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IX.—On a Bronze Statuette of Hercules

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2012

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Extract

The bronze statuette of Hercules which Lord Carlisle exhibits to-night at the desire of the President is said to have been “dug out of the Roman wall.” But the precise spot appears to be now unknown. One statement gives Northumberland; another, his lordship's property of Naworth, in Cumberland, which is no great distance from the Roman station of Amboglanna (Birdoswald). One could suppose that the bronze had been brought to this country by some officer attached to that camp. That would mean in the time of Hadrian, by whom this station on the Roman wall was established. And were the figure of pure classical workmanship there would not be much more to be said on that point. But you will see that the bronze cannot be of classical origin, and this suggests an alternative that it may have been brought to this country by a devotee of the Tyrian Hercules established at Corbridge, in Northumberland, where an altar to him has been found.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1896

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References

page 200 note a Nat. Hist. xxxiv. 45Google Scholar

page 201 note a Reinach, , Antiquités Nationales (Musée St. Germain), 222Google Scholar.

page 202 note ⁂ This interesting figure has since been acquired by Sir A. Wollaston Franks, K.C.B., President, and bv him presented to the Anglo-Roman collection at the British Museum.