In Roman times cinerary urns were made of a variety of materials, ranging from terracotta and glass to alabaster. Marble was a more prized medium and suggests greater means and discernment on the part of the urn’s patron. An example at Chatsworth (see Boschung, von Hesberg, and Linfert, Die antiken Skulpturen in Chatsworth, Mainz am Rhein, 1997, Cat. No. 84, Plate 74.1-71.2) shows similar vertical tongue decoration, as does an urn at Hever Castle (S. Dimas, C. Reinsberg, and H. von Hesberg, Die Antikensammlungen von Hever Castle, Cliveden, Bignor Park und Knole ,Wiesbaden, 2013, Cat. No. 33a-b, Plate 33). Another example at Petworth House also bears a wreath in a bottom frieze (see Joachim Raeder, Die antiken Skupturen in Petworth House, Mainz am Rhein, 2000, Cat. No. 90, Plate 114 3-5).
Repairs and restoration. The finial reattached. The body with two metal pins in the rim to locate a cover, with some rust-red residue, but the cover has no corresponding evidence of rust. The rim of the cover repaired. The body of the vase with a weathered, sugary surface, the cover and socle in smoother marble and slightly grey in colour.
預計金額計算機
拍品 1拍賣 21905
CIRCA 1ST CENTURY A.D., THE SOCLE AND COVER PROBABLY LATE 18TH CENTURYA ROMAN MARBLE CINERARY URN估價: GBP 20,000 - 40,000