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Photography by Paul Keates on 500px
Keswick, Cumbria, England by johnedwardjames
Second assault of Jerusalem by the Crusaders repulsed, 1877, Gustave Dore
Medium: lithography
Happy Mythology Monday! We’ve noted before how astrology, metallurgy (and by extension, alchemy), and classical mythology were often closely connected during the early modern period. These woodcuts, from Johannes ab Indagine’s Introductiones apolesmaticae in physiognomiam, astrologiam naturalem, complexiones hominum, naturas planetarum, are another example of this. From the top, we have personifications of the Moon, the Sun, Jupiter, Mars, Saturn, Venus, and Mercury, and each one is accompanied by their corresponding alchemical symbol. If you look at the chariot wheels, you’ll notice that they contain various Zodiac signs. Which one are you?
Photo Album: Veterans of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising.
Edouard Boubat. Transhumance In The Pyrenees. 1960
Spiral Armilla, c. 1500 BC, Cleveland Museum of Art: Greek and Roman Art
Size: Overall: 16.5 x 12.1 cm (6 ½ x 4 ¾ in.) Medium: bronze, wrought
https://clevelandart.org/art/1988.4
Tiškevičiai Palace, Palanga, Lithuania
Baden-Württemberg - Deutsches Kaiserreich
Санкт-Петербург - Российская империя