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Conceptually similar
AR6173826 
AR6178743 
AR6173814 
AR6173817 
AR6173806 
AR6173816 
AR6173808 
AR6173810 
AR6173820 
AR6173813 
AR6173807 
AR6173837 
AR6173815 
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AR6173830 
Taurobolium altar, used for sacrificing bulls, dedicated to Cybele, Mother of the Gods, and to the imperial Numina, by Lucius Pomponius Paternus, Gallo-Roman sculpture, 180-250 AD, excavated in the ramparts of Vesunna, detail, in the Musee Vesunna, Perigueux, Dordogne, France. The Vesunna Gallo-Roman Museum was built by Jean Nouvel and opened in 2003, to protect and house the excavated remains of the Vesunna domus and exhibit artefacts from the region. Vesunna was founded on the site of modern-day Perigueux in c. 16 BC under Emperor Augustus, and was the Gallo-Roman capital of Petrucores territory. Picture by Manuel Cohen 
Unique Identifier AR6173831 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 4725px × 7087px 
Photo Credit Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
2ND CENTURY AD
3RD CENTURY AD
Altar
ANCIENT
ANIMAL
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
Archaeology
ARCHEOLOGICAL
archeology
bas-relief
BULL
classical
Collection
cult
CYBELE
Dagger
detail
dordogne
EUROPE
EUROPEAN
French
Gallo-Roman
Gaul
HERITAGE
History
INDOORS
INSIDE
interior
Knife
Limestone
MUSEUM
Nouvelle-Aquitaine
ramparts
Relief
religion
Roman
Sacrifice
SACRIFICIAL KNIFE
Sculpture
Stone
TAUROBOLIA
TAUROBOLIUM
Tree
VERTICAL
Western Europe
Western European