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Gravestone with funerary banquet

Date:
ca. 2nd–3rd century A.D.
Geography:
Syria, probably from Palmyra
Medium:
Limestone
Dimensions:
H. 20 1/4 in. (51.4 cm)
Classification:
Stone
Credit Line:
Purchase, 1902
Accession Number:
02.29.1
  • Description

    In the mid-first century A.D., Palmyra, a wealthy and elegant Syrian city located along the caravan routes linking the Parthian Near East with the Mediterranean ports of Roman Syria and Phoenicia, came under Roman control. During the following period of great prosperity, the Aramaean citizens of Palmyra adopted customs and modes of dress from both the Iranian Parthian world to the east and the Graeco-Roman west.


    Palmyrenes constructed a series of large-scale funerary monuments. These structures, some of which were below ground, had interior walls that were cut away or constructed to form burial compartments in which the deceased, extended at full length, was placed. Limestone slabs with human busts in high relief sealed the rectangular openings of the compartments. These reliefs represented the "personality" or "soul" of the person interred and formed part of the wall decoration inside the tomb chamber. A banquet scene as depicted on this relief would have been displayed in a family tomb rather than that of an individual.

  • Provenance

    Acquired by the Museum in 1902, purchased from Azeez Khayat, New York

  • See also
    What
    Where
    When
    In the Museum
    Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
30001014

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