Aule Meteli at The Museo Archeologico Nazionale, Florence
Aule Meteli at The Museo Archeologico Nazionale, Florence
Published 2016-05-17T10:04:01+00:00
Aule Metele, Latin: Aulus Metellus; also known as The Orator, Italian: L'Arringatore, is a bronze sculpture 179 cm high. It is a Romano-Etruscan work from the late second century or early first century BCE in the Roman style and depicts an Etruscan man, Aule Metele, wearing a short Roman toga and footwear. His right arm is raised to indicate that he is an orator addressing the public.
The retrograde inscription is in the Etruscan alphabet reads: : “auleśi meteliś ve[luś] vesial clenśi / cen flereś tece sanśl tenine / tu θineś χisvlicś” (“To (or from) Auli Meteli, the son of Vel and Vesi, Tenine (?) set up this statue as a votive offering to Sans, by deliberation of the people”).
This scan originates from Oliver Laric's initiative 'threedscans'. It is part of an ongoing project by Laric, titled 'Versions', which deals with historical and contemporary ideas relating to image hierarchies. Every model produced by Laric is free to be downloaded and used without copyright restrictions. If you use the models please write to stw@myminifactory.com and contact@threedscans.com
Scale to size suitable for printer. Clothing gets thin at the lower part of the model, so printing upright can help, or choose an appropriate scale carefully.
发表的日期 | 17/05/2016 |
让时间去下载 | 186 - 分钟 |
打印工艺 | FDM |
标题 | Aule Meteli |
维度 | 179cm |
期 | Late second century BC |
媒介 | Bronze |
位置 | The Museo Archeologico Nazionale |