alb9507967

Ceres as goddess of agriculture with crown of ears of corn and sickle. The burning torch and two-headed snake refer to her role as a mother in search of her robbed daughter Proserpina. The inscription AEMA CERES DOCVIT SEGETVM SPEM CREDERE SVICIS states that faith in Ceres taught man to entrust the hope of a good harvest to the plough. Copy after print by Jacopo Giovanni Caraglio, Ceres with crown of ears of corn, sickle, burning torch and two-headed serpent Gods and Goddesses (series title)., print maker: Jacob Binck, Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio, Germany, 1530, paper, engraving, h 212 mm × w 108 mm.

Ceres as goddess of agriculture with crown of ears of corn and sickle. The burning torch and two-headed snake refer to her role as a mother in search of her robbed daughter Proserpina. The inscription AEMA CERES DOCVIT SEGETVM SPEM CREDERE SVICIS states that faith in Ceres taught man to entrust the hope of a good harvest to the plough. Copy after print by Jacopo Giovanni Caraglio, Ceres with crown of ears of corn, sickle, burning torch and two-headed serpent Gods and Goddesses (series title)., print maker: Jacob Binck, Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio, Germany, 1530, paper, engraving, h 212 mm × w 108 mm.
Teilen
pinterestPinterest
twitterTwitter
facebookFacebook
emailEmail

Zu einem anderen Lightbox hinzufügen

Zu einem anderen Lightbox hinzufügen

add to lightbox print share
Haben Sie bereits ein Konto? Anmelden
Sie haben kein Konto? Registrieren
Dieses Bild kaufen
Daten werden geladen...
Ceres as goddess of agriculture with crown of ears of corn and sickle. The burning torch and two-headed snake refer to her role as a mother in search of her robbed daughter Proserpina. The inscription AEMA CERES DOCVIT SEGETVM SPEM CREDERE SVICIS states that faith in Ceres taught man to entrust the hope of a good harvest to the plough. Copy after print by Jacopo Giovanni Caraglio, Ceres with crown of ears of corn, sickle, burning torch and two-headed serpent Gods and Goddesses (series title)., print maker: Jacob Binck, Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio, Germany, 1530, paper, engraving, h 212 mm × w 108 mm
Persönlichkeiten:
Bildnachweis:
Album / quintlox
Freigaben (Releases):
Model: Nein - Eigentum: Nein
Rechtefragen?
Bildgröße:
2940 x 6152 px | 51.7 MB
Druckgröße:
24.9 x 52.1 cm | 9.8 x 20.5 in (300 dpi)