File:Minotaurus.gif
Summary
| Description |
English: The Minotaur (represented here as a man's head and torso joined to a bull's body, in reverse of the Classical tradition showing a bull's head on a man's body) at the centre of the Labyrinth, depicted on a gem. According to Hermann Kern (Through the Labyrinth, Prestel, 2000, item 371, p. 202), the original gem is in the Medici Collection in the Palazzo Strozzi, Florence. Kern assigns the gem to the 16th century, stating that Maffei "erroneously deemed the piece to be from Classical antiquity". (The Labyrinth is depicted in a style unknown in Classical times but common in the Renaissance.) The Minotaur is here represented (as not uncommonly in medieval and later times) as a bucentaur, the reverse of the usual classical representation (a bull's head on a man's body). This is occasionally mistaken for a centaur; but the association with the Labyrinth makes it clear that it represents the Minotaur, and the artist has been careful to carve the hooves in bovine, not equine, form. The tuft on the belly is also typical of a bull, not a horse. |
| Source | MAFFEI, P. A. "Gemmae Antiche," 1709, Pt. IV, pl. 31. |
| Author | Copied from en:Image:Minotaurus.gif, originally uploaded by en:User:Nidara. |
Licensing
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This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or fewer. Category:PD-old missing SDC copyright status | |
| This file has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights. | |
Category:CC-PD-MarkCategory:Author died more than 100 years ago public domain imagesCategory:PD-old missing SDC copyright status Category:Round labyrinths Category:Medici collections Category:Minotaur Category:Bucentaurs