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Sokrates and Seneca, back to back

Unknown3rd century (first half)

Neues Museum, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Neues Museum, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
Berlin, Germany

This double herm unites the portraits of two outstanding thinkers from the Greek and Roman periods. They were apparently chosen for this dual portrait because of their similarly violent deaths: on one side is the Greek philosopher Sokrates, who in 399 BC was sentenced by an Athenian court to drink a poisonous brew of hemlock; on the other side is Seneca, a Roman statesman, philosopher, and dramatist who took his own life in AD 65 at the command of his onetime pupil Nero. Both heads of the herm – which originally would have belonged to the sculptural decoration of a Roman villa – are only cursorily worked. Yet the piece is important because it preserves the only portrait of Seneca accompanied by an inscription that allows it to be securely identified. Seneca is shown here with clear signs of age, an angular head, a high bald forehead, arched eyebrows, short hair on the sides of the head, wrinkles around the mouth, a double chin, and a small mouth. Following Greek custom, he wears only a mantle over his left shoulder. His name is inscribed on the lower left corner of the bust. [...]
Sokrates is easily recognisable. It takes after a statue attributed to Lysippos of Sikyon (active ca. 370–310 BC) which attenuated the satyr-like face of a slightly older portrait type.

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  • Title: Sokrates and Seneca, back to back
  • Creator: Unknown
  • Date Created: 3rd century (first half)
  • Provenance: Found in 1813 on the grounds of the Villa Mattei in Rome, near the church of S. Maria in Domnica. Acquired in Rome in 1878.
  • Type: Sculpture
  • Medium: Marble
  • Inv. no.: Sk 391
  • ISIL no.: DE-MUS-814319
  • External Link: Neues Museum, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
  • Copyright: Photo © Antikensammlung, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Johannes Laurentius. || Text © Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, The Antikensammlung: Altes Museum, Neues Museum, Pergamonmuseum, A publication of the Antikensammlung of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin ed. by Agnes Schwarzmaier, Andreas Scholl, and Martin Maischberger, p. 302–303, || Text: Mirko Vonderstein, Translation: Stephanie Pearson.
  • Collection: Antikensammlung, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz
Neues Museum, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

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