona in Rome, Italy
Crypt with a gilded stucco vault which houses the tomb of Andrea Doria, a sixteenth-century work by Giovanni Angelo Montorsoli
Sculptures of Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi Piazza Navona in Rome Italy . Sculptures of mythological gods . Marble craft figures
Religious art and architectural details in Sacro Monte di Varallo, Italy
The tympanum sculpture on the pediment is one characteristics of old Supreme Court building. These were the work of Cavalieri Rudolfo Nolli, a Milanese sculptor. The centre figure in the tympanum, holding a sword in the left hand and scales in the right, is Justice. The figure immediately to its left represents the lost soul begging for protection from it.
Ostia Antica. The \
Stone statue.
Io with bovine horns is kept under surveillance by Argos to prevent Zeus from seducing her, as requested by Hera.\nPompeii - House of Meleagro.\nIo was, in Greek mythology, one of the mortal lovers of Zeus. An Argive princess, she was an ancestor of many kings and heroes, such as Perseus.\nIo was tied to an olive tree in Heraion, the holy temple of Hera outside Argos, and the fierce hundred-eyed dog, Argus Panoptes, was guarding her and keeping Zeus away. However, Zeus found the way to set Io free and disregard his wife without doing it in person.
Sculpture - Laokoon group
Antiquities, illuminated historical column and antique gate - Ephesus Ancient City at night - İzmir / Turkey
Oceanus in the Trevi Fountain of Rome, Italy
Colosseum Rome on sunny day
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Pantheon temple in Rome: international landmarks of Italy
ROMAN COLUMNS AND TEMPLES ANCIENT ROMAN MARBLE STATUES AND SCULPTURES
Hercules and Iolaus mosaic - Anzio Nymphaeum. Lazio, Italy
Argos watching over Io to prevent Zeus from seducing her, as requested by Hera.\nPompeii - House of Meleagro.\nIo was, in Greek mythology, one of the mortal lovers of Zeus. An Argive princess, she was an ancestor of many kings and heroes, such as Perseus.\nIo was tied to an olive tree in Heraion, the holy temple of Hera outside Argos, and the fierce hundred-eyed dog, Argus Panoptes, was guarding her and keeping Zeus away. However, Zeus found the way to set Io free and disregard his wife without doing it in person.\nHigh Resolution -  partially digitally restored
Free Images: "bestof:Giacinto Gimignani - Venus Appearing to Aeneas and Achates - WGA08998.jpg Artwork Creator Giacinto Gimignani firsthalf other date century 17 Oil on canvas size"
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