A dictionary of Greek and Roman antiquities.. (1849) (14759392436)
Summary
Illustration of "an emperor" wearing a paludamentum
Identifier: dictionaryofgree00smit_1 (find matches)
Title: A dictionary of Greek and Roman antiquities..
Year: 1849 (1840s)
Authors: Smith, William, 1813-1893
Subjects:
Publisher: Boston
Contributing Library: The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor: The Library of Congress
Text Appearing Before Image:
one representing an officer, the other the emperorwith a tunic and fringed paludamentum, we ob-serve the clasp on the right shoulder, and thiswould manifestly be its usual position when thecloak was not used for warmth, for thus the right
Text Appearing After Image:
PAMBOEOTIA.hand and arm would be free and unembarrassed ;but in the preceding cut, copied from the RaccoltaMaffei, representing also a Roman emperor, weperceive that the clasp is on the left shoulder ;while in the cut below, the noble head of a warriorfrom the great Mosaic of Pompeii, we see thepaludamentum flying back in the charge, and theclasp nearly in front. It may be said that the lastis a Grecian figure ; but this, if true, is of no im-portance, since the chlamys and the paludamentumwere essentially, if not absolutely, the same. NoniusMarcellus considers the two terms synonymous,and Tacitus (Ann. xii. 56) tells how the splendidnaumachia exhibited by Claudius was viewed byAgrippina dressed clilamyde aurata, while Pliny(H. N. xxxiii. 3) and Dion Cassius (lx. 33) innarrating the same story use respectively the ex-pressions paludamento aurotextili, and %A.a/iv8t
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