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244:"The next group is, unfortunately, much damaged, as its composition is remarkable. It contains eight figures, all crowned with ivy; the fourth blowing the double horn; before them goes a nude figure, bearing a square chest. Here there is a figure now headless, and again the musician playing on the lyre, surrounded by seven persons. A male figure, in a tragic masque, appears to be declaiming to a female also masqued, who is surrounded by seven other females, crowned with garlands. in style they much resemble many of the Pompeian frescoes, to which time, or rather later, they may be assigned. On either side of the door, are an animal-fight and a hunt. On one, a bull attacked by a lion, while a tiger is preparing to spring upon his neck; above are stags, a gazelle, dogs, and a chacal. Spears are flying all about the picture."
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218:"The northern face of the eastern hill seems to have been the first place used for sepulture; and, judging from the style, I should think that some monuments, about half a mile from the fountain, on the road to Apollonia, are among the earliest. They are large sepulchres, with fades cut in the solid rock, with porticoes, in a very early Greek, almost Egyptian, style. I am inclined to think that the sepulchres, which are entirely excavated, without any adjuncts of masonry, are of two epochs, the earliest and latest, the former, though generally rude, impressive in their monolithic vastness; the latter, in their meretriciously minute though graceful decorations, reminding me forcibly of
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215:, ranged along the sides of the hills, obtruding far into the plain below, and stretching in every direction across the table-land to the south. The simple sarcophagus and proud mausoleum now alike gape tenantless; perpetuating neither the affection of the survivors nor the merits of the dead, they are mute as to their history, their fate, and almost their names. Barbarian hands have disturbed the relics, and rifled the treasures which they once contained; the existence of such treasures must have been the incentive to, and can alone account for the universal violation of the tombs — hatred, if profitless as well as toilsome, is seldom thus unrelenting."
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233:, occupying the two sides which are damaged. There are two wrestlers, with a third figure, who seems to be taking a flying leap over their heads, but who may be intended to be lying on the ground overcome, while the judge, with the prize-cup, or, perhaps, the oil for anointing, looks on in the comer. To the right are two figures, one of whom seems to be inviting the first, a youth, to enter a doorway to which he points; which I conjecture to be the introduction of a youth to the study of
191:"This ancient necropolis is one of the most important in the world. Its burial vaults and sarcophagi were built in about 600 B.C. These tombs are spread out on each side of a road that leads to the centre of the ancient city of Cyrene. The site was damaged along about two kilometres. About 200 vaults and tombs were destroyed, as well as a section of a
241:. It is here the inscriptions begin. The action of the next two figures is indistinguishable. We next see a figure in long drapery, crowned with ivy or vine-leaves, his right hand extended, in his left a lyre. An orator, or poet, with a roll in his hand, follows next; and, after him, the same draped figure, now playing on the lyre."
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figure, and surveyed, excavated tombs there between 1952 and 1957. Rowe was the first to make an extensive archaeological study of the
Necropolis of Cyrene, however, many artifacts from his excavations, and from Oliverio in 1925, are today considered to be lost. Burton Brown excavated two sarcophagi
137:, at the western slope of the Wadi Haleg Shaloof hill. It is around 10 square kilometres in size. With terraced archaic tombs, the cemetery is near the ancient road to Apollonia. The necropolis is today partially lost, parts were bulldozed in 2013. The
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229:"The inscriptions, scarcely legible, seem to consist of the names of visitors, to the unlearned offer no interest. The whole series evidently refer to the games of the ancients; chariot-races, gladiators, wrestlers, and
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that dates back to approximately 200 A.D. Ancient artefacts were thrown into a nearby river as if they were mere rubbish."
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211:"Some feelings of melancholy must be awakened in every visitor, as he follows those long lines of violated
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Reynolds, Joyce; Thorn, James
Copland (2005). "Cyrene's Thea figure discovered in the Necropolis".
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Earliest traces of Cyrene date back to about 700 BC, it is considered to be the oldest and largest
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Thorn, James
Copland (January 1994). "Reconstructing the discoveries of Alan Rowe at Cyrene".
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History of Egypt, Chaldea, Syria, Babylonia and
Assyria (1903)
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The
Necropolis of Cyrene: Two Hundred Years of Exploration
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burial in 1947. Beschi excavated two tombs in 1963.
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473:"The mystery of the lost Roman herb"
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141:classified the site in 1982 as a
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161:Wanderings in North Africa by
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492:"Wanderings in North Africa"
404:James Copland Thorn (2005).
257:excavated the site in 1911.
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367:Illustrated in the book "
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123:Necropolis of Cyrene
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143:World Heritage Site
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548:: 101–118.
249:Excavations
176:in eastern
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83:Coordinates
575:Categories
513:: 89–100.
389:References
213:sepulchres
127:necropolis
95:21°58′00″E
92:32°54′00″N
562:164527194
527:192033455
263:Ptolemaic
231:pugilists
224:Belgravia
135:Apollonia
377:See also
353:funerary
235:rhetoric
182:Silphium
63:Location
443:. 2013.
355:statues
278:Gallery
220:Pompeii
193:viaduct
153:General
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459:UNESCO
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270:and a
239:poetry
174:colony
139:UNESCO
73:Region
558:S2CID
523:S2CID
272:Roman
267:Theia
178:Libya
171:Greek
125:is a
67:Libya
412:ISBN
259:Rowe
165:1856
121:The
550:doi
515:doi
477:BBC
237:or
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