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Ivory of the Symmachi family, Quintus Aurelius Symmachus  (SYMMACHORUM). Rome, 402 AD. One of the last great commissions of pagan art in Rome before the triumph of Christianity. The scroll at the top bears a monogram probably reading 'SYMMACHORUM', a reference to one of the leading families in Rome. The Symmachi family probably commissioned this ivory panel to commemorate Quintus Aurelius Symmachus (about 340-402), the greatest orator of his day, a prominent pagan and opponent of Christianity. At the centre-right a mature bearded man in a senatorial toga sits beneath a gabled roof supported on columns. This ornate structure is borne on a wheeled carriage drawn by four elephants with their riders, holding prods and elephant-rattles. The figure is possibly intended to represent Q. Aurelius Symmachus himself, who served in the highest public offices of pro-consul and consul. The next scene shows his death, symbolized by a draped funeral pyre surmounted by a quadriga (four-horsed chariot). At the summit five ancestors welcome his arrival and apotheosis (elevation to divine status). Carved elephant ivory leaf, part of a diptych, 301 x 113 x 8 mm.  1857,1013.1. 
Location British Museum/London/Great Britain
Unique Identifier ART488475 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 3120px × 5000px 
Photo Credit © The Trustees of the British Museum / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
5th century CE
Apotheosis
Chariot
Elephant
Funeral
Gods
Helios
Imperial Roman (27 BCE-396 CE)
LATE ROMAN
Orator
PAGAN
Pyre
Quadriga
Zodiac