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Patron goddess (Tyche) of Antioch. Roman marble copy of the original by Eutychides, made about 300 BC.

Date 1st century B.C. copy of a 3rd century B.C. original
Object type sculpture
Medium, technique carved, marble
Dimensions

46.5 × 30.6 × 34.3 cm

Inventory number 4742
Collection Classical Antiquities
On view Museum of Fine Arts, Basement Floor, Classical Antiquity, The ancient Mediterranean

This is a Roman adaptation of a lost but reconstructible Greek statue. It represents a goddess, like the well-known Greek statue that represented the city of Antiokheia (Antioch/Antakia). She is seated on a rock – on the Greek sculpture this referred to the Sipylos, the mountain of Antiokheia. Under the feet of Antiokheia there was a swimming figure – here missing – which personified the city’s river, the Oronthes. This iconographic scheme, first connected to Antiokheia, was later used for representing other cities in the Mediterranean and also other goddesses.

Marble analyses have shown that the statue was made of Luna (Carrara) marble.

This record is subject to revision due to ongoing research.

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