Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Capitoline Wolf (Italian: Lupa Capitolina) is a bronze sculpture depicting a scene from the legend of the founding of Rome.The sculpture shows a she-wolf suckling the mythical twin founders of Rome, Romulus and Remus.
Capitoline she-wolf in Hibiya Park, Tokyo Capitoline she-wolf at Ajinomoto Stadium, Tokyo. Chōfu, Tokyo - in Ajinomoto Stadium, donated from the Commune of Rome in 2001. Chiyoda, Tokyo - in Hibiya Park, one block south of the Imperial Palace complex. It was donated by Benito Mussolini in 1938.
The Capitoline Wolf, arguably the most famous statue of the She-Wolf. The She-Wolf with Romulus and Remus, sculpture by Francesco Biggi and Domenico Parodi in the Palazzo Rosso of Genoa, Italy The She-Wolf on a coin of the late Roman republic (c.77 BC)
The theft of Cincinnati’s Capitoline Wolf may not equal art heists of the past – “Mona Lisa” snatched in 1911, European collections gutted during World War II, “The Scream” ripped off ...
Stone in June 2022, Eden Park's Capitoline Wolf statue returns Friday. It's been a wild ride. | Your Nov. 3 Daily Briefing.
The Capitoline Wolf Statue is a bronze sculpture of a she-wolf nursing Romulus and Remus in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. A replica of the original Capitoline Wolf, the first version of the statue was given to Cincinnati in 1929 by Italian dictator Benito Mussolini before being replaced by a larger one in 1931. Stolen in 2022, the statue was ...
Capitoline Wolf, sculpture of the she-wolf feeding the twins Romulus and Remus, the most famous image associated with the founding of Rome. According to Livy, it was erected in 296 BC. [1] Romulus and Remus on the House of the She-wolf at the Grand Place of Brussels
La Lupa Capitolina ("the Capitoline Wolf"). Traditional scholarship says the wolf-figure is Etruscan, 5th century BC. The figures of Romulus and Remus were added in the 15th century AD by Antonio del Pollaiuolo. Some modern research suggests that the she-wolf may be a Romanesque sculpture dating from the 13th century AD. [1]