Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Fragment of Monument or Architecture Decorated in Relief
View through Harvard Museums
Marble block with front decorated in relief and deeply drilled. Elaborate cross within an arch. Flowers sprout and curve up from the bottom of the cross, which stands atop a two-stepped base. The voussoirs of the arch spring from the blocky, tripartite capitals of double colonnettes. Inscriptions in either Syriac or Arabic occupy the otherwise undecorated space on either side of arch. Flanking these are four vertical grooves. Beside these grooves is a ridge with incised chevrons.
A deep hollow has been cut into the top face of the block and a hole has been drilled into the block's top edge on either side of the hollow. Such cuttings suggest that another piece, perhaps a stele, was meant to be inserted into or attached to this one.
In addition, the back side of the block is in two planes, which might indicate that the block was meant to be fitted against another block or into a wall.
Department of Ancient and Byzantine Art & Numismatics
Unknown formerly in the Kevorkian Collection.
Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum Gift of The Hagop Kevorkian Foundation in memory of Hagop Kevorkian
Title: Fragment of Monument or Architecture Decorated in Relief
Description:
Marble block with front decorated in relief and deeply drilled.
Elaborate cross within an arch.
Flowers sprout and curve up from the bottom of the cross, which stands atop a two-stepped base.
The voussoirs of the arch spring from the blocky, tripartite capitals of double colonnettes.
Inscriptions in either Syriac or Arabic occupy the otherwise undecorated space on either side of arch.
Flanking these are four vertical grooves.
Beside these grooves is a ridge with incised chevrons.
A deep hollow has been cut into the top face of the block and a hole has been drilled into the block's top edge on either side of the hollow.
Such cuttings suggest that another piece, perhaps a stele, was meant to be inserted into or attached to this one.
In addition, the back side of the block is in two planes, which might indicate that the block was meant to be fitted against another block or into a wall.
Related Results
Ceremonial tobacco pouch
Ceremonial tobacco pouch
Pipe bag; Lakota; ca. 1870-1880 \nHide, glass beads, porcupine quills, pigments; l. 40 cm. (incl. fringe); w. 13 cm.\nRMV 3158-9; purchased from art dealer Leendert Van Lier, Amste...
Tobacco pouch
Tobacco pouch
Tobacco, smoking, ritual, pipes, tobacco bags Tobacco was a stimulant used by the indigenous people in large parts of North, Central and South America as a sedative, medicine again...
Booties for mannequin
Booties for mannequin
"(Western?) Apache moccasins for a doll; buckskin, sinew, glass beads; l. (of sole) 5 cm., h. 9 cm., w. 2.5 cm.; ca. 1880.\These beaded miniature high-top moccasins with toe tabs a...
Breechcloth
Breechcloth
Breechcloth; probably Yanktonai; 1860-1870Wool, porcupine quills, sinew, metal, horsehair, pigments; 117.5 x 28.5 cm.\RMV 710-9; Herman F.C. ten Kate collection; purchased from tra...

