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Pompey's Pillar, or Pompey's Column, a Roman triumphal column erected 298-303 AD for emperor Diocletian, beside the ruins of the temple of Serapis, at the Serapeum of Alexandria, in Alexandria, Egypt. The granite corinthian column and capital once held a statue of Diocletian. (The misleading name Pompey's Column comes from a mistake in translation from its Greek inscription.) It is flanked by 2 Roman sphinxes in pink granite. Picture by Manuel Cohen
Unique Identifier
AR6179488
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
8268px × 5514px
Photo Credit
Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY
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Tags
3RD CENTURY AD
4th century AD
AFRICA
African
ALEXANDRIA
ANCIENT
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
Archaeology
ARCHEOLOGICAL
archeology
Architecture
BLUE SKY
CAPITAL
classical
COLOR IMAGE
colour image
Column
Corinthian
DAY
DIOCLETIAN
Egyptian
emperor
Exterior
HERITAGE
History
HORIZONTAL
MIDDLE EAST
Middle Eastern
MONOLITHIC
MYTHOLOGICAL
MYTHOLOGY
NORTH AFRICA
NORTH AFRICAN
Outdoors
OUTSIDE
Pillar
Pompey
Pompey's Pillar
Roman
RUINS
Serapeum
SITE
Sphinx
SUNNY
Temple
Temple of Serapis
TRIUMPHAL
triumphal column