INDEX.
697
KHO
Rhodes, art and artists in, 492 f 518 ff; Mr.
Ross's discoveries, tk See Colossus
Rhcecus and Theodorus of Samos (cite. 580
B.C.), supposed works of, 48/
Ricci, Florentine artist, 533
Riviere, Mirquis de, presents the Venus of
Mclos to Louis XVII1., 6ai
Romans, the, early ignorance of art of, 571 ;
delighted with their art spoils, 572 ; be-
come connoisseurs, 573 /;intluenceof Greek
art on, 573 /; artistic genius of, 575 /;
their fondness for the Apoxyomenos of Ly-
sippus, 574
Rome, immense art plunder brought to, 572];
filled with works of Greek art, 574/; de-
mand for copies, 575 ; Greek artists of the
Augustan age, 576 ff; revival of Greek art
in, ib; foreign cults introduced into, 667 ff
Ronlanini Medusa at .Munich, 65
Ross, Mr., his arl discoveries in Rhodes, 51S/
SADOLKTUS, lines from, on the Lao.oon,
524 n
Salomons, Mr. Geskel, on the attitude of the
Venus of Mclos, 603
Salpion, author of the Fjnt of Gala, 5S0
594 ; another relief seen by Welcker, 5S0
Samos, art school of, 48 f
Samothrace, art in, 77/; relief from, 77/;
island of, 387
Sappho, busts of, 647
Sap/ho and Aleieus, 11911, 120
■Sara/iis, of ltryaxis, removed from Sinope to
Kgvpt, 465/, 663 ; bust of in the Vatican,
460; statues of, 669
Sardis, capture of, by Cyrus, 26 n
Sarcophagi, account of the, 664 ; subjects of
reliefs on, 664 ff; testimony of, to the im-
mortality of the soul, 665 ; the Amaun
sarcophagus at Vienni, the Xiobui and
Bacchus sarcophagi of the Vatican anj Ca-
pitol, 665 /
Satyrs, the, 437; Satyr of Praxiteles, 437,/;
representations of, 439/
Schelling, on nature and art, 3 ; virtue and
l>eauty, 418 n
Schiller, on Greek art, 13 n ; on the Gods of
Greece, 14 n ; on artistic genius, 202 n; on
Greek love of nature, 434 n, 435 n
SIC
Schliemann, Dr., his discoveries at Mycenae
and Troy, 26/, 515/
Schnaase, Prof., on the Praying Boy (Berlin),
490 11
Scipio, Cornelius, removes the art treasures of
Magnesia to Rome, 572
' Scipio, Lucius, picture of his victory over An-
tiochus, 637
Scopas of Paros (circ. B.C. 387), architect and
sculptor, 378; chief works:—th; temple
and its sculptures of Athene Alea at Tegea,
and temple of Asklcpios at Gortys, 378 ff;
Aphrodite Pandemos, 379 « ; statues of
Hecate and Heracles, 380 ; his residence at
Athens, ib; the Eri nnyes, ib.; the Oane-
phoric, 380 f; Hestia and Iferma of Jlermcs,
381 ; the raging Bacchante, 382 /; extant
representation of this work, 383/; Apollo
Khamnus, 384 f; Bros, Himcros, and
Pothos, 386 f; Aphrodite and Pathos in
Samothrace, 387 ; Artemis Eukleia in
Thebes, 387/; AtUni Pronaia in Thebes,
388 ; Apollo Smiutheus and Lcto and Orty-
gia, 3S9 ; employed on the temple of Ar-
temis at Kphesus, 391 ; group of Dionysus
and Athene in Cnidos, 392 ; Aphrodite in
l'ergamon, ib. ; probable copies of, 393 ;
statue of Arcs, ib. ; Achilles group in lii-
thynia, 394 /'(sec Poseidon and A mphitrite);
supposed copies of, 396 ff; his work at the
Mausoleum of Uahcarnassus, 402 ff (see
Mausoleum) ; possibly the author of the
Niobe group, 41$/ (see jViobe); character-
istics and style of, 425/; as compared with
Praxiteles, 429 ; his Aphrodite removed to
Rome, 573
Sculpture. See Art
Scylhs. See Dijxenus and Scyllis
Scymnus, Athenian artist, 96
Scyros, capture of, by the Athenians, 178
Selinus, metopes from the temple of, 64 ff
Seneca, on the Olympian Zeus, 195
Septimius Severus, Arch of, 642
.sepulchres, reliefs from, III, 302ff, 304/,
453 ; forms of, 304 n, 305 u. See Sarcophagi
Serambus of .Kgina, 86
Shelley, on the birth of Minerva, 262 n ; on
the M.euads, 384 w
Sicyon, art and artists of, 47/, 80 ff, 361,
363/ 492
697
KHO
Rhodes, art and artists in, 492 f 518 ff; Mr.
Ross's discoveries, tk See Colossus
Rhcecus and Theodorus of Samos (cite. 580
B.C.), supposed works of, 48/
Ricci, Florentine artist, 533
Riviere, Mirquis de, presents the Venus of
Mclos to Louis XVII1., 6ai
Romans, the, early ignorance of art of, 571 ;
delighted with their art spoils, 572 ; be-
come connoisseurs, 573 /;intluenceof Greek
art on, 573 /; artistic genius of, 575 /;
their fondness for the Apoxyomenos of Ly-
sippus, 574
Rome, immense art plunder brought to, 572];
filled with works of Greek art, 574/; de-
mand for copies, 575 ; Greek artists of the
Augustan age, 576 ff; revival of Greek art
in, ib; foreign cults introduced into, 667 ff
Ronlanini Medusa at .Munich, 65
Ross, Mr., his arl discoveries in Rhodes, 51S/
SADOLKTUS, lines from, on the Lao.oon,
524 n
Salomons, Mr. Geskel, on the attitude of the
Venus of Mclos, 603
Salpion, author of the Fjnt of Gala, 5S0
594 ; another relief seen by Welcker, 5S0
Samos, art school of, 48 f
Samothrace, art in, 77/; relief from, 77/;
island of, 387
Sappho, busts of, 647
Sap/ho and Aleieus, 11911, 120
■Sara/iis, of ltryaxis, removed from Sinope to
Kgvpt, 465/, 663 ; bust of in the Vatican,
460; statues of, 669
Sardis, capture of, by Cyrus, 26 n
Sarcophagi, account of the, 664 ; subjects of
reliefs on, 664 ff; testimony of, to the im-
mortality of the soul, 665 ; the Amaun
sarcophagus at Vienni, the Xiobui and
Bacchus sarcophagi of the Vatican anj Ca-
pitol, 665 /
Satyrs, the, 437; Satyr of Praxiteles, 437,/;
representations of, 439/
Schelling, on nature and art, 3 ; virtue and
l>eauty, 418 n
Schiller, on Greek art, 13 n ; on the Gods of
Greece, 14 n ; on artistic genius, 202 n; on
Greek love of nature, 434 n, 435 n
SIC
Schliemann, Dr., his discoveries at Mycenae
and Troy, 26/, 515/
Schnaase, Prof., on the Praying Boy (Berlin),
490 11
Scipio, Cornelius, removes the art treasures of
Magnesia to Rome, 572
' Scipio, Lucius, picture of his victory over An-
tiochus, 637
Scopas of Paros (circ. B.C. 387), architect and
sculptor, 378; chief works:—th; temple
and its sculptures of Athene Alea at Tegea,
and temple of Asklcpios at Gortys, 378 ff;
Aphrodite Pandemos, 379 « ; statues of
Hecate and Heracles, 380 ; his residence at
Athens, ib; the Eri nnyes, ib.; the Oane-
phoric, 380 f; Hestia and Iferma of Jlermcs,
381 ; the raging Bacchante, 382 /; extant
representation of this work, 383/; Apollo
Khamnus, 384 f; Bros, Himcros, and
Pothos, 386 f; Aphrodite and Pathos in
Samothrace, 387 ; Artemis Eukleia in
Thebes, 387/; AtUni Pronaia in Thebes,
388 ; Apollo Smiutheus and Lcto and Orty-
gia, 3S9 ; employed on the temple of Ar-
temis at Kphesus, 391 ; group of Dionysus
and Athene in Cnidos, 392 ; Aphrodite in
l'ergamon, ib. ; probable copies of, 393 ;
statue of Arcs, ib. ; Achilles group in lii-
thynia, 394 /'(sec Poseidon and A mphitrite);
supposed copies of, 396 ff; his work at the
Mausoleum of Uahcarnassus, 402 ff (see
Mausoleum) ; possibly the author of the
Niobe group, 41$/ (see jViobe); character-
istics and style of, 425/; as compared with
Praxiteles, 429 ; his Aphrodite removed to
Rome, 573
Sculpture. See Art
Scylhs. See Dijxenus and Scyllis
Scymnus, Athenian artist, 96
Scyros, capture of, by the Athenians, 178
Selinus, metopes from the temple of, 64 ff
Seneca, on the Olympian Zeus, 195
Septimius Severus, Arch of, 642
.sepulchres, reliefs from, III, 302ff, 304/,
453 ; forms of, 304 n, 305 u. See Sarcophagi
Serambus of .Kgina, 86
Shelley, on the birth of Minerva, 262 n ; on
the M.euads, 384 w
Sicyon, art and artists of, 47/, 80 ff, 361,
363/ 492