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Iconography

Index Iconography

Iconography, as a branch of art history, studies the identification, description, and the interpretation of the content of images: the subjects depicted, the particular compositions and details used to do so, and other elements that are distinct from artistic style. [1]

1071 relations: -graphy, A Dance to the Music of Time (painting), A Meat Stall with the Holy Family Giving Alms, Abdullah Buhari, Abel Pann, Aberrant decoding, Abu Mena, Aby Warburg, Abyzou, Acheiropoieta, Acqui Award of History, Ade Bethune, Adelaide Damoah, Adler, Adolphe Napoléon Didron, Adoration of the Child (Gentile da Fabriano), Adoration of the Magi, Agatha of Sicily, Ah! Sun-flower, Albert Küchler, Albert Kutal, Albertus Magnus, Alek Rapoport, Aleksey Lidov, Alexander the Great in the Quran, Alexandre Astier (historian), Alexis Rockman, Alice, Sweet Alice, Alois Riegl, Altar Wings of Roudníky, Ambroży Mieroszewski, Amy C. Smith, Anagni, Anasyrma, Anat, Ancient astronauts, Ancient Egyptian deities, Ancient of Days, Andean civilizations, Andrei Rublev, Andrei Rublev (film), Andrei Tarkovsky, Andrew the Apostle, Angelo Italia, Angelos Akotantos, Angels in art, Anglican devotions, Anglo-Saxon art, Aniconism in Judaism, Animals in Christian art, ..., Anna Maria Bisi, Anne Everett, Annona (mythology), Annunciation (van Eyck, Washington), Anthony Beeson, Antonio Jose Guzman, Applause (Lady Gaga song), Aquamanile, Ara Pacis, Arc de Triomphe, Archangel, Archangel Michael in Christian art, Archbishop's Chapel, Ravenna, Archdiocesan Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, Architecture of Albania, Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism, Arma Christi, Armada Portrait, Arnold of Nijmegen, Arnulf of Metz, Art, Art film, Art history, Art in the Protestant Reformation and Counter-Reformation, Art Museum (Ivano-Frankivsk), Art of El Greco, Art of Europe, Artistic patronage of the Neapolitan Angevin dynasty, Artists of the Tudor court, Ascension of Jesus in Christian art, Asherah, Ashtamangala, Ashur (god), August 17 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics), Awamaki, Axial precession, Aylett Sammes, Azilian, Émile Mâle, Émile Savitry, Ľudovít Fulla, B. N. Mukherjee, Bad Painting, Balthasar Behem Codex, Banner, Banner-making, Baptismal font at St Bartholomew's Church, Liège, Barberini Gospels, Barry S. Brook, Basilikon, Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell, Batavian Republic, Batlló Majesty, Bayeux Tapestry, Bearded Mary, Beauty Is in the Street, Belarusian Republican Scout Association, Benno, Bernard van Orley, Bernardine of Feltre, Bernardo de Miera y Pacheco, Bezhin Meadow, Bhrikuti, Bible and Orient Museum, Biga (chariot), Bill Keith (artist), Birds' Head Haggadah, Birthday Boy (film), Bitola, Black-figure pottery, Blanche Parry, Blood squirt, Bloodletting in Mesoamerica, Blue-green, Bollingen Foundation, Book of hours, Boot, Borys Buryak, Bosnian Church, Bosom of Abraham Trinity, Brescia Casket, Buddhist influences on Christianity, Bull Palette, Burney Relief, Bushranger, Byzantine dress, Byzantine Rite, C. Sivaramamurti, Caesarius of Heisterbach, Cahokia, Cameo glass, Camera di San Paolo, Campana reliefs, Canterbury Treasure, Cantore al liuto, Carel Fabritius, Carlos Aguilar Piedra, Carnutes, Carolingian art, Carved lacquer, Castelseprio (archaeological park), Catacombs of Rome, Cathedral of Hajdúdorog, Catherine de' Medici's building projects, Catherine of Alexandria, Catholic Church art, Cave of Beasts, Celtic art, Celtic mythology, Centre de l'Imaginaire Arthurien, Cesare Ripa, Charalambos, Charalambos Pachis, Chariotry in ancient Egypt, Charlotte Cheverton, Charnel ground, Charon's obol, Chatra (umbrella), Chöd, Che Guevara in popular culture, Chimera of Arezzo, China–Nepal relations, Chinese pagoda, Cholula, Puebla, Christ Child, Christ in the winepress, Christ Pantocrator, Christ treading on the beasts, Christendom, Christian art, Christian cross, Christian culture, Christian influences in Islam, Christian views on Hell, Christmas, Church of Saint Maria del Soccorso, Church of St Mary, Abbas and Templecombe, Church of St Peter, Berende, Church of St. Anthony of Padua, Belgrade, Church of St. Nicholas, Brezova, Circle of stars, Circumcision of Jesus, Claude-François Baudez, Coat of arms of Mide, Codex Vyssegradensis, Coinage in Anglo-Saxon England, Comalcalco, Combing (torture), Comité International d'Histoire de l'Art, Commodus, Conflation, Confronted animals, Conjectural portrait, Coptic art, Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria, Coromandel lacquer, Coryphaeus, Cotton library, Council of Hieria, Council of Trent, Counter-Reformation, Craig Harbison, Crescent, Cristóbal Vela, Cristina Rodrigues, Croatian art, Cross in the Mountains, Crown of Immortality, Crucifixion and Last Judgement diptych, Cuckold, Cultural appropriation, Cultural depictions of the dog, Cultural encoding, Cultural influence of the September 11 attacks, Culture of Bulgaria, Culture of Europe, Dabhoi, Dadar (ritual tool), Daemon (classical mythology), Dafna Kaffeman, Danake, Danielle Bleitrach, Debashree Roy, Dechristianization of France during the French Revolution, Depiction, Depiction of Jesus, Desco da parto, Deshret, Desiderio da Settignano, Dharmapala, Di nixi, Diane Falkenhagen, Dimitar Dobrovich, Dionysius of Fourna, Diptych by Giovanni da Rimini, Djedmaatesankh, Don Gregorio Antón, Doni Tondo, Donyi-Polo, Dormition of the Virgin (El Greco), Doves as symbols, Dracula (1931 English-language film), Dragomirna, Dragotinci, Sveti Jurij ob Ščavnici, Dramyin, Dresden Triptych, Druze, Dura-Europos, Dura-Europos church, Eadwine Psalter, Eanna-shum-iddina kudurru, Early Christian art and architecture, Early Netherlandish painting, Early Netherlandish Painting (Friedländer), Early Netherlandish Painting (Panofsky), Earth (classical element), Eastern Orthodox theology, Ecclesia and Synagoga, Ecclesiastical heraldry, Eduardo Úrculo, Eduardo Urbano Merino, Egbert (archbishop of Trier), Eggenberg Palace, Graz, Ekphrasis, El Greco, El Panecillo, Electric Jukebox, Elephant goad, Elizabeth Catlett, Elizabeth I of England, Ellen Gallagher, Emanuel Leutze, English Apocalypse manuscripts, Enguerrand Quarton, Ennio Quirino Visconti, Ensemble Micrologus, Ephraim of Nea Makri, Eric Van Hove, Erie, Pennsylvania, Ernst Kitzinger, Erotes, Erotic art, Erwin Panofsky, Erzulie, Esphigmenou, Esquiline Treasure, Ethiopian art, Etowah plates, Euphronios, Eve, the Serpent and Death, Everaldo Coelho, Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy, Eye of Providence, FAILE (artist collaboration), Farnese Cup, Felipe Aldana, Felipe Ehrenberg, Female Figure (Giambologna), Ferdinand the Holy Prince, Fernando Gallego, Festival of Santa Esterica, Ficus, Finding of Moses, Flag of Europe, Flagellation of Christ (Piero della Francesca), Flight into Egypt, Foreleg of ox, Forty Martyrs of Sebaste, Fountain of Life, Fountain of Youth, Four Evangelists, Four Seasons (sculpture set), Fragment of a Crucifixion, Francesco Carotta, Francesco Danieli, Francisco Pacheco, Franco Maria Ricci, Frank C. Turner, Frederico Carlos Hoehne, French art, Funerary art, Gabra Manfas Qeddus, Gabriele Paleotti, Ganesha, Gankhüügiin Pürevbat, Garima Gospels, Gautama V. Vajracharya, Gay Messiah, Genealogia Deorum Gentilium, Geography of media and communication, George B. Chambers, Georgi Danevski, Georgian scripts, Georgy Pashkov, Gero (archbishop of Cologne), Gerona Beatus, Gervasius and Protasius, Gesture, Ghost, Ghosts in Thai culture, Gian Paolo Lomazzo, Gillian Mann, Giovanni Battista Agucchi, Giovanni Coppa, Girdle, Gladiator (2000 film), Glareana, Globus cruciger, Glory (religion), Gniezno Doors, Goad, Godefroid de Claire, Godescalc Evangelistary, Godflesh, Gold glass, Golden Madonna of Essen, Gonfalon, Gora (Davydovskoye Rural Settlement), Orekhovo-Zuyevsky District, Moscow Oblast, Gorne-Uspensky Convent, Gothic art, Gothic boxwood miniature, Gourmet Museum and Library, Gradhiva, Graffiti, Grani, Grayson Perry, Great Sphinx of Giza, Greco-Buddhism, Greek mythology, Greek Orthodox Church, Green Man, Gregory of Nazianzus, Gridiron (cooking), Guatemala, Guerrillero Heroico, Guillaume Rouillé, Gundestrup cauldron, Guy of Anderlecht, Haarlem, Hagia Sophia, Halo (religious iconography), Hamburg School of Art History, Hand (hieroglyph), Hans Holbein the Younger, Harappa, Hardvapour, Harold Desbrowe-Annear, Harrowing of Hell, Hatshepsut, Headlong (Frayn novel), Hecate, Hedwig glass, Hell icon, Hellmuth Christian Wolff, Helmet of Constantine, Help Me (Tinchy Stryder song), Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville, Heraclea Lyncestis, Heraclius II of Georgia, Hercules, Hermann Usener, Herr, gehe nicht ins Gericht mit deinem Knecht, BWV 105, Hetoimasia, Hindu iconography, Hiroshi Aramata, Historical Christian hairstyles, Historically informed performance, History, History of animation, History of art criticism, History of Buddhism, History of clothing in India, History of Eastern Orthodox theology, History of erotic depictions, History of Native Americans in the United States, History of painting, History of the United States, Hodegetria, Holly Mathieson, Holy Spirit, Hortus Palatinus, Hours of Catherine of Cleves, Hours of James IV of Scotland, Huitzilopochtli, Human guise, Human trophy taking in Mesoamerica, Hunters Palette, Hurrians, Hval's Codex, Icarus, Icon (disambiguation), Iconclass, Iconodule, Iconography (disambiguation), Iconography of Gautama Buddha in Laos and Thailand, Iconology, Iconostasis of the Cathedral of Hajdúdorog, Ill-Matched Marriage, Illimo District, Immaculate Conception, Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts, In the Light of the Moon, Inca mythology, Incense burner: pot (hieroglyph), Index of branches of science, Index of religion-related articles, Indian art, International Congress of Genealogical and Heraldic Sciences, Invidia, Irena Kazazić, Irworobongdo, Isaac Fanous, Ivan Kovalčik Mileševac, Ixcateopan de Cuauhtémoc, Jacobus da Varagine, Jacques de Baerze, Jagannath Temple, Puri, Jagdish Temple, Udaipur, Jaime Correa (architect), Jain art, Jainism, James Lavadour, James McKinnon, Jammin' Java, Jan Van der Stock, Jan Van Eyck Academie, Japanese Buddhist pantheon, Jean Michel Massing, Jean Seznec, Jean Wells (artist), Jean-Marc Moret, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jean-Philippe Charbonnier, Jeff Donaldson (artist), Jeff Koons, Jeffrey Harris (artist), Jerome, Jewish catacombs of Venosa, Jnana Vigraham, John 20:13, John August Swanson, John Granger, John LeKay, John-Paul Himka, Joris-Karl Huysmans, José Muñoz-Cortes, Josef Strzygowski, Josep Artigas, Joseph Pace, Joseph Sadan, Joseph Vladimirov, Josepha Petrick Kemarre, Jovan Vladimir, Juan Martínez Montañés, Jubilee Pavilion (hieroglyph), Judensau at the choir stalls of Cologne Cathedral, Judith beheading Holofernes, Julie Dash, June 17 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics), Jupiter Dolichenus, Kabouter, Kallidaikurichi, Karl Walther, Karlovo, Karlskirche, Karura, Katsudō Shashin, Kīla (Buddhism), Kerry Awn, Kertha Gosa Pavilion, Kildalton Cross, Kincaid Mounds State Historic Site, Kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti, Kirtimukha, Kodeń, Kostas Loudovikos, Kozani, Kremlin Armoury, L'Oiseau bleu (Metzinger), La Blanca, La Gran Chichimeca, Lady Xoc, Lahore Fort, Lajja Gauri, Lamassu, Lamb of God, Lane Twitchell, Larisa Shepitko, Last Judgment, Lazarus of Bethany, Le génie du mal, Lebes Gamikos, Lee Krasner, Leo Scepter, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, Levantine archaeology, Li'l Abner, Liberal and progressive Islam in Europe, Life of Saint Denis (Bibliothèque Nationale, MS fr. 2090–2092), Lillian Delevoryas, Lillian Pitt, Linda Schele, Linda Syddick Napaltjarri, Linear Pottery culture, List of Dewey Decimal classes, List of Egyptian hieroglyphs, List of gay, lesbian or bisexual people: L, List of Gospels, List of major paintings by Masaccio, List of Occult symbols, List of people from Nebraska, List of portraiture offerings with Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, List of Russian people, List of Russian saints, List of Theotokos of St. Theodore icons, List of University of Texas at Austin faculty, List of words ending in ology, Lists of national symbols, Liz Maw, Long Hard Road Out of Hell, Lopushna Monastery, Lot and his Daughters, with Sodom and Gomorrah Burning, Lotus-eaters, Louis Bréhier, Louis of Toulouse, Lubok, Lucas Cranach the Elder, Lucca Madonna, Ludovisi Throne, Lugus, Lupus of Sens, Luristan bronze, Maajid Nawaz, Madeleine Giteau, Madonna (art), Madonna di sant'Alessio, Madonna in the Church, Madonna of the Book, Maestà, Mahasiddha, Main Street, Makara (Hindu mythology), Makinti Napanangka, Man-prisoner (hieroglyph), Mandarava, Manga iconography, Marc Michael Epstein, March of Progress, Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, Marcus Mettius, Marduk-zakir-šumi I kudurru, Maria Goretti, Marian art in the Catholic Church, Mark Bradford, Marriage of the Virgin, Martín Ramírez, Mary of Egypt, Mass media impact on spatial perception, Mass of Saint Gregory, Master of Heiligenkreuz, Master of Saint Francis, Mateus Fernandes, Max Dashu, Max Dauphin, Maya death gods, Maya stelae, Maya warfare, Mérode Altarpiece, Measuring rod, Media art history, Medieval art, Medieval Bulgarian coinage, Meditations on the Life of Christ, Melammu Project, Melencolia I, Mercy, Mesoamerican architecture, Mesoamerican literature, Mesoamerican world tree, Michael (archangel), Michael Diers, Michaelion, Micromosaic, Mikel Dunham, Mikołaj Sapieha (1581–1644), Military art, Military of Mycenaean Greece, Min Palette, Minoan art, Minoan sealstone, Miraflores Altarpiece, Miranda Aldhouse-Green, Missorium of Theodosius I, Mithraeum, Mithraism, Moche culture, Modern understanding of Greek mythology, Mohammed Ali (artist), Moheyan, Mombach, Money bag, Monomachus Crown, Monza ampullae, Monza Cathedral, More Adey, Mosan art, Moscow, Motif (visual arts), Mound 72, Muchalls Castle, Mudra, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo (Madrid), Museo de Arte Hispanoamericano Isaac Fernández Blanco, Museum of Ukrainian folk art, Music history, Music of Scotland, Musicology, Mutunus Tutunus, Mykola Babak, Mykola Pymonenko, Nago–Torbole, Napoleon Crossing the Alps, Narciso Bassols, Narmer Palette, National Archaeology Museum (Portugal), National Iconographic Museum "Onufri", National Museum, New Delhi, National symbols of England, Native American fashion, Native Americans in the United States, Nativity (Christus), Naumachia, Navajo music, Nazca culture, Nechung Oracle, Neimar, Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, New Skete, New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Niccolo Cosme, Nicholas Mukomberanwa, Nicola Pisano, Niello, Nikolai Pavlovich, Nine bows, Noche Crist, Noli me tangere, Nona Orbach, Northern Mannerism, Northern Renaissance, Nortia, Norwich School (independent school), Notman Photographic Archives, Notname, Nottingham alabaster, Nuno Pinheiro (artist), Nursing Madonna, Oaxaca Valley, Odd Nerdrum, Old Katholikon of the Trinity Lavra, Om Prakash Sharma (artist), Orientalism, Osiris myth, Our Lady of Ipswich, Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Our Lady of Sorrows, Outhouse, Oxtotitlán, Pablo Zelaya Sierra, Pada (foot), Paddy Bedford, Pagoda, Painting, Palais Rohan, Strasbourg, Palatine Chapel, Aachen, Palekh, Papyrus stem (hieroglyph), Parachutist Badge (United Kingdom), Park Güell, Paschal cycle, Passion of Jesus, Patriarchal cross, Patriot movement, Paul-Marie-Léon Regnard, Pátio do Colégio, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Pectoral (Ancient Egypt), Pelican, Pensive Christ, Perpetual virginity of Mary, Persian art, Petar Ubavkić, Peter Murphy (artist), Petronius of Bologna, Philip II, Metropolitan of Moscow, Photo blanket, Physiologist (Russian literature), Piasa, Picts, Pietà (Southern German, Cloisters), Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Pindaya Caves, Plague Column, Vienna, Plovdiv, Poet and Muse diptych, Politikon, Poor Man's Bible, Portland Vase, Portraiture of Elizabeth I of England, Portrayals of God in popular media, Portuguese Romanesque architecture, Posthumous fame of El Greco, President of the Czech Republic, Princeton University Chapel, Prohor Pčinjski, Promptuarium Iconum Insigniorum, Psalm 91, Publius Licinius Crassus (son of triumvir), Putto, Quentin Metsys the Younger, R. D. Banerji, Rabbits and hares in art, Rabbula Gospels, Radical chic, Radivoje Kalajdzic, Rakovica Monastery, Ramón Mujica Pinilla, Ranch, Répertoire International de Littérature Musicale, Reading Egyptian Art: A Hieroglyphic Guide to Ancient Egyptian Painting and Sculpture, Red-figure pottery, Regina Vasorum, Religious art, Rembrandt, Rest on the Flight into Egypt, Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Mola), Resurrection of Jesus in Christian art, Retablo, Richard Boys, Rio de Janeiro State University, Robert Hite (artist), Robert Indiana, Roman art, Roman glass, Romanesque art, Romeyn de Hooghe, Romulus and Remus, Rosa Mystica, Rosemary Joyce, Rotwang, Royal entry, Royal Gold Cup, Rudolf Koppitz, Ryabushinsky Museum of Icons and Paintings, Sacred architecture, Sacred tradition, Saddle, Sagaris, Sail (hieroglyph), Saint Ambrose, Brugherio, Saint Bessus, Saint Blaise, Saint Catherine (Caravaggio), Saint Eustace, Saint Fin Barre's Cathedral, Saint George and the Dragon, Saint George in devotions, traditions and prayers, Saint Ghislain, Saint Jerome in His Study (Dürer), Saint Joseph, Saint Luke Drawing the Virgin, Saint Nicholas, Saint Peter, Saint Petroc, Saint Sava Serbian Orthodox Church (Merrillville, Indiana), Saint Spyridon, Saint Stephen, Saint symbolism, Salus Populi Romani, Salvador Dalí, Salvator Mundi, Samantabhadrī (tutelary), San Jose de Moro, San Vito dei Normanni, San Zeno Altarpiece (Mantegna), Sanchi Yakshi Figure, Sanctissimus Dominus Noster, Sandpainting, Sandro Botticelli, Sanghyang Kamahayanikan, Santa Barraza, Santa Prisca Church (Rome), Santa Pudenziana, Santa Reparata, Florence, Santa Sabina, Santo (art), Sarcophagus of Junius Bassus, Sassetti Chapel, Savvas the New of Kalymnos, Say Yes (Michelle Williams song), Scandix pecten-veneris, Scrovegni Chapel, Scythian art, Seapunk, Seated Woman of Çatalhöyük, Secondary products revolution, Self-fashioning, Serbian Orthodox Church, Sergei Gribkov, Serpents in the Bible, Seshat's emblem, Seven Seas, Seven-dots glyph, Seventy disciples, Shahba, Shakespeare's funerary monument, Shamordino Convent, Sheep, Shen Jingdong, Shirley Purdie, Shiva, Shostakovich (1969-1981), Shoulder angel, Shuti hieroglyph (two-feather adornment), Shy Abady, Sican culture, Sid Bradley, Sigüenza Cathedral, Simulacrum, Siribhoovalaya, Sistine Chapel ceiling, Sivagurunathan Tamil Library, Sky (hieroglyph), Sky burial, Slasher film, Slavery in ancient Greece, Slavic dragon, Society of the Cincinnati, Socrate Sidiropoulos, Sodi family, Sophia (wisdom), Sotiris René Sidiropoulos, Southeastern Ceremonial Complex, Spanish art, Sparlösa Runestone, Special Air Service, Spikenard, Spiro Mounds, St Andrew's Greek Orthodox Theological College, St Augustine Gospels, St Augustine's, Kilburn, St Mark's Basilica, St. Dimitrija Solunski Macedonian Orthodox Church, Markham, Ontario, St. Ignatius Cathedral, St. Nicholas Cathedral (Washington, D.C.), St. Spyridon Greek Orthodox Church, Stanford Memorial Church, Stanislaus of Szczepanów, Star of Bethlehem, Stefan Lochner, Steven Carrington, Still life, Stipo a bambocci, Study (Flandrin), Style (visual arts), Sun, Sutton Hoo purse-lid, Swatow ware, Swayambhunath, Sword of Stalingrad, Sylvie Deswarte-Rosa, Symbolism (arts), Symbology (disambiguation), Symbols of Ukrainian people, Synaulia, T. J. Clark (art historian), Tablet of Shamash, Tablets of Stone, Tal-Mintna Catacombs, Tamamushi Shrine, Tapestry, Taweret, Taxi Driver, Technology of the Discworld, Tecpatl, Temple Adas Israel (Brownsville, Tennessee), Temple of the Cross Complex, Terra sigillata, Tetramorph, Thai art, Thai folklore, The Allegory of Faith, The Art of Painting, The Birth of Venus, The Burial of the Count of Orgaz, The Chemicals, The Da Vinci Code (film), The Four Seasons (Poussin), The Garden of Earthly Delights, The Graham Children, The Immaculate Conception (Tiepolo), The KLF, The Last Judgment (Fra Angelico, Florence), The Magdalen Reading, The Mystical Nativity, The Olmec-Maya and Now, The Power of Love (Frankie Goes to Hollywood song), The Power-House, The Primitive Hut, The Ride (The Sopranos), The Tribute Money (Masaccio), The Trinity in art, The Virgin of the Navigators, The Wrestler (sculpture), Theological aesthetics, Theophilos Hatzimihail, Theotokos of Pochayiv, Theotokos of Vladimir, Thetford Hoard, Thornography, Three hares, Three Roots, Throw stick (hieroglyph), Tibetan art, Timotesubani, Tinchy Stryder videography, Titles of Mary, Tjurkö bracteates, Tlaltecuhtli, Toledo Cathedral, Toltec, Tom of Finland, Tom Palin, Tomb of Antipope John XXIII, Tomb of the Bulls, Tourism in Lebanon, Townsite-city-region (hieroglyph), Traditional Berber religion, Transfiguration of Jesus, Transgender history, Treasure of Gourdon, Tree of life, Trefoil knot, Trinity, Triple deity, Troilus, Trois morceaux en forme de poire, Tsepelovo, Tu'er Ye, Tudwal, Turbo-folk, Turin Erotic Papyrus, Turin-Milan Hours, Twyfelfontein, Uday Shankar, United Office Building, University of Rijeka, Unlucky Mummy, Uppland Runic Inscription 1144, Urban iconography, Urnes Stave Church, Use of costume in Athenian tragedy, Utrecht Psalter, Vadstena bracteate, Vahana, Vajra, Valeriy Igoshev, Vandalism of art, Varadamudra, Vasudhara, Vatican Mythographers, Vädersolstavlan, Velificatio, Veneration, Venus and Mars (Botticelli), Vietnamese Nôm Preservation Foundation, Villa Farnese, Vinča symbols, Vincent van Gogh, Virgin and Child Enthroned, Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele, Virgin and Child with Four Angels, Virgin of Mercy, Vishvarupa, Vision Serpent, Vitis, Vleeshuis, W. Stanley Proctor, Warlugulong, Watanabe no Tsuna, Western painting, Westminster Psalter, Wierix family, Will Cotton, William Gibson, William of York, William Spratling, Winchester Psalter, Wintjiya Napaltjarri, Women in Classical Athens, Women in Maya society, Wycliffe's Bible, Xindi (Star Trek), Xochicalco, Yali (mythology), Yannis Tsarouchis, Yaroslav Levchenko, Yidam, Yixian glazed pottery luohans, Yreina Cervantez, Yves Morvan, Zazel, Zemun Cemetery, Zoomorphism, 1360s in art, 1620 in art, 1691 in art, 1950s, 1973 in archaeology, 446, 5th Special Air Service. Expand index (1021 more) »

-graphy

The English suffix -graphy means either "writing" or a "field of study", and is an anglicization of the French -graphie inherited from the Latin -graphia, which is a transliterated direct borrowing from Greek.

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A Dance to the Music of Time (painting)

A Dance to the Music of Time is a painting by Nicolas Poussin in the Wallace Collection in London.

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A Meat Stall with the Holy Family Giving Alms

A Meat Stall with the Holy Family Giving Alms is a painting by the Netherlandish artist Pieter Aertsen (1508–1575).

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Abdullah Buhari

Abdullah Buhari was an 18th-century Ottoman court miniature painter.

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Abel Pann

Abel Pann (1883–1963) was a European Jewish painter who settled in the Talpiot neighborhood of Jerusalem in the early twentieth century and taught at the Bezalel Academy of Art under Boris Schatz.

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Aberrant decoding

Aberrant decoding or aberrant reading is a concept used in fields such as communication and media studies, semiotics, and journalism about how messages can be interpreted differently from what was intended by their sender.

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Abu Mena

Abu Mena (also spelled Abu Mina; ابو مينا) was a town, monastery complex and Christian pilgrimage centre in Late Antique Egypt, about southwest of Alexandria.

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Aby Warburg

Abraham Moritz Warburg, known as Aby Warburg (June 13, 1866 – October 26, 1929), was a German art historian and cultural theorist who founded a private Library for Cultural Studies, the Kulturwissenschaftliche Bibliothek Warburg, which was later moved to the Warburg Institute, London.

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Abyzou

In the myth and folklore of the Near East and Europe, Abyzou is the name of a female demon.

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Acheiropoieta

Acheiropoieta (Medieval Greek: ἀχειροποίητα, "made without hand"; singular acheiropoieton) — also called Icons Made Without Hands (and variants) — are Christian icons which are said to have come into existence miraculously, not created by a human.

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Acqui Award of History

The Acqui Award of History (Premio Acqui Storia) is an Italian prize.

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Ade Bethune

Ade Bethune (January 12, 1914 – May 1, 2002) was a Catholic liturgical artist.

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Adelaide Damoah

Adelaide Damoah is a British artist of Ghanaian descent whose earlier work combined African and Western influences while highlighting social issues.

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Adler

Adler is a surname of German origin meaning eagle, and has a frequency in the United Kingdom of less than 0.004%, and of 0.008% in the United States.

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Adolphe Napoléon Didron

Adolphe Napoléon Didron (1806–1867) was a French art historian and archaeologist.

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Adoration of the Child (Gentile da Fabriano)

The Adoration of the Child is an tempera and gold on panel painting by the Italian late medieval artist Gentile da Fabriano, dating from around 1420–1421 and housed in the Getty Center of Los Angeles, United States.

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Adoration of the Magi

The Adoration of the Magi or Adoration of the Kings is the name traditionally given to the subject in the Nativity of Jesus in art in which the three Magi, represented as kings, especially in the West, having found Jesus by following a star, lay before him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh, and worship him.

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Agatha of Sicily

Saint Agatha of Sicily (c. 231 – c. 251 AD) is a Christian saint and virgin martyr.

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Ah! Sun-flower

"Ah! Sun-flower" is an illustrated poem written by the English poet, painter and printmaker William Blake.

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Albert Küchler

Albert Küchler (2 May 1803 – 16 February 1886) was a Danish painter associated with the Danish Golden Age.

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Albert Kutal

Albert Kutal (9 January 1904, Hranice na Moravě – 27 December 1976, Brno) was a Czech art historian of Moravian descent who established classifying principles of Central European Gothic sculpture as one of the first to study and analyse the medieval art of Bohemia and Moravia, and the influence upon it of Southern European iconography.

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Albertus Magnus

Albertus Magnus, O.P. (c. 1200 – November 15, 1280), also known as Saint Albert the Great and Albert of Cologne, was a German Catholic Dominican friar and bishop.

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Alek Rapoport

Alek Rapoport (November 24, 1933, Kharkiv, Ukraine SSR – February 4, 1997, San Francisco) was a Russian Nonconformist artist, art theorist and teacher.

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Aleksey Lidov

Alexei Mikhailovich Lidov (Russian: Алексей́ Михай́лович Ли́дов) is a Russian art historian and byzantinist, an author of the concepts hierotopy and spatial icon, member of the Russian Academy of Arts.

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Alexander the Great in the Quran

The story of Dhul-Qarnayn (in Arabic ذو القرنين, literally "The Two-Horned One", also transliterated as Zul-Qarnain or Zulqarnain), mentioned in the Quran, may be a reference to Alexander III of Macedon (356–323 BC), popularly known as Alexander the Great.

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Alexandre Astier (historian)

Alexandre Astier (17 February 1968) is a French writer on the religions in India.

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Alexis Rockman

Alexis Rockman (born 1962) is an American contemporary artist known for his paintings that provide rich depictions of future landscapes as they might exist with impacts of climate change and evolution influenced by genetic engineering.

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Alice, Sweet Alice

Alice, Sweet Alice (originally known as Communion and also known as Holy Terror) is a 1976 American slasher film co-written and directed by Alfred Sole, and starring Linda Miller, Paula Sheppard, and Brooke Shields in her film debut.

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Alois Riegl

Alois Riegl (14 January 1858, Linz – 17 June 1905, Vienna) was an Austrian art historian, and is considered a member of the Vienna School of Art History.

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Altar Wings of Roudníky

Altar Wings of Roudníky are two surviving wings of late Gothic retable, which probably originated in one of Prague's contemporary workshops for village (Utraquist) parish church.

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Ambroży Mieroszewski

Ambroży Mieroszewski (1802–1884) was a Polish painter who was Frédéric Chopin's first known portraitist.

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Amy C. Smith

Amy C. Smith is the Curator of the Ure Museum of Greek Archaeology and Professor of Classical Archaeology at Reading University.

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Anagni

Anagni is an ancient town and comune in the province of Frosinone, Latium, central Italy, in the hills east-southeast of Rome.

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Anasyrma

Anasyrma (ἀνάσυρμα) composed of ἀνά ana "up, against, back", and σύρμα syrma "skirt"; plural: anasyrmata (ἀνασύρματα), also called anasyrmos (ἀνασυρμός), is the gesture of lifting the skirt or kilt.

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Anat

Anat, classically Anath (עֲנָת ʿĂnāth; 𐤏𐤍𐤕 ʿAnōt; 𐎓𐎐𐎚 ʿnt; Αναθ Anath; Egyptian Antit, Anit, Anti, or Anant) is a major northwest Semitic goddess.

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Ancient astronauts

"Ancient astronauts" (or "ancient aliens") refers to the pseudoscientific idea that intelligent extraterrestrial beings visited Earth and made contact with humans in antiquity and prehistoric times.

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Ancient Egyptian deities

Ancient Egyptian deities are the gods and goddesses worshipped in ancient Egypt.

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Ancient of Days

Ancient of Days is a name for God in the Book of Daniel: in the original Aramaic atik yomin עַתִּיק יֹומִין; in the Septuagint palaios hemeron παλαιὸς ἡμερῶν; and in the Vulgate antiquus dierum.

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Andean civilizations

The Andean civilizations were a patchwork of different cultures and peoples that developed from the Andes of Colombia southward down the Andes to northern Argentina and Chile, plus the coastal deserts of Peru and northern Chile.

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Andrei Rublev

Andrei Rublev (p, also transliterated as Andrey Rublyov; born in the 1360s, died 29 January 1427 or 1430, or 17 October 1428 in Moscow) is considered to be one of the greatest medieval Russian painters of Orthodox icons and frescos.

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Andrei Rublev (film)

Andrei Rublev (Russian: Андрей Рублёв) is a 1966 Soviet biographical historical drama film directed by Andrei Tarkovsky and co-written with Andrei Konchalovsky.

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Andrei Tarkovsky

Andrei Arsenyevich Tarkovsky (p; 4 April 1932 – 29 December 1986) was a Russian filmmaker, writer, film editor, film theorist, theatre and opera director.

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Andrew the Apostle

Andrew the Apostle (Ἀνδρέας; ⲁⲛⲇⲣⲉⲁⲥ, Andreas; from the early 1st century BC – mid to late 1st century AD), also known as Saint Andrew and referred to in the Orthodox tradition as the First-Called (Πρωτόκλητος, Prōtoklētos), was a Christian Apostle and the brother of Saint Peter.

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Angelo Italia

Angelo Italia (8 May 1628 – 5 May 1700) was an Italian Jesuit and Baroque architect, who was born in Licata and died in Palermo.

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Angelos Akotantos

Angelos Akotantos (Greek: Άγγελος Ακοτάντος) was a 15th-century Byzantine-Cretan Icon-painter and hagiographer who lived and worked at Heraklion, Crete, then part of the Republic of Venice.

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Angels in art

Angels have appeared in works of art since early Christian art, and they have been a popular subject for Byzantine and European paintings and sculpture.

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Anglican devotions

Anglican devotions are private prayers and practices used by Anglican Christians to promote spiritual growth and communion with God.

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Anglo-Saxon art

Anglo-Saxon art covers art produced within the Anglo-Saxon period of English history, beginning with the Migration period style that the Anglo-Saxons brought with them from the continent in the 5th century, and ending in 1066 with the Norman Conquest of a large Anglo-Saxon nation-state whose sophisticated art was influential in much of northern Europe.

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Aniconism in Judaism

Aniconism in Judaism covers a number of areas.

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Animals in Christian art

In Christian art, animal forms have at times occupied a place of importance.

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Anna Maria Bisi

Anna Maria Bisi (1938–1988), known as A. M. Bisi, was an Italian archaeologist and academic, specialising in the Phoenicians and Punics.

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Anne Everett

Anne Everett (1943–2013) was an American artist from the Blue Ridge Mountains, Bedford county, Virginia.

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Annona (mythology)

In ancient Roman religion, Annona (Latin annōna “corn, grain; means of subsistence”, from annus "year") is the divine personification of the grain supply to the city of Rome.

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Annunciation (van Eyck, Washington)

The Annunciation is an oil painting by the Early Netherlandish master Jan van Eyck, from around 1434-1436.

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Anthony Beeson

Anthony Beeson (born April 1948) is a classical iconographer and an expert on Roman and Greek art and architecture.

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Antonio Jose Guzman

Antonio Jose Guzman is a Dutch Panamanian visual artist, communication designer and lecturer.

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Applause (Lady Gaga song)

"Applause" is a song by American singer Lady Gaga from her third studio album, Artpop (2013).

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Aquamanile

In modern usage, an aquamanile (plural aquamanilia or simply aquamaniles) is a ewer or jug-type vessel in the form of one or more animal or human figures.

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Ara Pacis

The Ara Pacis Augustae (Latin, "Altar of Augustan Peace"; commonly shortened to Ara Pacis) is an altar in Rome dedicated to Pax, the Roman goddess of Peace.

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Arc de Triomphe

The Arc de Triomphe de l'Étoile (Triumphal Arch of the Star) is one of the most famous monuments in Paris, standing at the western end of the Champs-Élysées at the center of Place Charles de Gaulle, formerly named Place de l'Étoile — the étoile or "star" of the juncture formed by its twelve radiating avenues.

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Archangel

An archangel is an angel of high rank.

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Archangel Michael in Christian art

Archangel Michael may be depicted in Christian art alone or with other angels such as Gabriel or saints.

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Archbishop's Chapel, Ravenna

The Archbishop's Chapel (or Archiepiscopal Chapel) is a chapel on the first floor of the bishops' palace in Ravenna, Italy, the smallest of the famous mosaic sites of the city.

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Archdiocesan Cathedral of the Holy Trinity

The Archdiocesan Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, at 319–337 East 74th Street on the Upper East Side in New York City, New York, is a Neo-Byzantine-style Greek Orthodox church.

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Architecture of Albania

The Architecture of Albania (— Arkitektura e Shqipërisë) is a reflection of Albania's historical and cultural heritage.

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Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism

The Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism (ARAS) is an encyclopedic collection of archetypal images consisting of photographs of works of art, ritual images, and artifacts of sacred traditions and contemporary art from around the world.

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Arma Christi

Arma Christi ("Weapons of Christ"), or the Instruments of the Passion, are the objects associated with Jesus' Passion in Christian symbolism and art.

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Armada Portrait

The Armada Portrait of Elizabeth I of England is the name of any of three surviving versions of an allegorical panel painting depicting the Tudor queen surrounded by symbols of imperial majesty against a backdrop representing the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588.

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Arnold of Nijmegen

Arnold of Nijmegen (also known as Aert Ortkens, Aert van Hort, Arnoud van Nijmegen, Arnt van Ort van Nijmegen, Arnoult de Nimègue, Arnouldt de la Pointe) (active c. 1490 – c. 1536) was a 15th-century Flemish stained glass artist who worked in both Belgium and France, adopting the Renaissance style and influencing the stained glass workshops of Normandy.

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Arnulf of Metz

Saint Arnulf of Metz (582640) was a Frankish bishop of Metz and advisor to the Merovingian court of Austrasia, who retired to the Abbey of Remiremont.

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Art

Art is a diverse range of human activities in creating visual, auditory or performing artifacts (artworks), expressing the author's imaginative, conceptual idea, or technical skill, intended to be appreciated for their beauty or emotional power.

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Art film

An art film is typically a serious, independent film, aimed at a niche market rather than a mass market audience.

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Art history

Art history is the study of objects of art in their historical development and stylistic contexts; that is genre, design, format, and style.

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Art in the Protestant Reformation and Counter-Reformation

The Protestant Reformation during the 16th century in Europe almost entirely rejected the existing tradition of Catholic art, and very often destroyed as much of it as it could reach.

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Art Museum (Ivano-Frankivsk)

Art Museum Prycarpattya (Музей мистецтв Прикрапаття) is a regional art museum that is located in the Collegiate Church of Virgin Mary in Ivano-Frankivsk.

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Art of El Greco

El Greco (1541–1614) was a prominent painter, sculptor and architect active during the Spanish Renaissance.

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Art of Europe

The art of Europe, or Western art, encompasses the history of visual art in Europe.

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Artistic patronage of the Neapolitan Angevin dynasty

The Artistic Patronage of the Neapolitan Angevin dynasty includes the creation of sculpture, architecture and paintings during the reigns of Charles I, Charles II and Robert of Anjou in the south of Italy.

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Artists of the Tudor court

The artists of the Tudor court are the painters and limners engaged by the monarchs of England's Tudor dynasty and their courtiers between 1485 and 1603, from the reign of Henry VII to the death of Elizabeth I. Typically managing a group of assistants and apprentices in a workshop or studio, many of these artists produced works across several disciplines, including portrait miniatures, large-scale panel portraits on wood, illuminated manuscripts, heraldric emblems, and elaborate decorative schemes for masques, tournaments, and other events.

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Ascension of Jesus in Christian art

The Ascension of Jesus to Heaven as stated in the New Testament has been a frequent subject in Christian art, as well as a theme in theological writings.

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Asherah

Asherah in ancient Semitic religion, is a mother goddess who appears in a number of ancient sources.

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Ashtamangala

The Ashtamangala are a sacred suite of Eight Auspicious Signs endemic to a number of Indian religions such as Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism.

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Ashur (god)

Ashur (also, Assur, Aššur; cuneiform: dAš-šur) is an East Semitic god, and the head of the Assyrian pantheon in Mesopotamian religion, worshipped mainly in the northern half of Mesopotamia, and parts of north-east Syria and south east Asia Minor which constituted old Assyria.

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August 17 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

August 16 - Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar - August 18 All fixed commemorations below are observed on August 30 by Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.

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Awamaki

Awamaki is a small non-profit that works to create economic opportunities and improve social well-being in rural Peru.

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Axial precession

In astronomy, axial precession is a gravity-induced, slow, and continuous change in the orientation of an astronomical body's rotational axis.

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Aylett Sammes

Aylett Sammes (1636?–1679?) was an English antiquary, noted for his theories of Phoenician influence on the Welsh language.

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Azilian

The Azilian is a name given by archaeologists to an industry in the Franco-Cantabrian region of northern Spain and southern France.

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Émile Mâle

Émile Mâle (2 June 1862 – 6 October 1954) was a French art historian, one of the first to study medieval, mostly sacral French art and the influence of Eastern European iconography thereon.

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Émile Savitry

Émile Savitry (1903-1967) was a French photographer and painter.

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Ľudovít Fulla

Ľudovít Fulla (27 February 1902, Ružomberok – 21 April 1980, Bratislava) was a Slovak painter, graphic artist, illustrator, stage designer and art teacher.

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B. N. Mukherjee

Bratindra Nath Mukherjee (1 January 1932 – 4 April 2013) was an Indian historian, numismatist, epigraphist and iconographist, known for his scholarship in central Asian languages such as Sogdian.

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Bad Painting

"Bad" Painting is the name given to a trend in American figurative painting in the 1970s by critic and curator, Marcia Tucker (1940–2006).

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Balthasar Behem Codex

The Balthasar Behem Codex, also known as Codex Picturatus, is a collection of the charters, privileges and statutes of the burghers of the city of Kraków.

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Banner

A banner can be a flag or other piece of cloth bearing a symbol, logo, slogan or other message.

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Banner-making

Banner-making is the ancient art or craft of sewing banners.

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Baptismal font at St Bartholomew's Church, Liège

The baptismal font at St Bartholomew's Church, Liège is a Romanesque brass or bronze baptismal font made between 1107 and 1118 now in St Bartholomew's church in Liège, Belgium.

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Barberini Gospels

The Barberini Gospels is an illuminated Hiberno-Saxon manuscript Gospel Book (Rome, Vatican City, Biblioteca Apostolica, Barberini Lat. 570, also known as the Wigbald Gospels), assumed to be of a late 8th-century origin.

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Barry S. Brook

Barry Shelley Brook (November 1, 1918, New York City – December 7, 1997, New York City) was an American musicologist.

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Basilikon

The basilikon (βασιλικόν, "imperial "), commonly also referred to as the doukaton (Greek: δουκάτον), was a widely circulated Byzantine silver coin of the first half of the 14th century.

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Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell

Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell is the sixth studio album by American rock singer Meat Loaf and was written and produced by Jim Steinman.

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Batavian Republic

The Batavian Republic (Bataafse Republiek; République Batave) was the successor of the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands.

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Batlló Majesty

The Batlló Majesty (Majestat Batlló) is a large 12th-century Romanesque wooden crucifix, now in the National Art Museum of Catalonia in Barcelona, Spain.

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Bayeux Tapestry

The Bayeux Tapestry (Tapisserie de Bayeux or La telle du conquest; Tapete Baiocense) is an embroidered cloth nearly long and tall, which depicts the events leading up to the Norman conquest of England concerning William, Duke of Normandy, and Harold, Earl of Wessex, later King of England, and culminating in the Battle of Hastings.

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Bearded Mary

The Bearded Mary is an image from medieval iconography (from the time of the Carolingian dynasty) in which Mary, the mother of Jesus, is depicted with a beard.

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Beauty Is in the Street

Beauty Is in the Street: A Visual Record of the May 68 Uprising is a 2011 book of posters produced by the Atelier Populaire (Popular Workshop) in support of the May 1968 events in France.

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Belarusian Republican Scout Association

The National Scout Association of Belarus (Белорусская республиканская скаутская ассоциация, formerly Belaruskaya Natsianalnaya Skautskaya Asatsiyatsia, BNSA) is one of several nationwide Scouting associations in Belarus.

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Benno

Saint Benno (– 16 June 1106) was named Bishop of Meissen in 1066.

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Bernard van Orley

Bernard van Orley (between 1487 and 1491 – 6 January 1541), also called Barend or Barent van Orley, Bernaert van Orley or Barend van Brussel, was a leading artist in Dutch and Flemish Renaissance painting, though he was at least as active as a leading designer of Brussels tapestry and, at the end of his life, stained glass.

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Bernardine of Feltre

The Blessed Bernardine of Feltre (sometimes Bernardinus of Feltre) was a Friar Minor and missionary, b. at Feltre, Italy, in 1439 and d. at Pavia, 28 September 1494.

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Bernardo de Miera y Pacheco

Bernardo de Miera y Pacheco (4 August 1713 – 4 or 11 April 1785) was "perhaps the most prolific and important cartographer of New Spain" as well as an artist, particularly as a Santero (wood-carver of religious images).

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Bezhin Meadow

Bezhin Meadow (italic-yes, Bezhin lug) is a 1937 Soviet film famous for having been suppressed and believed destroyed before its completion.

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Bhrikuti

The Licchavi Princess Bhrikuti Devi, known to Tibetans as Bal-mo-bza' Khri-btsun, Bhelsa Tritsun ('Nepali consort') or, simply, Khri bTsun ("Royal Lady"), is traditionally considered to have been the first wife of the earliest emperor of Tibet, Songtsen Gampo (605? - 650 CE), and an incarnation of Tara.

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Bible and Orient Museum

The Bible and Orient Museum (officially: BIBLE+ORIENT Museum) in Fribourg, Switzerland is the exhibition of a collection of ancient Egyptian and ancient Near Eastern miniature art, as well as a project to create a modern museum to compare biblical and extra-biblical texts with archaeological, epigraphical and iconographical data.

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Biga (chariot)

The biga (Latin, plural bigae) is the two-horse chariot as used in ancient Rome for sport, transportation, and ceremonies.

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Bill Keith (artist)

William "Bill" Keith (January 20, 1929 – September 1, 2004) was an American artist who began his artistic life as a painter, but moved into photography and visual poetry.

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Birds' Head Haggadah

The Birds' Head Haggadah (c. 1300) is the oldest surviving illuminated Ashkenazi Passover Haggadah.

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Birthday Boy (film)

Birthday Boy is a 2004 short film.

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Bitola

Bitola (Битола known also by several alternative names) is a city in the southwestern part of the Republic of Macedonia.

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Black-figure pottery

Black-figure pottery painting, also known as the black-figure style or black-figure ceramic (Greek, μελανόμορφα, melanomorpha) is one of the styles of painting on antique Greek vases.

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Blanche Parry

Blanche Parry (1507/8–12 February 1590) of Newcourt in the parish of Bacton, Herefordshire, in the Welsh Marches, was a personal attendant of Queen Elizabeth I, who held the offices of Chief Gentlewoman of the Queen's Most Honourable Privy Chamber and Keeper of Her Majesty’s Jewels.

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Blood squirt

Blood squirt (blood spurt, blood spray, blood gush, or blood jet) is the effect when an artery, a blood vessel in the human body (or other organism's body) is cut.

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Bloodletting in Mesoamerica

Bloodletting was the ritualized self-cutting or piercing of an individual's body that served a number of ideological and cultural functions within ancient Mesoamerican societies, in particular the Maya.

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Blue-green

Blue-green/bottle green is a color that is a representation of the color that is between green and blue on a typical traditional old-fashioned RYB color wheel.

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Bollingen Foundation

The Bollingen Foundation was an educational foundation set up along the lines of a university press in 1945.

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Book of hours

The book of hours is a Christian devotional book popular in the Middle Ages.

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Boot

A boot is a type of footwear and a specific type of shoe.

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Borys Buryak

Borys Buryak (born 25 October 1953 in Podvirne, Chernivtsi Oblast, in the Ukrainian SSR of the Soviet Union) is a Ukrainian painter.

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Bosnian Church

The Bosnian Church (Crkva Bosanska/Црква Босанска) was a Christian church in medieval Bosnia that was independent of and considered heretical by both the Roman Catholic and the Eastern Orthodox hierarchies.

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Bosom of Abraham Trinity

The Bosom of Abraham Trinity, also known as the Trinity with souls, is a rare iconography apparently unique to English medieval alabaster sculpture, of which only twelve examples are known to have survived, although there were undoubtedly many more made.

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Brescia Casket

The Brescia Casket or Lipsanotheca (in Italian Lipsanoteca) is an ivory box, perhaps a reliquary, from the late 4th century, which is now in the Museo di Santa Giulia at San Salvatore in Brescia, Italy.

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Buddhist influences on Christianity

Some scholars believe that there exist significant Buddhist influences on Christianity reaching back to Christianity's earliest days.

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Bull Palette

The Bull Palette is an ancient Egyptian palette in the corpus of iconographic cosmetic palettes that focus on topics from the Late Predynastic Period, ca late 4th millennium BC.

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Burney Relief

The Burney Relief (also known as the Queen of the Night relief) is a Mesopotamian terracotta plaque in high relief of the Isin-Larsa or Old-Babylonian period, depicting a winged, nude, goddess-like figure with bird's talons, flanked by owls, and perched upon two lions.

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Bushranger

Bushrangers were originally escaped convicts in the early years of the British settlement of Australia who had the survival skills necessary to use the Australian bush as a refuge to hide from the authorities.

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Byzantine dress

Byzantine dress changed considerably over the thousand years of the Empire, but was essentially conservative.

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Byzantine Rite

The Byzantine Rite, also known as the Greek Rite or Constantinopolitan Rite, is the liturgical rite used by the Eastern Orthodox Church as well as by certain Eastern Catholic Churches; also, parts of it are employed by, as detailed below, other denominations.

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C. Sivaramamurti

Calambur Sivaramamurti, (1909–1983) was an Indian museologist, art historian and epigraphist who is primarily known for his work as curator in the Government Museum, Chennai.

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Caesarius of Heisterbach

Caesarius of Heisterbach (ca. 1180 – ca. 1240) (sometimes erroneously called in English Caesar of Heisterbach) was the prior of the former Cistercian monastery Heisterbach Abbey, in the Siebengebirge near the little town of Oberdollendorf, Germany.

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Cahokia

The Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site (11 MS 2) is the site of a pre-Columbian Native American city (circa 1050–1350 CE) directly across the Mississippi River from modern St. Louis, Missouri.

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Cameo glass

Cameo glass is a luxury form of glass art produced by etching and carving through fused layers of differently colored glass to produce designs, usually with white opaque glass figures and motifs on a dark-colored background.

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Camera di San Paolo

vault frescoes. Coat of arms of abbess Giovanna. The fresco of Diana in the fireplace. The Camera di San Paolo (Italian: "Chamber of St. Paul) or Camera della Badessa (Italian: "Abbess' Chamber") is a room in the former Monastery of San Paolo, in Parma, northern Italy.

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Campana reliefs

Campana reliefs (also Campana tiles) are Ancient Roman terracotta reliefs made from the middle of the first century BC until the first half of the second century AD.

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Canterbury Treasure

The Canterbury Treasure is an important late Roman silver hoard found in the city of Canterbury, Kent, south-east England in 1962, and now in the Roman Museum, Canterbury, Kent.

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Cantore al liuto

The “Cantore al liuto” - typical Italian definition for musicians and composers at the end of 1400 - is the singing lutist whose description and historical representation are deeply rooted in the past going back to the myth of Orpheus.

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Carel Fabritius

Carel Pietersz.

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Carlos Aguilar Piedra

Carlos Aguilar Piedra (August 24, 1917 - March 31, 2008) was a prominent Costa Rican archaeologist on the faculty of the University of Costa Rica.

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Carnutes

The Carnutes, a powerful Gaulish people in the heart of independent Gaul, dwelt in an extensive territory between the Sequana (Seine) and the Liger (Loire) rivers.

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Carolingian art

Carolingian art comes from the Frankish Empire in the period of roughly 120 years from about 780 to 900—during the reign of Charlemagne and his immediate heirs—popularly known as the Carolingian Renaissance.

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Carved lacquer

Carved lacquer or Qīdiāo is a distinctive Chinese form of decorated lacquerware.

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Castelseprio (archaeological park)

Castelseprio or Castel Seprio was the site of a Roman fort in antiquity, and a significant Lombard town in the early Middle Ages, before being destroyed and abandoned in 1287.

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Catacombs of Rome

The Catacombs of Rome (Catacombe di Roma) are ancient catacombs, underground burial places under Rome, Italy, of which there are at least forty, some discovered only in recent decades.

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Cathedral of Hajdúdorog

The Cathedral of Hajdúdorog, officially Greek Catholic Cathedral of the Presentation of Mary in Hajdúdorog (Hungarian: Hajdúdorogi Istenszülő Bevezetése a Templomba Székesegyház) is the cathedral of the Archeparchy of Hajdúdorog, Hungary.

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Catherine de' Medici's building projects

Catherine de' Medici's building projects included the Valois chapel at Saint-Denis, the Tuileries Palace, and the Hôtel de la Reine in Paris, and extensions to the château of Chenonceau, near Blois.

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Catherine of Alexandria

Saint Catherine of Alexandria, or Saint Catharine of Alexandria, also known as Saint Catherine of the Wheel and The Great Martyr Saint Catherine (Ϯⲁⲅⲓⲁ Ⲕⲁⲧⲧⲣⲓⲛ, ἡ Ἁγία Αἰκατερίνη ἡ Μεγαλομάρτυς – translation: Holy Catherine the Great Martyr) is, according to tradition, a Christian saint and virgin, who was martyred in the early 4th century at the hands of the pagan emperor Maxentius.

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Catholic Church art

Catholic art consists of all visual works produced in an attempt to illustrate, supplement and portray in tangible form the teachings of the Catholic Church.

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Cave of Beasts

The Cave of the Beasts (also named Foggini-Mestikawi Cave or Foggini Cave or Cave Wadi Sura II) is a huge natural rock shelter in the Western Desert of Egypt featuring Neolithic rock paintings, more than 7,000 years old, with about 5,000 figures.

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Celtic art

Celtic art is associated with the peoples known as Celts; those who spoke the Celtic languages in Europe from pre-history through to the modern period, as well as the art of ancient peoples whose language is uncertain, but have cultural and stylistic similarities with speakers of Celtic languages.

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Celtic mythology

Celtic mythology is the mythology of Celtic polytheism, the religion of the Iron Age Celts.

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Centre de l'Imaginaire Arthurien

The Centre de l'Imaginaire Arthurien (English:The Centre for the Arthurian Imaginary, but often referred to as the Centre Arthurien, English:The Arthurian Centre) is a cultural centre dedicated to the Matter of Britain.

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Cesare Ripa

Cesare Ripa (c. 1560, Perugia – c. 1622) was an Italian iconographer who worked for Cardinal Anton Maria Salviati as a cook and butler.

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Charalambos

Charalambos (Άγιος Χαράλαμπος) (also variously Charalampus, Charalambos, Haralampus, Haralampos, Haralabos or Haralambos) was an early Christian bishop in Magnesia on the Maeander, a region of Asia Minor, in the diocese of the same name.

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Charalambos Pachis

Charalambos Pachis (Greek: Χαράλαμπος Παχής; 1844, Corfu – 1891, Corfu) was a Greek painter of the Heptanese school who specialized in landscapes and historical scenes.

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Chariotry in ancient Egypt

In ancient Egyptian society chariotry stood as an independent unit in the King’s military force.

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Charlotte Cheverton

Charlotte Mary Rose Cheverton (née Ramsden) was born on 16 January 1960 in Ripon, Yorkshire.

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Charnel ground

A charnel ground (Devanagari: श्मशान; Romanized Sanskrit: śmaśān; Tibetan pronunciation: durtrö),Rigpa Shedra (July 2009).

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Charon's obol

Charon's obol is an allusive term for the coin placed in or on the mouth of a dead person before burial.

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Chatra (umbrella)

The chatra (from छत्र, meaning "umbrella") is an auspicious symbol in Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism.

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Chöd

Chöd (lit. 'to sever'), is a spiritual practice found primarily in the Nyingma and Kagyu schools of Tibetan Buddhism (where it is classed as Anuttarayoga Tantra).

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Che Guevara in popular culture

Appearances of Argentine Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara (1928–1967) in popular culture are common throughout the world.

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Chimera of Arezzo

The Chimera of Arezzo is regarded as the best example of ancient Etruscan artwork.

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China–Nepal relations

The bilateral relation between Nepal and China has been friendly and is defined by the Sino-Nepal Treaty of Peace and Friendship signed on April 28, 1960 by the two countries.

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Chinese pagoda

Chinese pagodas are a traditional part of Chinese architecture.

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Cholula, Puebla

Cholula (Spanish) is a city and district located in the center west of the state of Puebla, next to the city of Puebla de Zaragoza, in central Mexico.

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Christ Child

The Christ Child, also known as Divine Infant, Baby Jesus, Infant Jesus, Child Jesus, the Holy Child, and Santo Niño, refers to Jesus Christ from his nativity to age 12.

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Christ in the winepress

Christ in the winepress or the mystical winepress is a motif in Christian iconography showing Christ standing in a winepress, where Christ himself becomes the grapes in the press.

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Christ Pantocrator

In Christian iconography, Christ Pantocrator is a specific depiction of Christ.

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Christ treading on the beasts

Christ treading on the beasts is a subject found in Late Antique and Early Medieval art, though it is never common.

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Christendom

Christendom has several meanings.

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Christian art

Christian art is sacred art which uses themes and imagery from Christianity.

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Christian cross

The Christian cross, seen as a representation of the instrument of the crucifixion of Jesus, is the best-known symbol of Christianity.

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Christian culture

Christian culture is the cultural practices common to Christianity.

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Christian influences in Islam

Christian influences in Islam could be traced back to the Eastern Christianity, which surrounded the origins of Islam.

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Christian views on Hell

In Christian theology, Hell is the place or state into which by God's definitive judgment unrepentant sinners pass either immediately after death (particular judgment) or in the general judgment.

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Christmas

Christmas is an annual festival commemorating the birth of Jesus Christ,Martindale, Cyril Charles.

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Church of Saint Maria del Soccorso

The ex Church of Saint Maria del Soccorso (often called Church of Perpetual Help) is a Catholic Church located in Alcamo, in the province of Trapani.

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Church of St Mary, Abbas and Templecombe

The Anglican Church of St Mary at Templecombe, within the English county of Somerset, was built in the 12th century and is a Grade II* listed building.

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Church of St Peter, Berende

The Church of St Peter (църква „Свети Петър“, tsarkva „Sveti Petar“) or Church of Saints Peter and Paul is a small medieval Bulgarian Orthodox church located in the village of Berende in Dragoman Municipality, Sofia Province, in westernmost Bulgaria.

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Church of St. Anthony of Padua, Belgrade

On one of the peripheral hills towards Zvezdara, close to Crveni krst, between the Bregalnička and Pop Stojanova Street, stands a very unusual church in Belgrade.

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Church of St. Nicholas, Brezova

The Church of Saint Nicholas (Црква Светог Николе/Crkva Svetog Nikole) is a church of the Serbian Orthodox Church, located in the village of Brezova, 26 km southwest of Ivanjica.

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Circle of stars

A circle of stars often represents unity, solidarity and harmony in flags, seals and signs, and is also seen in iconographic motifs related to the Woman of the Apocalypse as well as in Baroque allegoric art that sometimes depicts the Crown of Immortality.

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Circumcision of Jesus

The circumcision of Jesus is an event from the life of Jesus, according to the Gospel of Luke, which states in verse 2:21 that Jesus was circumcised eight days after his birth (traditionally January 1).

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Claude-François Baudez

Claude-François Baudez (3 December 1932 – 13 July 2013) was a French Mayanist, archaeologist and iconologist.

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Coat of arms of Mide

Mide or Meath, a medieval Irish province, is sometimes represented by a coat of arms comprising a monarch "in majesty": that is, seated on a throne on a field of azure (blue).

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Codex Vyssegradensis

The Vyšehrad Codex (Latin Codex Vyssegradensis), also known as the Coronation Gospels of King Vratislaus, is a late 11th-century illuminated Romanesque Gospel Book, which is considered the most important and most valuable manuscript kept in Bohemia (Czech Republic).

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Coinage in Anglo-Saxon England

Coinage in Anglo-Saxon England refers to the use of coins, either for monetary value or for other purposes, in Anglo-Saxon England during the early Medieval period.

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Comalcalco

Comalcalco is a city located in Comalcalco Municipality about 45 miles (60 km) northwest of Villahermosa in the Mexican state of Tabasco.

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Combing (torture)

Combing, sometimes known as carding,"Card".

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Comité International d'Histoire de l'Art

The Comité International d'Histoire de l'Art (CIHA) is an international committee that endeavors to improve art historical research.

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Commodus

Commodus (31 August 161– 31 December 192AD), born Lucius Aurelius Commodus and died Lucius Aelius Aurelius Commodus, was Roman emperor with his father Marcus Aurelius from177 to his father's death in 180, and solely until 192.

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Conflation

Conflation happens when the identities of two or more individuals, concepts, or places, sharing some characteristics of one another, seem to be a single identity, and the differences appear to become lost.

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Confronted animals

Confronted animals, or confronted-animal as an adjective, where two animals face each other in a symmetrical pose, is an ancient bilateral motif in art and artifacts studied in archaeology and art history.

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Conjectural portrait

A conjectural portrait is a portrait made of a historical figure for whom no authentic contemporary portrait is available.

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Coptic art

Coptic art is a term used either for the art of Egypt produced in the early Christian era or for the art produced by the Coptic Christians themselves.

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Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria

The Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria (Coptic: Ϯⲉⲕ̀ⲕⲗⲏⲥⲓⲁ ̀ⲛⲣⲉⲙ̀ⲛⲭⲏⲙⲓ ⲛⲟⲣⲑⲟⲇⲟⲝⲟⲥ, ti.eklyseya en.remenkimi en.orthodoxos, literally: the Egyptian Orthodox Church) is an Oriental Orthodox Christian church based in Egypt, Northeast Africa and the Middle East.

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Coromandel lacquer

Coromandel lacquer is a type of Chinese lacquerware, latterly mainly made for export, so called only in the West because it was shipped to European markets via the Coromandel coast of south-east India, where the Dutch East Indies Company (VOC) and its rivals from a number of European powers had bases in the 18th century.

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Coryphaeus

In Attic drama, the coryphaeus, corypheus, or koryphaios (Greek κορυφαῖος koryphaîos, from κορυφή koryphḗ́, the top of the head) was the leader of the chorus.

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Cotton library

The Cotton or Cottonian library is a collection of manuscripts once owned by Sir Robert Bruce Cotton MP (1571–1631), an antiquarian and bibliophile.

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Council of Hieria

The iconoclast Council of Hieria was a Christian council of 754 which viewed itself as ecumenical, but was later rejected by the medieval Catholic Church (what would later fracture into the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic communions).

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Council of Trent

The Council of Trent (Concilium Tridentinum), held between 1545 and 1563 in Trent (or Trento, in northern Italy), was an ecumenical council of the Catholic Church.

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Counter-Reformation

The Counter-Reformation, also called the Catholic Reformation or the Catholic Revival, was the period of Catholic resurgence initiated in response to the Protestant Reformation, beginning with the Council of Trent (1545–1563) and ending at the close of the Thirty Years' War (1648).

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Craig Harbison

Craig S. Harbison (April 19, 1944 – May 17, 2018) was an American art historian specialising in 15th and 16th-century Flemish and Northern Renaissance painting.

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Crescent

A crescent shape (British English also) is a symbol or emblem used to represent the lunar phase in the first quarter (the "sickle moon"), or by extension a symbol representing the Moon itself.

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Cristóbal Vela

Cristóbal Vela (c. 1588-1658) was a Spanish Baroque painter and gilder.

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Cristina Rodrigues

Cristina Rodrigues (Porto, born 1 July 1980) is a Portuguese artist and architect.

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Croatian art

Croatian art describes the visual arts in Croatia from medieval times to the present.

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Cross in the Mountains

Cross in the Mountains, also known as the Tetschen Altar, is an oil painting by the German artist Caspar David Friedrich designed as an altarpiece.

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Crown of Immortality

The Crown of Immortality is a literary and religious metaphor traditionally represented in art first as a laurel wreath and later as a symbolic circle of stars (often a crown, tiara, halo or aureola).

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Crucifixion and Last Judgement diptych

The Crucifixion and Last Judgement diptych (or Diptych with Calvary and Last Judgement)Vermij et al., 362 consists of two small painted panels attributed to the Early Netherlandish artist Jan van Eyck, with areas finished by unidentified followers or members of his workshop.

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Cuckold

A cuckold is the husband of an adulterous wife.

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Cultural appropriation

Cultural appropriation is a concept dealing with the adoption of the elements of a minority culture by members of the dominant culture.

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Cultural depictions of the dog

Cultural depictions of dogs extend back thousands of years to when dogs were portrayed on the walls of caves.

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Cultural encoding

Cultural encoding is a process in which a website or related node is "encoded" with the language, symbols, or representative styles of particular culture or subculture.

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Cultural influence of the September 11 attacks

The cultural influence of the September 11 attacks (9/11) has been profound and long-lasting.

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Culture of Bulgaria

A number of ancient civilizations, including the Thracians, Ancient Greeks, Romans, Ostrogoths, Slavs, Varangians and probably Bulgars, have left their mark on the culture, history and heritage of Bulgaria.

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Culture of Europe

The culture of Europe is rooted in the art, architecture, music, literature, and philosophy that originated from the continent of Europe.

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Dabhoi

Dabhoi, also called Darbhavati, is a town and a municipality in Vadodara district in the state of Gujarat, India.

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Dadar (ritual tool)

The Dadar (Tibetan; Wylie: mda' dar), or arrow often though not always dressed with rainbow ribbon, is a teaching tool, ritual instrument symbol for Nyingmapa and Bonpo Dzogchenpa and is a particular attribute for Mandarava and Saraha.

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Daemon (classical mythology)

Daemon is the Latin word for the Ancient Greek daimon (δαίμων: "god", "godlike", "power", "fate"), which originally referred to a lesser deity or guiding spirit; the daemons of ancient Greek religion and mythology and of later Hellenistic religion and philosophy.

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Dafna Kaffeman

Dafna Kaffeman (born 1972, Jerusalem) is an artist and a senior lecturer at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design.

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Danake

The danake or danace (Greek: δανάκη) was a small silver coin of the Persian Empire (Old Persian dânake), equivalent to the Greek obol and circulated among the eastern Greeks.

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Danielle Bleitrach

Danielle Bleitrach (born in 1938) is a French sociologist and journalist.

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Debashree Roy

Debashree Roy (also known as Debasree Roy) is an Indian actress, dancer, choreographer, politician and animal rights activist.

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Dechristianization of France during the French Revolution

The dechristianization of France during the French Revolution is a conventional description of the results of a number of separate policies conducted by various governments of France between the start of the French Revolution in 1789 and the Concordat of 1801, forming the basis of the later and less radical laïcité policies.

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Depiction

Depiction is reference conveyed through pictures.

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Depiction of Jesus

No useful description of the physical appearance of Jesus is given in the New Testament and the depiction of Jesus in pictorial form was controversial in the early Church.

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Desco da parto

A painted desco da parto (a birth tray or birth salver) was an important symbolic gift on the occasion of a successful birth in late medieval and Early Modern Florence and Siena.

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Deshret

Deshret, from Ancient Egyptian, was the formal name for the Red Crown of Lower Egypt and for the desert Red Land on either side of Kemet (Black Land), the fertile Nile river basin.

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Desiderio da Settignano

Desiderio da Settignano, real name Desiderio de Bartolomeo di Francesco detto Ferro (1428 or 1430 – 1464) was an Italian sculptor active during the Renaissance.

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Dharmapala

A dharmapāla is a type of wrathful god in Buddhism.

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Di nixi

In ancient Roman religion, the di nixi (or dii nixi), also Nixae, were birth deities.

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Diane Falkenhagen

Diane Falkenhagen is an American artist metalsmith living and working in Texas.

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Dimitar Dobrovich

Dimitar Georgiev Dobrovich (Димитър Георгиев Добрович; 1816 – 2 March 1905) was the first academically-trained Bulgarian painter and a participant in the revolutions of 1848 in the Italian states.

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Dionysius of Fourna

Dionysius of Fourna (c. 1670 - after 1744) was an Eastern Orthodox author of a manual of iconography and painting in the 18th century.

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Diptych by Giovanni da Rimini

Among the paintings attributed to Giovanni da Rimini (fl. 1292–1336) are two panels from a former diptych, dated to 1300–1305, of which the left wing is in the collection of the National Gallery, London, and the right that of the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, Palazzo Barberini, Rome.

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Djedmaatesankh

Djedmaatesankh was an Egyptian woman from the city then known as Waset (known to the Greeks as Thebes, now natively known as Luxor) who died in the middle of the 9th century B.C. She was an ordinary middle-class woman and musician.

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Don Gregorio Antón

Don Gregorio Antón is a photographer and an Emeritus Professor of Art of Humboldt State University (HSU).

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Doni Tondo

The Doni Tondo or Doni Madonna, is the only finished panel painting by the mature Michelangelo to survive.

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Donyi-Polo

Donyi-Polo (also Donyi-Poloism) is the designation given to the indigenous religions, of animistic and shamanic type, of the Tani and other Tibeto-Burman peoples of Arunachal Pradesh, in north-eastern India.

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Dormition of the Virgin (El Greco)

El Greco painted his Dormition of the Virgin near the end of his Cretan period, probably before 1567.

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Doves as symbols

Doves, usually white in color, are used in a lot of settings as symbols of love, peace or as messengers.

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Dracula (1931 English-language film)

Dracula is a 1931 American pre-Code vampire-horror film directed by Tod Browning and starring Bela Lugosi as Count Dracula.

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Dragomirna

The Dragomirna Monastery was built during the first three decades of the 17th century, 15 km from Suceava, in Mitocu Dragomirnei commune.

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Dragotinci, Sveti Jurij ob Ščavnici

Dragotinci is a settlement in the Municipality of Sveti Jurij ob Ščavnici in northeastern Slovenia.

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Dramyin

The dramyin or dranyen (dramnyen) is a traditional Himalayan folk music lute with six strings, used primarily as an accompaniment to singing in the Drukpa Buddhist culture and society in Bhutan, as well as in Tibet, Sikkim and Himalayan West Bengal.

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Dresden Triptych

The Dresden Triptych (or Virgin and Child with St. Michael and St. Catherine and a Donor, or Triptych of the Virgin and Child) is a very small hinged-triptych altarpiece by the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck.

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Druze

The Druze (درزي or, plural دروز; דרוזי plural דרוזים) are an Arabic-speaking esoteric ethnoreligious group originating in Western Asia who self-identify as unitarians (Al-Muwaḥḥidūn/Muwahhidun).

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Dura-Europos

Dura-Europos (Δοῦρα Εὐρωπός), also spelled Dura-Europus, was a Hellenistic, Parthian and Roman border city built on an escarpment above the right bank of the Euphrates river.

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Dura-Europos church

The Dura-Europos church (also known as the Dura-Europos house church) is the earliest identified Christian house church.

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Eadwine Psalter

The Eadwine Psalter or Eadwin Psalter is a heavily illuminated 12th-century psalter named after the scribe Eadwine, a monk of Christ Church, Canterbury (now Canterbury Cathedral), who was perhaps the "project manager" for the large and exceptional book.

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Eanna-shum-iddina kudurru

The Eanna-shum-iddina kudurru is a boundary stone of governor Eanna-shum-iddina in the Sealand Dynasty of Babylon in the mid 2nd millennium BC.

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Early Christian art and architecture

Early Christian art and architecture or Paleochristian art is the art produced by Christians or under Christian patronage from the earliest period of Christianity to, depending on the definition used, sometime between 260 and 525.

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Early Netherlandish painting

Early Netherlandish painting is the work of artists, sometimes known as the Flemish Primitives, active in the Burgundian and Habsburg Netherlands during the 15th- and 16th-century Northern Renaissance; especially in the flourishing cities of Bruges, Ghent, Mechelen, Louvain, Tournai and Brussels, all in contemporary Belgium.

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Early Netherlandish Painting (Friedländer)

Early Netherlandish Painting (German: Die altniederländische Malerei) is a pioneering 14-volume series of illustrated books by the German art historian Max Jakob Friedländer (1867–1958).

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Early Netherlandish Painting (Panofsky)

Early Netherlandish Painting, Its Origins and Character, is a 1953 book on art history by Erwin Panofsky, derived from the 1947–48 Charles Eliot Norton Lectures.

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Earth (classical element)

Earth is one of the classical elements, in some systems numbering four along with air, fire, and water.

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Eastern Orthodox theology

Eastern Orthodox theology is the theology particular to the Eastern Orthodox Church (officially the Orthodox Catholic Church).

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Ecclesia and Synagoga

Ecclesia and Synagoga, or Ecclesia et Synagoga in Latin, meaning "Church and Synagogue", are a pair of figures personifying the Church and the Jewish synagogue, that is to say the Jewish religion, found in medieval Christian art.

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Ecclesiastical heraldry

Ecclesiastical heraldry refers to the use of heraldry within the Christian Church for dioceses and Christian clergy.

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Eduardo Úrculo

Eduardo Úrculo (21 September 1938 – 31 March 2003), was a Spanish pop artist who also worked in other art movements, including Expressionism and Neo-Cubism.

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Eduardo Urbano Merino

Eduardo Urbano Merino is a Mexican painter and sculptor.

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Egbert (archbishop of Trier)

Egbert (ca. 950 – 9 December 993) was the Archbishop of Trier from 977 until his death.

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Eggenberg Palace, Graz

Eggenberg Palace (Schloss Eggenberg) in Graz is the most significant Baroque palace complex in Styria.

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Ekphrasis

Ekphrasis or ecphrasis, comes from the Greek for the description of a work of art produced as a rhetorical exercise, often used in the adjectival form ekphrastic, is a vivid, often dramatic, verbal description of a visual work of art, either real or imagined.

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El Greco

Doménikos Theotokópoulos (Δομήνικος Θεοτοκόπουλος; October 1541 7 April 1614), most widely known as El Greco ("The Greek"), was a painter, sculptor and architect of the Spanish Renaissance.

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El Panecillo

El Panecillo (from Spanish panecillo small piece of bread, diminutive of pan bread) is a 200-metre-high hill of volcanic-origin, with loess soil, located between southern and central Quito.

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Electric Jukebox

Electric Jukebox is a digital media player developed by The Electric Jukebox Company.

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Elephant goad

The elephant goad, bullhook, or ankus (from Sanskrit or ankusha) is a tool employed by mahout in the handling and training of elephants.

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Elizabeth Catlett

Elizabeth Catlett (April 15, 1915 – April 2, 2012) was an African-American graphic artist and sculptor best known for her depictions of the African-American experience in the 20th century, which often focused on the female experience.

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Elizabeth I of England

Elizabeth I (7 September 1533 – 24 March 1603) was Queen of England and Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death on 24 March 1603.

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Ellen Gallagher

Ellen Gallagher (born December 16, 1965) is an American artist.

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Emanuel Leutze

Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze (May 24, 1816July 18, 1868) was a German American history painter best known for his painting Washington Crossing the Delaware.

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English Apocalypse manuscripts

Illustrated Apocalypse manuscripts are manuscripts that contain the text of Revelation or a commentary on Revelation and also illustrations.

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Enguerrand Quarton

Enguerrand Quarton (or Charonton) (1410 – 1466) was a French painter and manuscript illuminator whose few surviving works are among the first masterpieces of a distinctively French style, very different from either Italian or Early Netherlandish painting.

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Ennio Quirino Visconti

Ennio Quirino Visconti (November 1, 1751 – February 7, 1818) was an Italian antiquarian and art historian, papal Prefect of Antiquities, and the leading expert of his day in the field of ancient Roman sculpture.

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Ensemble Micrologus

Ensemble Micrologus is an Italian group that performs vocal and instrumental medieval music, including both religious and secular pieces from the 12th to the 16th century in their repertoire.

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Ephraim of Nea Makri

St.

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Eric Van Hove

Éric Philippe Bernard Van Hove Marsan de Mondragon (born 1975 in Guelma, Algeria) is a Cameroon-raised Belgian conceptual artist, social entrepreneur, poet and traveler.

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Erie, Pennsylvania

Erie is a city in and the county seat of Erie County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Ernst Kitzinger

Ernst Kitzinger (December 27, 1912 – January 22, 2003) was a German-American historian of late antique, early medieval, and Byzantine art.

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Erotes

The Erotes are a collective of winged gods associated with love and sexual intercourse in Greek mythology.

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Erotic art

Erotic art covers any artistic work that is intended to evoke erotic arousal or that depicts scenes of love-making.

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Erwin Panofsky

Erwin Panofsky (March 30, 1892 in Hannover – March 14, 1968 in Princeton, New Jersey) was a German-Jewish art historian, whose academic career was pursued mostly in the U.S. after the rise of the Nazi regime.

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Erzulie

Erzulie (sometimes spelled Erzili or Ezili) is a family of loa, or spirits in Vodou.

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Esphigmenou

Esphigmenou monastery (Μονή Εσφιγμένου) is an Eastern Orthodox monastery in the monastic state of Mount Athos in Greece, dedicated to the Ascension of Christ.

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Esquiline Treasure

The Esquiline Treasure is an ancient Roman silver treasure that was found in 1793 on the Esquiline Hill in Rome.

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Ethiopian art

Ethiopian art from the 4th century until the 20th can be divided into two broad groupings.

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Etowah plates

The Etowah plates, including the Rogan Plates, are a collection of Mississippian copper plates discovered in Mound C at the Etowah Indian Mounds near Cartersville, Georgia.

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Euphronios

Euphronios (Εὐφρόνιος; c. 535 – after 470 BC) was an ancient Greek vase painter and potter, active in Athens in the late 6th and early 5th centuries BC.

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Eve, the Serpent and Death

Eve, the Serpent and Death (or Eve, the Serpent, and Adam as Death) is a painting by the German Renaissance artist Hans Baldung, housed in the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa.

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Everaldo Coelho

Everaldo Coelho (born March 25, 1978) is a Brazilian graphic designer and illustrator.

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Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy

The Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy (Iubilaeum Extraordinarium Misericordiae) was a Roman Catholic period of prayer held from 8 December 2015, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, to 20 November 2016, the Feast of Christ the King.

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Eye of Providence

The Eye of Providence (or the all-seeing eye of God) is a symbol showing an eye often surrounded by rays of light or a glory and usually enclosed by a triangle.

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FAILE (artist collaboration)

FAILE (Pronounced "fail") is a Brooklyn-based artistic collaboration between Patrick McNeil (born 1975) and Patrick Miller (born 1976).

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Farnese Cup

The Farnese Cup or Tazza Farnese is a 2nd-century BC cameo hardstone carving bowl or cup made in Hellenistic Egypt in four-layered sardonyx agate, now in the Naples National Archaeological MuseumInv.

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Felipe Aldana

Felipe Aldana (1922–1970) was an Argentine poet.

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Felipe Ehrenberg

Felipe Ehrenberg (27 June 1943, Tlacopac, Mexico City, 1943 – 15 May 2017) was a Mexican artist who worked in painting, drawing, printmaking and performance, among other mediums.

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Female Figure (Giambologna)

Female Figure is a near life-size 16th century marble statue by the Flemish sculptor Giambologna.

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Ferdinand the Holy Prince

Ferdinand the Holy Prince (Fernando o Infante Santo; 29 September 1402 – 5 June 1443), sometimes called the "Saint Prince" or the "Constant Prince", was an infante of the Kingdom of Portugal.

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Fernando Gallego

Fernando Gallego (1440 – 1507) was a Spanish painter, and his art is generally regarded as Hispano-Flemish in style.

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Festival of Santa Esterica

The Festival of Santa Esterica is a holiday that was created as a substitute for Purim by the Anusim also known as "Conversos" (Sephardi Jews forced to convert to Catholicism) after the Explusion of Spain in the late 15th Century.

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Ficus

Ficus is a genus of about 850 species of woody trees, shrubs, vines, epiphytes and hemiepiphytes in the family Moraceae.

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Finding of Moses

The Finding of Moses, sometimes called Moses in the Bullrushes, Moses Saved from the Waters, or other variants, is the story in chapter 2 of the Book of Exodus in the Hebrew Bible of the finding in the River Nile of Moses as a baby by the daughter of Pharoah.

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Flag of Europe

The European Flag is an official symbol of two separate organisations—the Council of Europe (CoE) and the European Union (EU).

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Flagellation of Christ (Piero della Francesca)

The Flagellation of Christ (probably 1455–1460) is a painting by Piero della Francesca in the Galleria Nazionale delle Marche in Urbino, Italy.

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Flight into Egypt

The flight into Egypt is a story recounted in the Gospel of Matthew (Matthew 2:13–23) and the New Testament apocrypha.

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Foreleg of ox

The foreleg of ox (a foreleg with the thigh) hieroglyph of Ancient Egypt is an old hieroglyph; it even represented a nighttime constellation (the Big Dipper, Maskheti).

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Forty Martyrs of Sebaste

The Forty Martyrs of Sebaste or the Holy Forty (Ancient/Katharevousa Greek Ἃγιοι Τεσσεράκοντα; Demotic: Άγιοι Σαράντα) were a group of Roman soldiers in the Legio XII ''Fulminata'' (Armed with Lightning) whose martyrdom in 320 for the Christian faith is recounted in traditional martyrologies.

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Fountain of Life

The Fountain of Life, or in its earlier form the Fountain of Living Waters, is a Christian iconography symbol associated with baptism and/or eucharist, first appearing in the 5th century in illuminated manuscripts and later in other art forms such as panel paintings.

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Fountain of Youth

The Fountain of Youth is a spring that supposedly restores the youth of anyone who drinks or bathes in its waters.

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Four Evangelists

In Christian tradition, the Four Evangelists are Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, the authors attributed with the creation of the four Gospel accounts in the New Testament that bear the following titles: Gospel according to Matthew; Gospel according to Mark; Gospel according to Luke and Gospel according to John.

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Four Seasons (sculpture set)

The Four Seasons are a set of four stone allegorical putti, each representing a traditional, temperate season.

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Fragment of a Crucifixion

Fragment of a Crucifixion is a 1950 canvas by the Irish-born, English figurative painter Francis Bacon, housed in the Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven.

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Francesco Carotta

Francesco Carotta (born 1946 in Veneto, Italy) is an Italian writer who developed a theory that the historical Jesus was based on the life of Julius Caesar, that the Gospels were a rewriting of Roman historical sources, and that Christianity developed from the cult of the deified Caesar.

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Francesco Danieli

Francesco Danieli (1981 in Lecce) is an Italian historian and iconologist.

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Francisco Pacheco

Francisco Pacheco del Río (bap. 3 November 1564 – 27 November 1644) was a Spanish painter, best known as the teacher and father-in-law of Diego Velázquez and Alonzo Cano, and for his textbook on painting that is an important source for the study of 17th-century practice in Spain.

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Franco Maria Ricci

Franco Maria Ricci (born December 2, 1937 in Parma) is an Italian art publisher.

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Frank C. Turner

Francis Charles Turner (born June 2, 1951) is an actor and iconographer born in Wainwright, Alberta and now living in BC.

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Frederico Carlos Hoehne

Frederico Carlos Hoehne (1 February 1882, Juiz de Fora – 16 March 1959) was a Brazilian botanist.

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French art

French art consists of the visual and plastic arts (including architecture, woodwork, textiles, and ceramics) originating from the geographical area of France.

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Funerary art

Funerary art is any work of art forming, or placed in, a repository for the remains of the dead.

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Gabra Manfas Qeddus

Gabra Manfas Qeddus (Amharic: ገብረ መንፈስ ቅዱስ; also familiarly called Abo) was an Ethiopian Christian saint, and the founder of the monastery of Zuqualla.

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Gabriele Paleotti

Gabriele Paleotti (4 October 1522 – 22 July 1597) was an Italian cardinal and Archbishop of Bologna.

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Ganesha

Ganesha (गणेश), also known as Ganapati, Vinayaka, Pillaiyar and Binayak, is one of the best-known and most worshipped deities in the Hindu pantheon.

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Gankhüügiin Pürevbat

Gankhüügiin Pürevbat (Ганхүүгийн Пүрэвбат) is a Mongolian artist painter, art collector, museum director and Buddhist teacher in the Vajrayana School.

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Garima Gospels

The Garima Gospels are two ancient Ethiopic Gospel Books.

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Gautama V. Vajracharya

Gautama Vajra Vajracharya (गौतम वज्र वज्राचार्य) is a Nepali Sanskritist and scholar specializing in the iconography of the Indian Sub-Continent.

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Gay Messiah

"Gay Messiah" is a song written and performed by American-Canadian singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright.

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Genealogia Deorum Gentilium

Genealogia deorum gentilium, known in English as On the Genealogy of the Gods of the Gentiles, is a mythography or encyclopedic compilation of the tangled family relationships of the classical pantheons of Ancient Greece and Rome, written in Latin prose from 1360 onwards by the Italian author and poet Giovanni Boccaccio.

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Geography of media and communication

Geography of media and communication (also known as communication geography, media geography and geographies of media) is an interdisciplinary research area bringing together human geography with media studies and communication theory.

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George B. Chambers

George Bennet Chambers (born 18 January 1881 in Ealing, London; died early 1969 in Surrey) was an English priest, social activist and author (writing as G. B. Chambers).

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Georgi Danevski

Georgi Danevski (born July 25, 1947) is a Canadian Macedonian painter, iconographer and muralist.

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Georgian scripts

The Georgian scripts are the three writing systems used to write the Georgian language: Asomtavruli, Nuskhuri and Mkhedruli.

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Georgy Pashkov

Georgy Pavlovich Pashkov (Гео́ргий Па́влович Пашко́в; 1886–1925) was a Russian artist known for his work in interior design, painting and graphics.

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Gero (archbishop of Cologne)

Gero (c. 900 – 29 June 976) was Archbishop of Cologne from 969 until his death.

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Gerona Beatus

The Gerona Beatus is a 10th-century illuminated manuscript currently housed in the museum of Girona Cathedral, Catalonia, Spain.

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Gervasius and Protasius

Saints Gervasius and Protasius (also Saints Gervase and Protase, Gervasis and Prothasis and in French Gervais and Protais) are venerated as Christian martyrs, probably of the 2nd century.

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Gesture

A gesture is a form of non-verbal communication or non-vocal communication in which visible bodily actions communicate particular messages, either in place of, or in conjunction with, speech.

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Ghost

In folklore, a ghost (sometimes known as an apparition, haunt, phantom, poltergeist, shade, specter or spectre, spirit, spook, and wraith) is the soul or spirit of a dead person or animal that can appear to the living.

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Ghosts in Thai culture

Belief in ghosts in Thai culture is both popular and enduring.

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Gian Paolo Lomazzo

Gian Paolo Lomazzo (26 April 1538 – 27 January 1592; his first name is sometimes also given as "Giovan" or "Giovanni") was an Italian painter, best remembered for his writings on art theory, belonging to the second generation that produced Mannerism in Italian art and architecture.

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Gillian Mann

Gillian Mann (11 May 1939 – 29 December 2007), English/Australian artist who won the Blake Prize for Religious Art with the woodcut print on paper titled in 1990.

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Giovanni Battista Agucchi

Giovanni Battista Agucchi (20 November 1570, Bologna – 1 January 1632) was an Italian churchman, Papal diplomat and writer on art theory.

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Giovanni Coppa

Giovanni Coppa (9 November 1925 – 16 May 2016) was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Girdle

The term girdle, meaning "belt", commonly refers to the liturgical attire that normally closes a cassock in many Christian denominations, including the Anglican Communion, Methodist Church and Lutheran Church.

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Gladiator (2000 film)

Gladiator is a 2000 epic historical drama film directed by Ridley Scott and written by David Franzoni, John Logan, and William Nicholson.

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Glareana

Glareana is a biannual academic journal covering topics related to musical instruments, ranging from historical and critical musicology to theory and organology, ethnomusicology, and music iconographical studies.

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Globus cruciger

The globus cruciger (Latin for "cross-bearing orb"), also known as the orb and cross, is an orb (Latin: globus) surmounted (Latin: gerere, to wear) by a cross (Latin: crux).

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Glory (religion)

Glory (from the Latin gloria, "fame, renown") is used to describe the manifestation of God's presence as perceived by humans according to the Abrahamic religions.

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Gniezno Doors

The Gniezno Doors (Drzwi Gnieźnieńskie) are a pair of bronze doors at the entrance to Gniezno Cathedral in Gniezno, Poland, a Gothic building which the doors pre-date, having been carried over from an earlier building.

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Goad

The goad is a traditional farming implement, used to spur or guide livestock, usually oxen, which are pulling a plough or a cart; used also to round up cattle.

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Godefroid de Claire

Godefroid de Claire or Godefroid de Huy (born c. 1100; died c. 1173) was a goldsmith and enamelist.

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Godescalc Evangelistary

The Godescalc Evangelistary, Godescalc Sacramentary, Godescalc Gospels, or Godescalc Gospel Lectionary (Paris, BNF. lat.1203) is an illuminated manuscript made by the Frankish scribe Godescalc and today kept in the Bibliothèque nationale de France.

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Godflesh

Godflesh are an English industrial metal band from Birmingham, England.

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Gold glass

Gold glass or gold sandwich glass is a luxury form of glass where a decorative design in gold leaf is fused between two layers of glass.

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Golden Madonna of Essen

The Golden Madonna of Essen is a sculpture of the Virgin Mary and the infant Jesus.

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Gonfalon

The gonfalon, gonfanon, gonfalone (from the early Italian confalone) is a type of heraldic flag or banner, often pointed, swallow-tailed, or with several streamers, and suspended from a crossbar in an identical manner to the ancient Roman vexillum.

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Gora (Davydovskoye Rural Settlement), Orekhovo-Zuyevsky District, Moscow Oblast

Gora (Гора́) is a rural locality (a village) in Orekhovo-Zuyevsky District of Moscow Oblast, Russia, located some south-east of Moscow.

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Gorne-Uspensky Convent

The Gorne-Uspensky Convent (Горне-Успенский монастырь) or simply Gorny Convent (in English: Convent of the Assumption on the Hill) is a monastery in Vologda, Russia.

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Gothic art

Gothic art was a style of medieval art that developed in Northern France out of Romanesque art in the 12th century AD, led by the concurrent development of Gothic architecture.

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Gothic boxwood miniature

Gothic boxwood miniatures are extremely small carved wood miniature sculptures, mostly made in today's Belgium in the 15th and 16th centuries.

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Gourmet Museum and Library

The Gourmet Museum and Library (Bibliothèque et musée de la Gourmandise) is a museum dedicated to the history of gastronomy, located in Hermalle-sous-Huy, province of Liège, Belgium.

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Gradhiva

Gradhiva is an anthropological and museological journal, founded in 1986 by the poet and social scientist Michel Leiris and by the anthropologist Jean Jamin.

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Graffiti

Graffiti (plural of graffito: "a graffito", but "these graffiti") are writing or drawings that have been scribbled, scratched, or painted, typically illicitly, on a wall or other surface, often within public view.

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Grani

In Norse mythology, Grani is a horse owned by the hero Sigurd.

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Grayson Perry

Grayson Perry (born 24 March 1960) is an English contemporary artist.

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Great Sphinx of Giza

The Great Sphinx of Giza (translit,, The Terrifying One; literally: Father of Dread), commonly referred to as the Sphinx of Giza or just the Sphinx, is a limestone statue of a reclining sphinx, a mythical creature with the body of a lion and the head of a human.

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Greco-Buddhism

Greco-Buddhism, or Graeco-Buddhism, is the cultural syncretism between Hellenistic culture and Buddhism, which developed between the 4th century BC and the 5th century AD in Bactria and the Indian subcontinent, corresponding to the territories of modern-day Afghanistan, Tajikistan, India, and Pakistan.

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Greek mythology

Greek mythology is the body of myths and teachings that belong to the ancient Greeks, concerning their gods and heroes, the nature of the world, and the origins and significance of their own cult and ritual practices.

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Greek Orthodox Church

The name Greek Orthodox Church (Greek: Ἑλληνορθόδοξη Ἑκκλησία, Ellinorthódoxi Ekklisía), or Greek Orthodoxy, is a term referring to the body of several Churches within the larger communion of Eastern Orthodox Christianity, whose liturgy is or was traditionally conducted in Koine Greek, the original language of the Septuagint and New Testament, and whose history, traditions, and theology are rooted in the early Church Fathers and the culture of the Byzantine Empire.

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Green Man

A Green Man is a sculpture or other representation of a face surrounded by or made from leaves.

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Gregory of Nazianzus

Gregory of Nazianzus (Γρηγόριος ὁ Ναζιανζηνός Grēgorios ho Nazianzēnos; c. 329Liturgy of the Hours Volume I, Proper of Saints, 2 January. – 25 January 390), also known as Gregory the Theologian or Gregory Nazianzen, was a 4th-century Archbishop of Constantinople, and theologian.

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Gridiron (cooking)

A gridiron is a metal grate with parallel bars typically used for grilling meat, fish, vegetables, or combinations of such foods.

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Guatemala

Guatemala, officially the Republic of Guatemala (República de Guatemala), is a country in Central America bordered by Mexico to the north and west, the Pacific Ocean to the southwest, Belize to the northeast, the Caribbean to the east, Honduras to the east and El Salvador to the southeast.

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Guerrillero Heroico

Guerrillero Heroico ("Heroic Guerrilla Fighter") is an iconic photograph of Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara taken by Alberto Korda.

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Guillaume Rouillé

Guillaume Rouillé (Gulielmus Rovillium; 1518–1589) was one of the most prominent humanist bookseller-printers in 16th-century Lyon.

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Gundestrup cauldron

The Gundestrup cauldron is a richly decorated silver vessel, thought to date from between 200 BC and 300 AD,Nielsen, S; Andersen, J; Baker, J; Christensen, C; Glastrup, J; et al.

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Guy of Anderlecht

Saint Guy of Anderlecht (also, Guido, Guidon, Wye of Láken) (ca. 950–1012) was a Catholic saint.

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Haarlem

Haarlem (predecessor of Harlem in the English language) is a city and municipality in the Netherlands.

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Hagia Sophia

Hagia Sophia (from the Greek Αγία Σοφία,, "Holy Wisdom"; Sancta Sophia or Sancta Sapientia; Ayasofya) is a former Greek Orthodox Christian patriarchal basilica (church), later an Ottoman imperial mosque and now a museum (Ayasofya Müzesi) in Istanbul, Turkey.

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Halo (religious iconography)

A halo (from Greek ἅλως, halōs; also known as a nimbus, aureole, glory, or gloriole) is a crown of light rays, circle or disk of light that surrounds a person in art.

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Hamburg School of Art History

The so-called Hamburg School of Art History (Hamburger Schule der Kunstgeschichte) was a school of art historians primarily teaching at the University of Hamburg, who were closely connected with the Kulturwissenschaftliche Bibliothek Warburg (KBW) at the Warburg Haus, Hamburg.

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Hand (hieroglyph)

The ancient Egyptian Hand (hieroglyph) is an alphabetic hieroglyph with the meaning of "d"; it is also used in the word for 'hand', and actions that are performed, i.e. by the 'way of one's hands', or actions.

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Hans Holbein the Younger

Hans Holbein the Younger (Hans Holbein der Jüngere) (– between 7 October and 29 November 1543) was a German artist and printmaker who worked in a Northern Renaissance style, known as one of the greatest portraitists of the 16th century.

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Harappa

Harappa (Urdu/ہڑپّہ) is an archaeological site in Punjab, Pakistan, about west of Sahiwal.

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Hardvapour

Hardvapour is an Internet-based microgenre that emerged in late 2015 as a tongue-in-cheek response to vaporwave, departing from the calm, muzak-sampling capitalist utopia concept of the latter in favor of a gabber- and punk-influenced sound.

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Harold Desbrowe-Annear

Harold Desbrowe-Annear (16 August 1865 – 22 June 1933) was an influential Australian architect who was at the forefront of the development of the Arts and Crafts movement in this country.

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Harrowing of Hell

In Christian theology, the Harrowing of Hell (Latin: Descensus Christi ad Inferos, "the descent of Christ into hell") is the triumphant descent of Christ into Hell (or Hades) between the time of his Crucifixion and his Resurrection when he brought salvation to all of the righteous who had died since the beginning of the world.

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Hatshepsut

Hatshepsut (also Hatchepsut; Egyptian: ḥꜣt-šps.wt "Foremost of Noble Ladies"; 1507–1458 BCE) was the fifth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt.

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Headlong (Frayn novel)

Headlong is a novel by Michael Frayn, published in 1999.

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Hecate

Hecate or Hekate (Ἑκάτη, Hekátē) is a goddess in ancient Greek religion and mythology, most often shown holding a pair of torches or a keyThe Running Maiden from Eleusis and the Early Classical Image of Hekate by Charles M. Edwards in the American Journal of Archaeology, Vol.

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Hedwig glass

Hedwig glasses or Hedwig beakers are a type of glass beaker originating in the Middle East or Norman Sicily and dating from the 10th-12th centuries AD.

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Hell icon

Hell icons (Адописная икона, adopisnaya ikona, lit. "Hell-written icon" or "Hell-painted icon") are legendary icons with images of Devil hidden under the primer, the riza or the painted layer.

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Hellmuth Christian Wolff

Hellmuth Christian Wolff (23 May 1906, Zürich – 1 July 1988, Leipzig) was a German composer and musicologist.

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Helmet of Constantine

The Helmet of Constantine was a helmet or form of helmet worn by the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great, now lost, which featured in his imperial iconography.

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Help Me (Tinchy Stryder song)

"Help Me" is a song by recording artist Tinchy Stryder, and was released on 30 September 2012, as the fourth single from his scrapped fourth album: Full Tank.

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Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville

Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville (12 September 1777 – 1 May 1850) was a French zoologist and anatomist.

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Heraclea Lyncestis

Heraclea Lyncestis, also spelled Herakleia Lynkestis (Ἡράκλεια Λυγκηστίς; Heraclea Lyncestis; Хераклеа Линкестис), was an ancient Greek city in Macedon, ruled later by the Romans.

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Heraclius II of Georgia

Heraclius II (ერეკლე II), also known as Erekle II and The Little Kakhetian (პატარა კახი) (7 November 1720 or 7 October 1721 – 11 January 1798), was a Georgian monarch of the Bagrationi dynasty, reigning as the king of Kakheti from 1744 to 1762, and of Kartli and Kakheti from 1762 until 1798.

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Hercules

Hercules is a Roman hero and god.

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Hermann Usener

Hermann Karl Usener (23 October 1834 – 21 October 1905) was a German scholar in the fields of philology and comparative religion.

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Herr, gehe nicht ins Gericht mit deinem Knecht, BWV 105

Herr, gehe nicht ins Gericht mit deinem Knecht (Lord, do not pass judgment on Your servant), BWV 105, is a church cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Hetoimasia

The Hetoimasia, Etimasia (Greek ἑτοιμασία, "preparation"), prepared throne, Preparation of the Throne, ready throne or Throne of the Second Coming is the Christian version of the symbolic subject of the empty throne found in the art of the ancient world, whose meaning has changed over the centuries.

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Hindu iconography

Over the millennia of its development Hinduism has adopted several iconic symbols, forming part of Hindu iconography, that are imbued with spiritual meaning based on either the scriptures or cultural traditions.

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Hiroshi Aramata

is a Japanese author, polymath, critic, translator and specialist in natural history, iconography and cartography.

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Historical Christian hairstyles

The hairstyles adopted in the Christian tradition have been most varied, over history.

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Historically informed performance

Historically informed performance (also referred to as period performance, authentic performance, or HIP) is an approach to the performance of classical music, which aims to be faithful to the approach, manner and style of the musical era in which a work was originally conceived.

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History

History (from Greek ἱστορία, historia, meaning "inquiry, knowledge acquired by investigation") is the study of the past as it is described in written documents.

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History of animation

The history of animation started long before the development of cinematography.

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History of art criticism

The history of art criticism, as part of art history, is the study of objects of art in their historical development and stylistic contexts, i.e. genre, design, format, and style, which include aesthetic considerations.

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History of Buddhism

The history of Buddhism spans from the 5th century BCE to the present.

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History of clothing in India

Indians have mainly worn clothing made up of locally grown cotton.

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History of Eastern Orthodox theology

The history of Eastern '''Orthodox Christian''' theology begins with the life of Jesus and the forming of the Christian Church.

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History of erotic depictions

The history of erotic depictions includes paintings, sculpture, photographs, dramatic arts, music and writings that show scenes of a sexual nature throughout time.

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History of Native Americans in the United States

The history of Native Americans in the United States began in ancient times tens of thousands of years ago with the settlement of the Americas by the Paleo-Indians.

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History of painting

The history of painting reaches back in time to artifacts from pre-historic humans, and spans all cultures.

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History of the United States

The history of the United States began with the settlement of Indigenous people before 15,000 BC.

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Hodegetria

A Hodegetria (Ὁδηγήτρια, literally: "She who shows the Way"; Russian: Одигитрия), or Virgin Hodegetria, is an iconographic depiction of the Theotokos (Virgin Mary) holding the Child Jesus at her side while pointing to Him as the source of salvation for humankind.

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Holly Mathieson

Holly Mathieson (28 May 1981) is a New Zealand conductor and academic.

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Holy Spirit

Holy Spirit (also called Holy Ghost) is a term found in English translations of the Bible that is understood differently among the Abrahamic religions.

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Hortus Palatinus

The Hortus Palatinus, or Garden of the Palatinate, was a Baroque garden in the Italian Renaissance style attached to Heidelberg Castle, Germany.

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Hours of Catherine of Cleves

The Hours of Catherine of Cleves (Morgan Library and Museum, now divided in two parts, M. 917 and M. 945, the latter sometimes called the Guennol Hours or, less commonly, the Arenberg Hours) is an ornately illuminated manuscript in the Gothic art style, produced in about 1440 by the anonymous Dutch artist known as the Master of Catherine of Cleves. It is one of the most lavishly illuminated manuscripts to survive from the 15th century and has been described as one of the masterpieces of Northern European illumination.

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Hours of James IV of Scotland

The Hours of James IV of Scotland, Prayer book of James IV and Queen Margaret (or variants) is an illuminated book of hours, produced in 1503 or later, probably in Ghent.

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Huitzilopochtli

In the Aztec religion, Huitzilopochtli (wiːt͡siloːˈpoːt͡ʃt͡ɬi) is a Mesoamerican deity of war, sun, human sacrifice and the patron of the city of Tenochtitlan.

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Human guise

A human guise (also human disguise and sometimes human form) is a concept in fantasy, folklore, mythology, religion, literary tradition, iconography, and science fiction whereby non-human beings such as aliens, angels, demons, gods, monsters, robots, Satan, or shapeshifters are disguised to seem human.

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Human trophy taking in Mesoamerica

Most of the ancient civilizations of Mesoamerica such as the Olmec, Maya, Mixtec, Zapotec and Aztec cultures practised some kind of taking of human trophies during warfare.

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Hunters Palette

The Hunters Palette or Lion Hunt Palette is a circa 3100 BCE cosmetic palette from the Naqada III period of late prehistoric Egypt.

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Hurrians

The Hurrians (cuneiform:; transliteration: Ḫu-ur-ri; also called Hari, Khurrites, Hourri, Churri, Hurri or Hurriter) were a people of the Bronze Age Near East.

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Hval's Codex

Hval's Codex (Hvalov zbornik/Хвалов зборник) or Hval's Manuscript (Hvalov rukopis/Хвалов рукопис) is a Cyrillic manuscript of 353 pages written in 1404, in Split, for Duke Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić.

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Icarus

In Greek mythology, Icarus (the Latin spelling, conventionally adopted in English; Ἴκαρος, Íkaros, Etruscan: Vikare) is the son of the master craftsman Daedalus, the creator of the Labyrinth.

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Icon (disambiguation)

An icon, from the Greek for image, is a religious painting in the tradition of Eastern Christianity.

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Iconclass

Iconclass is a specialized library classification designed for art and iconography.

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Iconodule

An iconodule (from Neoclassical Greek εἰκονόδουλος eikonodoulos, "one who serves images"; also iconodulist or iconophile) is someone who espouses iconodulism, i.e., who supports or is in favor of religious images or icons and their veneration, and is in opposition to an iconoclast, someone against the use of religious images.

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Iconography (disambiguation)

Iconography is the study of icons Iconography may also refer to.

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Iconography of Gautama Buddha in Laos and Thailand

The Iconography of Gautama Buddha in Laos and Thailand is referred to as pang phraputtarup:th:ปางพระพุทธรูป, and a given pose as pang ปาง episode.

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Iconology

Iconology is a method of interpretation in cultural history and the history of art used by Aby Warburg, Erwin Panofsky and their followers that uncovers the cultural, social, and historical background of themes and subjects in the visual arts.

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Iconostasis of the Cathedral of Hajdúdorog

The iconostasis of the Cathedral of Hajdúdorog is the largest Greek Catholic icon screen in Hungary.

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Ill-Matched Marriage

The Ill-Matched Marriage (also known as The Marriage Contract) is an oil painting executed by the early Netherlandish master Quentin Matsys, usually dated between 1525 and 1530.

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Illimo District

Illimo District is one of twelve districts of the province Lambayeque in Peru.

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Immaculate Conception

The Immaculate Conception is the conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary free from original sin by virtue of the merits of her son Jesus Christ.

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Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts

The Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts (Russian: Императорское общество поощрения художеств (ОПХ)) was an organization devoted to promoting the arts that existed in Saint Petersburg from 1820 to 1929.

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In the Light of the Moon

In the Light of the Moon (also known as Ed Gein) is a 2000 American horror film directed by Chuck Parello, and written by Stephen Johnston.

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Inca mythology

Inca mythology includes many stories and legends that attempt to explain or symbolize Inca beliefs.

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Incense burner: pot (hieroglyph)

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Index of branches of science

Science (from Latin scientia, meaning "knowledge") is a systematic enterprise that builds and organizes knowledge in the form of testable explanations and predictions about the universe.

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Index of religion-related articles

Many Wikipedia articles on religious topics are not yet listed on this page.

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Indian art

Indian Arts consists of a variety of art forms, including plastic arts (e.g., pottery sculpture), visual arts (e.g., paintings), and textile arts (e.g., woven silk).

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International Congress of Genealogical and Heraldic Sciences

The International Congress of Genealogical and Heraldic Sciences is a biennial conference discussing topics of heraldic and genealogical interest.

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Invidia

In Latin, invidia is the sense of envy, a "looking upon" associated with the evil eye, from invidere, "to look against, to look in a hostile manner." Invidia ("Envy") is one of the Seven Deadly Sins in Christian belief.

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Irena Kazazić

Irena Kazazić (born 1972) is a Slovenian painter and writer of Serbian descent.

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Irworobongdo

Irworobongdo is a Korean folding screen with a highly stylized landscape painting of a sun and moon, five peaks which always was set behind ''Eojwa'', the king’s royal throne during the Joseon Dynasty.

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Isaac Fanous

Isaac Fanous (December 19, 1919 – January 14, 2007) was an Egyptian artist and scholar, who specialized in Coptic art and founded its contemporary school.

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Ivan Kovalčik Mileševac

Ivan Kovalčik Mileševac (Иван Ковалчик Милешевац; March 3, 1968), Prijepolje, Yugoslavia, Serbia) is a Serbian icon and fresco painter - the Prime Master of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Mileševa. At the initiative of the National Museums of Prijepolje and Belgrade headed by directors Slavoljub Pušica and Jefta Jeftović in reconstruction projects of Nemanjic's endowments, in collaboration with SANU and under the supervision of the Institute for Protection of Cultural Heritage of Kraljevo, with the blessing of His Holiness Serbian Patriarch Pavle and by blessing of episcops (bishops) of the Eparchy (dioceses) of Mileševa, Vasilije Veinović and Filaret Mićević, painted a larger number of iconostasis for the Serbian Orthodox Church in churches and monasteries of the Eparchy of Mileševa. Since 2006. he has lived in Novi Sad, where within the rules of Church painting, works on making icons and frescoes in the Byzantine style.

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Ixcateopan de Cuauhtémoc

Ixcateopan de Cuauhtémoc is a town in Ixcateopan de Cuauhtémoc Municipality located in isolated, rugged mountains in the northern part of Guerrero state, Mexico.

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Jacobus da Varagine

Jacopo De Fazio, best known as the blessed Jacobus da Varagine (Giacomo da Varazze, Jacopo da Varazze; c. 1230July 13 or July 16, 1298) was an Italian chronicler and archbishop of Genoa.

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Jacques de Baerze

Jacques de Baerze (active before 1384, died after 1399) was a Flemish sculptor in wood, two of whose major carved altarpieces survive in Dijon, now in France, then the capital of the Duchy of Burgundy.

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Jagannath Temple, Puri

The Shree Jagannath Temple (Odia: ଶ୍ରୀ ଜଗନ୍ନାଥ ମନ୍ଦିର) of Puri is an important Hindu temple dedicated to Lord Jagannath, a form of lord Vishnu, located on the eastern coast of India, at Puri in the state of Odisha.

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Jagdish Temple, Udaipur

Jagdish Temple is a large Hindu temple in the middle of Udaipur in Rajasthan, just outside the royal palace.

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Jaime Correa (architect)

Jaime Correa (born September 19, 1957 in Colombia) is an urban planner, architect, and professor at the University of Miami.

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Jain art

Jain art refers to religious works of art associated with Jainism.

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Jainism

Jainism, traditionally known as Jain Dharma, is an ancient Indian religion.

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James Lavadour

James Lavadour (born 1951) is an American painter and printmaker.

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James McKinnon

James William McKinnon (April 7, 1932 – February 23, 1999) was an American musicologist most known for his work in the fields of Western plainchant, medieval and renaissance music, Latin liturgy and musical iconography.

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Jammin' Java

Jammin' Java is a music club and coffee bar in Vienna, Virginia, which focuses on local and independent musical acts.

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Jan Van der Stock

Jan Van der Stock (born Antwerp, 1959) is a Belgian art historian and exhibition curator.

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Jan Van Eyck Academie

The Jan van Eyck Academie is a post-academic institute for research and production in the fields of fine art, design and art theory, based in Maastricht, Netherlands.

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Japanese Buddhist pantheon

The Japanese Buddhist Pantheon designates the multitude (the Pantheon) of various Buddhas, Bodhisattvas and lesser deities and eminent religious masters in Buddhism.

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Jean Michel Massing

Jean Michel Massing is a French art historian.

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Jean Seznec

Jean Seznec (19 March 1905, in Morlaix – 22 November 1983, in Oxford) was a historian and mythographer whose most influential book, for English-speaking readers, has been La Survivance des dieux antiques, 1940, translated as The Survival of the Pagan Gods: Mythological Tradition in Renaissance Humanism and Art, 1953.

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Jean Wells (artist)

Jean Wells is an American artist known for her large-scaled and life-sized mosaic sculptures featuring pop-inspired objects such as ice cream cones, hamburgers, hot dogs, and candy.

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Jean-Marc Moret

Jean-Marc Moret (born 6 June 1942 in Geneva, Switzerland) is a Swiss archaeologist and art historian.

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Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat (December 22, 1960 – August 12, 1988) was an American artist.

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Jean-Philippe Charbonnier

Jean-Philippe Charbonnier (August 28, 1921 – May 28, 2004) was a French photographer whose works typify the humanist impulse in that medium in his homeland of the period after World War Two.

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Jeff Donaldson (artist)

Jeff Donaldson (1932 – 2004) was a visual artist whose work helped define the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s and 1970s.

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Jeff Koons

Jeffrey Koons (born January 21, 1955) is an American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces.

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Jeffrey Harris (artist)

Jeffrey Harris (born Akaroa, 1949) is a New Zealand artist.

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Jerome

Jerome (Eusebius Sophronius Hieronymus; Εὐσέβιος Σωφρόνιος Ἱερώνυμος; c. 27 March 347 – 30 September 420) was a priest, confessor, theologian, and historian.

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Jewish catacombs of Venosa

The Jewish Catacombs of Venosa are a set of catacombs located near the Italian city of Venosa, Province of Potenza, on Maddelena Hill.

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Jnana Vigraham

Jñāna Vigraham is a distinctively styled statue of the revered saint Sree Nārāyana Guru.

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John 20:13

John 20:13 is the thirteenth verse of the twentieth chapter of the Gospel of John in the Bible.

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John August Swanson

John August Swanson (born January 11, 1938) is an American visual artist working primarily in the medium of serigraphy, as well as oil, watercolor, acrylic, mixed media, lithography, and etching.

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John Granger

John Granger is a speaker and writer whose principal focus is the intersection of literature, faith and culture.

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John LeKay

John LeKay (born 1 June 1961) is an English conceptual and installation artist and sculptor, who lives in New York City.

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John-Paul Himka

John-Paul Himka (born May 18, 1949 in Detroit, Michigan) is an American-Canadian historian and retired professor of history of the University of Alberta in Edmonton.

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Joris-Karl Huysmans

Charles-Marie-Georges Huysmans (5 February 1848 in Paris – 12 May 1907 in Paris) was a French novelist and art critic who published his works as Joris-Karl Huysmans (variably abbreviated as J. K. or J.-K.). He is most famous for the novel À rebours (1884, published in English as Against the Grain or Against Nature).

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José Muñoz-Cortes

Jose (Joseph) Muñoz-Cortes (a privately tonsure monk Ambrose; 13 May 1948, Santiago, Chile – 30/31 October 1997, Athens, Greece) was an Orthodox monastic, and the keeper of the Iveron Icon of Montreal.

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Josef Strzygowski

Josef Strzygowski (March 7, 1862 – January 2, 1941) was a Polish-Austrian art historian known for his theories promoting influences from the art of the Near East on European art, for example that of Early Christian Armenian architecture on the early Medieval architecture of Europe, outlined in his book, Die Baukunst der Armenier und Europa (an aspect of his thinking that has survived better than many others).

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Josep Artigas

Josep Artigas Ojeda (1919 in Barcelona – 1992) was one of the most important Spanish post-war poster creator, a member of honor of the ADG (Association of Art Directors and Graphic Designers)-FAD (Decorative Arts).

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Joseph Pace

Joseph Pace (born 18 November 1959) is an Italian painter and sculptor.

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Joseph Sadan

Joseph Sadan (born January 17, 1939) is emeritus professor of the Department of Arabic and Islamic Studies at the Tel-Aviv University.

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Joseph Vladimirov

Joseph Vladimirov (active 1642-1666) was a Russian painter and art theorist of the 17th century.

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Josepha Petrick Kemarre

Josepha Petrick Kemarre (born ca. 1945 or ca. 1953, date uncertain) is an Anmatyerre-speaking Indigenous Australian artist from Central Australia.

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Jovan Vladimir

Jovan Vladimir or John Vladimir (Јован Владимир; c. 990 – 22 May 1016) was the ruler of Duklja, the most powerful Serbian principality of the time, from around 1000 to 1016.

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Juan Martínez Montañés

Juan Martínez Montañés (March 16, 1568 – June 18, 1649), known as el Dios de la Madera (the God of Wood), was a Spanish sculptor, born at Alcalá la Real, in the province of Jaén.

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Jubilee Pavilion (hieroglyph)

The Jubilee Festival for the Pharaoh, the Heb Sed is represented in hieroglyphs by a Jubilee Pavilion Hieroglyph.

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Judensau at the choir stalls of Cologne Cathedral

The Judensau at the choir stalls of Cologne Cathedral is a medieval, arguably antisemitic wood carving at the side of one of the seats in the choir of Cologne Cathedral.

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Judith beheading Holofernes

The account of the beheading of Holofernes by Judith is given in the deuterocanonical Book of Judith, and is the subject of many paintings and sculptures from the Renaissance and Baroque periods.

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Julie Dash

Julie Dash (born October 22, 1952) is an American film director, writer, producer, website creator and music video and commercial director.

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June 17 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

June 16 - Eastern Orthodox Church calendar - June 18 All fixed commemorations below celebrated on June 30 by Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.

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Jupiter Dolichenus

Jupiter Dolichenus was a Roman god whose mystery cult was widespread in the Roman Empire from the early-2nd to mid-3rd centuries AD.

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Kabouter

Kabouter is the Dutch word for gnome or leprechaun.

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Kallidaikurichi

Kallidaikurichi is a town on the right bank of the Thamiraparani river in Ambasamudram Taluk of Tirunelveli district in Tamil Nadu, a southern state of India.

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Karl Walther

Karl Walther (born August 19, 1905 in Zeitz; died June 9, 1981 in Seeshaupt) was a painter of the German Post-Impressionist school, and an exponent of plein air painting.

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Karlovo

Kàrlovo (Карлово) is a picturesque and a historically important town in central Bulgaria located in a fertile valley along the river Stryama at the southern foot of the Balkan Mountains.

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Karlskirche

The Rektoratskirche St.

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Karura

The is a divine creature with human torso and birdlike head in Japanese Hindu-Buddhist mythology.

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Katsudō Shashin

, sometimes called the Matsumoto fragment, is a Japanese animated filmstrip that is the oldest known work of animation from Japan.

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Kīla (Buddhism)

The kīla or phurba (Sanskrit Devanagari: कील; IAST: kīla;, alternate transliterations and English orthographies: phurpa, phurbu, purbha, or phurpu) is a three-sided peg, stake, knife, or nail-like ritual implement traditionally associated with Indo-Tibetan Buddhism, Bön, and Indian Vedic traditions.

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Kerry Awn

Kerry Fitzgerald, better known as Kerry Awn, is an American cartoonist, actor, muralist, comedian, musician, iconographer and poster artist.

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Kertha Gosa Pavilion

The Kertha Gosa Pavilion is an example of Balinese architecture located on the island of Bali, in city Klungkung, Indonesia.

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Kildalton Cross

The Kildalton Cross is a monolithic high cross in Celtic cross form in the churchyard of the former parish church of Kildalton (from Scottish Gaelic Cill Daltain, "Church of the Foster Son" (i.e. St John the Evangelist) on the island of Islay in the Inner Hebrides, Scotland. It was carved probably in the second half of the 8th century AD, and is closely related to crosses of similar date on Iona. It is often considered the finest surviving Celtic cross in Scotland, and is certainly one of the most perfect monuments of its date to survive on western Europe. The cross and the adjacent roofless medieval parish church are in the care of Historic Scotland (access at all times) and are jointly a scheduled ancient monument. A simpler cross of late medieval date stands nearby.

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Kincaid Mounds State Historic Site

The Kincaid Mounds Historic Site (11MX2-11; 11PO2-10) 1050-1400 CE, is the site of a city from the prehistoric Mississippian culture.

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Kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti

The Kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti (ქართლ-კახეთის სამეფო) (1762–1801) was created in 1762 by the unification of two eastern Georgian kingdoms of Kartli and Kakheti.

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Kirtimukha

Kirtimukha (Sanskrit, also, a bahuvrihi compound translating to "glorious face") is the name of a swallowing fierce monster face with huge fangs, and gaping mouth, very common in the iconography of Hindu temple architecture and Buddhist architecture in South Asia and Southeast Asia.

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Kodeń

Kodeń is a village in eastern Poland on the Bug River, which forms the border between Poland and Belarus.

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Kostas Loudovikos

Κostas Loudovikos is a painter and author.

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Kozani

Kozani (Κοζάνη) is a city in northern Greece, capital of Kozani regional unit and of West Macedonia region.

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Kremlin Armoury

The Kremlin Armoury,Officially called the "Armou/ory Chamber" but also known as the cannon yard, the "Armou/ory Palace", the "Moscow Armou/ory", the "Armou/ory Museum", and the "Moscow Armou/ory Museum" but different from the Kremlin Arsenal.

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L'Oiseau bleu (Metzinger)

L'Oiseau bleu (also known as The Blue Bird and Der Blaue Vogel) is a large oil painting created in 1912–1913 by the French artist and theorist Jean Metzinger (1883–1956); considered by Guillaume Apollinaire and André Salmon as a founder of Cubism, along with Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso.

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La Blanca

La Blanca is a pre-Columbian Mesoamerican archaeological site in present-day Retalhuleu Department, western Guatemala.

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La Gran Chichimeca

La Gran Chichimeca was a term used by the Spanish conquistadores of the 16th century to refer to an area of the northern central Mexican ''altiplano'' (plateau), a territory which today is encompassed by the modern Mexican states of Jalisco, Aguascalientes, Nayarit, Guanajuato and Zacatecas.

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Lady Xoc

Lady Kʻabʻal Xook or Lady Xoc was a Maya Queen consort of Yaxchilan and is considered to have been one of the most powerful and prominent women in Maya civilization.

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Lahore Fort

The Lahore Fort (Punjabi and شاہی قلعہ: Shahi Qila, or "Royal Fort"), is a citadel in the city of Lahore, Pakistan.

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Lajja Gauri

Lajjit Gauri is a lotus-headed Hindu Goddess associated with abundance, fertility and sexuality, sometimes euphemistically described as Lajja ("modesty").

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Lamassu

A lamassu (Cuneiform:,; Sumerian: lammař; Akkadian: lamassu; sometimes called a lamassus) is an Assyrian protective deity, often depicted as having a human's head, a body of a bull or a lion, and bird's wings.

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Lamb of God

Lamb of God (Ἀμνὸς τοῦ Θεοῦ, Amnos tou Theou; Agnus Deī) is a title for Jesus that appears in the Gospel of John.

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Lane Twitchell

Lane Twitchell (b. 1967 in Salt Lake City, Utah) is a visual artist known foremost for his work in painting, cut paper, collage, and glass lamination.

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Larisa Shepitko

Larisa Efimovna Shepitko (Лари́са Ефи́мовна Шепи́тько; Лариса Юхимівна Шепітько; 6 January 1938 – 2 July 1979) was a Soviet film director, screenwriter and actress.

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Last Judgment

The Last Judgment, Final Judgment, Day of Judgment, Judgment Day, Doomsday, or The Day of the Lord (Hebrew Yom Ha Din) (יום הדין) or in Arabic Yawm al-Qiyāmah (یوم القيامة) or Yawm ad-Din (یوم الدین) is part of the eschatological world view of the Abrahamic religions and in the Frashokereti of Zoroastrianism.

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Lazarus of Bethany

Lazarus of Bethany, also known as Saint Lazarus or Lazarus of the Four Days, is the subject of a prominent miracle of Jesus in the Gospel of John, in which Jesus restores him to life four days after his death.

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Le génie du mal

Le génie du mal (installed 1848) or The Genius of Evil or the genie of evil or the spirit of evil, known informally in English as Lucifer or The Lucifer of Liège, is a religious sculpture executed in white marble by the Belgian artist Guillaume Geefs.

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Lebes Gamikos

The lebes gamikos, or "nuptial lebes," (plural - lebetes gamikoi) is a form of ancient Greek Pottery used in marriage ceremonies (literally, it means marriage vase).

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Lee Krasner

Lenore "Lee" Krasner (October 27, 1908 – June 19, 1984) was an American abstract expressionist painter in the second half of the 20th century.

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Leo Scepter

The Leo Scepter is a Byzantine ivory work of art, usually and erroneously identified as a scepter tip.

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Les Demoiselles d'Avignon

Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (The Young Ladies of Avignon, and originally titled The Brothel of Avignon) is a large oil painting created in 1907 by the Spanish artist Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) and now on exhibit in New York's Museum of Modern Art.

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Levantine archaeology

Levantine archaeology is the archaeological study of the Levant.

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Li'l Abner

Li'l Abner is a satirical American comic strip that appeared in many newspapers in the United States, Canada and Europe, featuring a fictional clan of hillbillies in the impoverished mountain village of Dogpatch, USA.

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Liberal and progressive Islam in Europe

This is a list of individual liberal and progressive Islamic movements in Europe, sorted by country.

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Life of Saint Denis (Bibliothèque Nationale, MS fr. 2090–2092)

Bibliothèque Nationale, MS fr.

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Lillian Delevoryas

Lillian Grace Delevoryas (January 3, 1932 - March 6, 2018) was an American artist whose career spanned six decades.

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Lillian Pitt

Lillian Pitt (born 1944) is a Native American artist from the Columbia River region of the Pacific Northwest.

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Linda Schele

Linda Schele (October 30, 1942 – April 18, 1998) was an expert in the field of Maya epigraphy and iconography.

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Linda Syddick Napaltjarri

Linda Yunkata Syddick Napaltjarri (born c. 1937) is a Pintupi- and Pitjantjatjara- speaking Indigenous artist from Australia's Western Desert region.

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Linear Pottery culture

The Linear Pottery culture is a major archaeological horizon of the European Neolithic, flourishing 5500–4500 BC.

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List of Dewey Decimal classes

The Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) is structured around ten main classes covering the entire world of knowledge; each main class is further structured into ten hierarchical divisions, each having ten sections of increasing specificity.

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List of Egyptian hieroglyphs

The following is a list of Egyptian hieroglyphs.

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List of gay, lesbian or bisexual people: L

Parent article: List of gay, lesbian or bisexual people; Siblings: This is a partial list of famous people who were or identify themselves as gay, lesbian or bisexual.

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List of Gospels

A gospel (a contraction of Old English god spel meaning "good news/glad tidings (of the kingdom of God)", comparable to Greek εὐαγγέλιον, evangelion) is a written account of the career and teachings of Jesus.

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List of major paintings by Masaccio

Masaccio is important for developing naturalistic depiction of 3D space containing figures conceived as accurate plastic objects.

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List of Occult symbols

The following is a list of symbols associated with the occult.

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List of people from Nebraska

The following are notable people who were born in, raised in, or have lived for a significant period of time in the U.S. state of Nebraska.

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List of portraiture offerings with Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs

A list of portraiture offerings with Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs.

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List of Russian people

This is a list of people associated with the modern Russian Federation, the Soviet Union, Imperial Russia, Russian Tsardom, the Grand Duchy of Moscow, and other predecessor states of Russia.

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List of Russian saints

This list of Russian saints includes the saints canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian saints canonized by other Orthodox Churches.

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List of Theotokos of St. Theodore icons

This article lists icons of the Theotokos of St. Theodore having historical or cultural value, or housed in scholarly museums or collections.

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List of University of Texas at Austin faculty

This list of University of Texas at Austin faculty includes current and former instructors and administrators of the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin), a major research university located in Austin, Texas that is the flagship institution of the University of Texas System.

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List of words ending in ology

† not study.

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Lists of national symbols

These are themes of lists of national symbols.

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Liz Maw

Liz Maw (born 1966) is an artist from New Zealand.

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Long Hard Road Out of Hell

"Long Hard Road Out of Hell" is a song by American rock band Marilyn Manson and British trip hop band Sneaker Pimps, released as a single from the soundtrack to the 1997 motion picture Spawn.

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Lopushna Monastery

The Lopushna Monastery of Saint John the Forerunner (Лопушански манастир „Свети Йоан Предтеча“, Lopushanski manastir „Sveti Yoan Predtecha“) is a Bulgarian Orthodox monastery in northwestern Bulgaria.

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Lot and his Daughters, with Sodom and Gomorrah Burning

Lot and his Daughters, with Sodom and Gomorrah Burning is a miniature in pen and watercolour from a very late illuminated manuscript bible.

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Lotus-eaters

In Greek mythology the lotus-eaters (λωτοφάγοι, lōtophagoi), also referred to as the lotophagi or lotophaguses (singular lotophagus) or lotophages (singular lotophage), were a race of people living on an island dominated by lotus plants.

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Louis Bréhier

Louis René Bréhier (August 5, 1868, Brest – October 13, 1951, Reims) was a French historian who specialized in Byzantine studies.

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Louis of Toulouse

Saint Louis of Toulouse (9 February 1274 – 19 August 1297) was a Neapolitan prince of the Capetian House of Anjou and a Catholic bishop.

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Lubok

A lubok (plural Lubki, Cyrillic: лубо́к, лубо́чная картинка) is a Russian popular print, characterized by simple graphics and narratives derived from literature, religious stories and popular tales.

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Lucas Cranach the Elder

Lucas Cranach the Elder (Lucas Cranach der Ältere, c. 1472 – 16 October 1553) was a German Renaissance painter and printmaker in woodcut and engraving.

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Lucca Madonna

The Lucca Madonna is a 1436 oil painting of the Madonna and Child by the Early Netherlandish master Jan van Eyck.

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Ludovisi Throne

The Ludovisi Throne is an ancient sculpted block of white marble hollowed at the back and carved with bas-reliefs on the three outer faces.

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Lugus

Lugus was a deity of the Celtic pantheon.

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Lupus of Sens

Saint Lupus of Sens (or Saint Loup de Sens) (born c. 573; died c. 623) was an early French bishop of Sens.

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Luristan bronze

Luristan bronzes (rarely "Lorestān", "Lorestāni" etc. in sources in English) are small cast objects decorated with bronze sculptures from the Early Iron Age which have been found in large numbers in Lorestān Province and Kermanshah in western Iran.

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Maajid Nawaz

Maajid Usman Nawaz (born 2 November 1977) is a British activist and politician.

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Madeleine Giteau

Madeleine Giteau (1918–2005) was a French historian and member of the Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient, who devoted a great part of her life to research involving Laotian and Cambodian art, especially Khmer sculpture and iconography.

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Madonna (art)

A Madonna is a representation of Mary, either alone or with her child Jesus.

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Madonna di sant'Alessio

Madonna di Sant’ Alessio (Madonna of St. Alexis; Madonna of Intercession) - is an icon, probably of Byzantine origin, of the Blessed Virgin now in the Basilica of the Saints Bonifacio and Alexis on the Aventine Hill in Rome, Italy.

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Madonna in the Church

Madonna in the Church (or The Virgin in the Church) is a small oil panel by the early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck.

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Madonna of the Book

The Madonna of the Book, or the Madonna del Libro, is a small painting by the Italian Renaissance artist Sandro Botticelli, and is preserved in the Poldi Pezzoli Museum in Milan.

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Maestà

Maestà, the Italian word for "majesty", designates an iconic formula of the enthroned Madonna with the child Jesus, whether or not accompanied with angels and saints.

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Mahasiddha

Mahasiddha (Sanskrit: mahāsiddha "great adept) is a term for someone who embodies and cultivates the "siddhi of perfection".

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Main Street

Main Street is a generic phrase used to denote a primary retail street of a village, town or small city in many parts of the world.

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Makara (Hindu mythology)

Makara (मकर) is a sea-creature in Hindu culture.

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Makinti Napanangka

Makinti Napanangka (1930 – 9 January 2011) was a Pintupi-speaking Indigenous Australian artist from Australia's Western Desert region.

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Man-prisoner (hieroglyph)

The ancient Egyptian Man-prisoner is one of the oldest hieroglyphs from Ancient Egypt.

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Mandarava

Mandarava (Skt., Mandāravā) (Tib., མནྡཱ་ར་བཱ་; Wylie, ma da ra ba me tog) (also known as The Long Life Dakini Mandarava, Machik Drubpai Gyalmo, or Pandaravasini) was, along with Yeshe Tsogyal, one of the two principal consorts of great 8th century Indian tantric teacher Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche), a founder-figure of Tibetan Buddhism, described as a 'second Buddha' by many practitioners.

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Manga iconography

Japanese manga has developed its own visual language or iconography for expressing emotion and other internal character states.

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Marc Michael Epstein

Marc Michael Epstein (born 15 October 1964) is Professor of Religion and Visual Culture on the Mattie M. Paschall (1899) & Norman Davis Chair at Vassar College.

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March of Progress

The March of Progress, properly called The Road to Homo Sapiens, is an illustration that presents 25 million years of human evolution.

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Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger

Marcus Gheeraerts (also written as Gerards or Geerards) (Bruges, 1561/62 – 19 January 1636) was a Flemish artist working at the Tudor court, described as "the most important artist of quality to work in England in large-scale between Eworth and Van Dyck"Strong 1969, p. 22 He was brought to England as a child by his father Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder, also a painter.

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Marcus Mettius

Marcus Mettius or Metius (fl. mid-1st century BC) was a supporter of Julius Caesar in the 50s and 40s BC.

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Marduk-zakir-šumi I kudurru

The Marduk-zakir-shumi I kudurru is a boundary stone (kudurru) of Marduk-zakir-šumi I, a king in the 10th dynasty of Babylon from 855 - 819 BC.

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Maria Goretti

Saint Maria Goretti (October 16, 1890 – July 6, 1902) is an Italian virgin-martyr of the Catholic Church, and one of the youngest canonized saints.

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Marian art in the Catholic Church

The Blessed Virgin Mary has been one of the major subjects of Western Art for centuries.

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Mark Bradford

Mark Bradford (born 1961 Los Angeles, California) is an American artist living and working in Los Angeles.

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Marriage of the Virgin

The Marriage of the Virgin is the subject in Christian art depicting the marriage of the Virgin Mary and Saint Joseph.

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Martín Ramírez

Martín Ramírez (January 30, 1895 – February 17, 1963) was a self-taught artist who spent most of his adult life institutionalized in California mental hospitals, diagnosed as a catatonic schizophrenic.

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Mary of Egypt

Mary of Egypt (Ϯⲁⲅⲓⲁ Ⲙⲁⲣⲓⲁ Ⲛⲣⲉⲙⲛ̀ⲭⲏⲙⲓ; c. 344 – c. 421) is revered as the patron saint of penitents, most particularly in the Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Churches, and Oriental Orthodox Churches.

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Mass media impact on spatial perception

Mass media influences spatial perception through journalistic cartography and spatial bias in news coverage.

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Mass of Saint Gregory

The Mass of Saint Gregory is a subject in Roman Catholic art which first appears in the late Middle Ages and was still found in the Counter-Reformation.

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Master of Heiligenkreuz

The Master of Heiligenkreuz was an Austrian painter active at the beginning of the 15th century; a tentative lifespan of 1395 to 1430 has been put forth but this appears highly conjectural.

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Master of Saint Francis

The Master of Saint Francis (in Italian Maestro di S. Francesco) was an anonymous Italian painter, perhaps of Pisan origin though probably trained in Umbria, working between 1250–1280.

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Mateus Fernandes

Mateus Fernandes (died 10 April 1515), also called Mateus Fernandes the Elder, was a Portuguese architect.

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Max Dashu

Maxine Hammond (born 1950), known professionally as Max Dashu, is an American feminist historian, author and artist.

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Max Dauphin

Max Dauphin was born in Luxembourg in 1977.

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Maya death gods

The Maya death gods, known by various names, are two basic types of death gods who are respectively represented by the 16th-century Yucatec deities Hunhau and Uacmitun Ahau mentioned by Spanish Bishop Landa.

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Maya stelae

Maya stelae (singular stela) are monuments that were fashioned by the Maya civilization of ancient Mesoamerica.

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Maya warfare

Although the Maya were once thought to have been peaceful (see below), current theories emphasize the role of inter-polity warfare as a factor in the development and perpetuation of Maya society.

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Mérode Altarpiece

The Mérode Altarpiece (or Annunciation Triptych) is an oil on oak panel triptych, now in The Cloisters, in New York City.

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Measuring rod

A measuring rod is a tool used to physically measure lengths and survey areas of various sizes.

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Media art history

Media art history is an interdisciplinary field of research that explores the current developments as well as the history and genealogy of new media art, digital art, and electronic art.

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Medieval art

The medieval art of the Western world covers a vast scope of time and place, over 1000 years of art in Europe, and at times the Middle East and North Africa.

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Medieval Bulgarian coinage

Medieval Bulgarian coinage are the coins minted by the Bulgarian Emperors during the Middle Ages at the time of the Second Bulgarian Empire.

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Meditations on the Life of Christ

The Meditations on the Life of Christ (Meditationes uitae Christi or Meditationes de uita Christi) is a fourteenth-century devotional work, later translated into Middle English by Nicholas Love as The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ.

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Melammu Project

The Melammu Project investigates the continuity, transformation and diffusion of Mesopotamian and Ancient Near Eastern culture from the third millennium BCE through the ancient world until Islamic times.

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Melencolia I

Melencolia I is a 1514 engraving by the German Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer.

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Mercy

Mercy (Middle English, from Anglo-French merci, from Medieval Latin merced-, merces, from Latin, "price paid, wages", from merc-, merxi "merchandise") is a broad term that refers to benevolence, forgiveness, and kindness in a variety of ethical, religious, social, and legal contexts.

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Mesoamerican architecture

Mesoamerican architecture is the set of architectural traditions produced by pre-Columbian cultures and civilizations of Mesoamerica, traditions which are best known in the form of public, ceremonial and urban monumental buildings and structures.

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Mesoamerican literature

The traditions of indigenous Mesoamerican literature extend back to the oldest-attested forms of early writing in the Mesoamerican region, which date from around the mid-1st millennium BCE.

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Mesoamerican world tree

World trees are a prevalent motif occurring in the mythical cosmologies, creation accounts, and iconographies of the pre-Columbian cultures of Mesoamerica.

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Michael (archangel)

Michael (translit; translit; Michahel;ⲙⲓⲭⲁⲏⲗ, translit) is an archangel in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.

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Michael Diers

Michael Diers (born 15 March 1950, in Werl, West Germany) is a German art historian and professor of art history in Hamburg and Berlin.

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Michaelion

The Michaelion was one of the earliest and most famous sanctuaries dedicated to Archangel Michael in the Roman Empire.

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Micromosaic

Micromosaics (or micro mosaics, micro-mosaics) are a special form of mosaic that uses unusually small mosaic pieces (tesserae) of glass, or in later Italian pieces an enamel-like material, to make small figurative images.

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Mikel Dunham

File:Mikel Dunham-Kathmandu.jpg|Mikel Dunham speaking at book launch of Elizabeth Hawley's "The Nepal Scene" with Lisa Choegyal, Ambassador Bodde and Elizabeth Hawley in the background.

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Mikołaj Sapieha (1581–1644)

Mikołaj Sapieha (Mykalojus Sapiega) (1581 - 1644) also known as Pobożny ("Pious") was a nobleman of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and Great Standard-Keeper of Lithuania.

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Military art

The genre of military art is art with a military subject matter, regardless of its style or medium.

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Military of Mycenaean Greece

The military nature of Mycenaean Greece (c. 1600–1100 BC) in the Late Bronze Age is evident by the numerous weapons unearthed, warrior and combat representations in contemporary art, as well as by the preserved Greek Linear B records.

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Min Palette

The Min Palette, or El Amrah Palette is an ancient Egyptian cosmetic palette from El Amrah (for the Amratian Period), found in Naqada, tomb B62.

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Minoan art

Minoan art is the art produced by the Minoan civilization on Bronze Age Crete from about 2600 to 1100 BC.

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Minoan sealstone

Minoan seal-stones are gemstones, or near-gem-quality stones produced in the Minoan civilization.

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Miraflores Altarpiece

The Miraflores Altarpiece (or Triptych of the Virgin, or The Altar of Our Lady or the Mary Altarpiece) is a c. 1442-5 oil-on-oak wood panel altarpiece by the Early Netherlandish painter Rogier van der Weyden, in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin since 1850.

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Miranda Aldhouse-Green

Miranda Jane Aldhouse-Green, (née Aldhouse; born 24 July 1947) is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Missorium of Theodosius I

The Missorium of Theodosius I is a large ceremonial silver dish preserved in the Real Academia de la Historia, in Madrid, Spain.

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Mithraeum

A Mithraeum, sometimes spelled Mithreum, is a large or small Mithraic temple, erected in classical antiquity by the worshippers of Mithras.

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Mithraism

Mithraism, also known as the Mithraic mysteries, was a mystery religion centered around the god Mithras that was practised in the Roman Empire from about the 1st to the 4th century CE.

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Moche culture

The Moche civilization (alternatively, the Mochica culture or the Early, Pre- or Proto-Chimú) flourished in northern Peru with its capital near present-day Moche, Trujillo, Peru from about 100 to 700 AD during the Regional Development Epoch.

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Modern understanding of Greek mythology

The genesis of modern understanding of Greek mythology is regarded by some scholars as a double reaction at the end of the 18th century against "the traditional attitude of Christian animosity mixed with disdain, which had prevailed for centuries", in which the Christian reinterpretation of myth as a "lie" or fable had been retained.

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Mohammed Ali (artist)

Mohammed Ali, MBE (মুহাম্মদ আলি; born 21 July 1979), also known by his stage name Aerosol Arabic, is an English street artist.

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Moheyan

Heshang Moheyan was a late 8th century Buddhist monk associated with the East Mountain Teaching.

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Mombach

Mombach, with about 14,000 inhabitants, is a borough in the northwest corner of Mainz, Germany.

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Money bag

A money bag (moneybag, bag of money, money sack, sack of money, bag of gold, gold bag, sack of gold, etc.) is a bag (normally with a drawstring) of money (or gold) used to hold and transport coins and banknotes from/to a mint, bank, ATM, vending machine, business, or other institution.

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Monomachus Crown

The Monomachus Crown (Monomakhosz-korona) is a piece of engraved Byzantine goldwork, decorated with cloisonné enamel, in the Hungarian National Museum in Budapest, Hungary.

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Monza ampullae

The Monza ampullae form the largest collection of a specific type of Early Medieval pilgrimage ampullae or small flasks designed to hold holy oil from pilgrimage sites in the Holy Land related to the life of Jesus.

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Monza Cathedral

The Duomo of Monza (Italian: Duomo di Monza) often known in English as Monza Cathedral is the main religious building of Monza, near Milan, in northern Italy.

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More Adey

William More Adey, known universally as More Adey (1858–29 January 1942), was an English art critic, editor and aesthete.

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Mosan art

Mosan art is a regional style of art from the valley of the Meuse in present-day Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany.

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Moscow

Moscow (a) is the capital and most populous city of Russia, with 13.2 million residents within the city limits and 17.1 million within the urban area.

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Motif (visual arts)

In art and iconography, a motif is an element of an image.

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Mound 72

Mound 72 is a small ridgetop mound located roughly to the south of Monks Mound at Cahokia Mounds near Collinsville, Illinois.

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Muchalls Castle

Muchalls Castle stands overlooking the North Sea in the countryside of Kincardine and Mearns, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.

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Mudra

A mudra (Sanskrit "seal", "mark", or "gesture") is a symbolic or ritual gesture in Hinduism and Buddhism.

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Museo de Arte Contemporáneo (Madrid)

The Museo de Arte Contemporáneo (Museum of Contemporary Art), formerly known as Museo Municipal de Arte Contemporáneo, is a museum in Madrid, Spain, located in the historic barracks of the Conde Duque, a building designed by the architect Pedro de Ribera at the beginning of the 18th century.

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Museo de Arte Hispanoamericano Isaac Fernández Blanco

The Museo de Arte Hispanoamericano Isaac Fernández Blanco is a museum of art located in the Retiro ward of Buenos Aires, Argentina.

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Museum of Ukrainian folk art

The National Folk Decorative Art Museum (Національний Музей українського народного декоративного мистецтва) is a museum dedicated to Ukrainian Folk decorative art in Kiev, Ukraine.

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Music history

Music history, sometimes called historical musicology, is the highly diverse subfield of the broader discipline of musicology that studies music from a historical viewpoint.

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Music of Scotland

Scotland is internationally known for its traditional music, which remained vibrant throughout the 20th century and into the 21st, when many traditional forms worldwide lost popularity to pop music.

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Musicology

Musicology is the scholarly analysis and research-based study of music.

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Mutunus Tutunus

In ancient Roman religion, Mutunus Tutunus or Mutinus Titinus was a phallic marriage deity, in some respects equated with Priapus.

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Mykola Babak

Mykola Babak (Микола Бабак, 10 June 1954) is a Ukrainian artist, writer, publisher, and art collector; lives and works in Cherkasy.

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Mykola Pymonenko

Mykola Kornylovych Pymonenko (Ukrainian: Микола Корнилович Пимоненко; 9 March 1862, Priorka, near Kiev — 26 March 1912, Kiev) was a Ukrainian painter; associated with the Peredvizhniki.

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Nago–Torbole

Nago–Torbole (Naag-Turbel) is a comune (municipality) in Trentino in the northern Italian region Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, located about southwest of Trento on the north shore of Lake Garda.

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Napoleon Crossing the Alps

Napoleon Crossing the Alps (also known as Napoleon at the Saint-Bernard Pass or Bonaparte Crossing the Alps) is the title given to the five versions of an oil on canvas equestrian portrait of Napoleon Bonaparte painted by the French artist Jacques-Louis David between 1801 and 1805.

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Narciso Bassols

Narciso Bassols García (October 22, 1897 – July 24, 1959) was a Mexican lawyer, socialist politician, ambassador to France, the Soviet Union, and the United Kingdom, and professor of law at the National University of Mexico.

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Narmer Palette

The Narmer Palette, also known as the Great Hierakonpolis Palette or the Palette of Narmer, is a significant Egyptian archeological find, dating from about the 31st century BC.

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National Archaeology Museum (Portugal)

The National Museum of Archaeology (Portugal) (Museu Nacional de Arqueologia) is the largest Archaeological museum in Portugal and one of the most important museums in the world devoted to ancient art found in the Iberian Peninsula.

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National Iconographic Museum "Onufri"

The National Iconographic Museum "Onufri" Muzeu Kombëtar Ikonografik "Onufri") is an Albanian national museum dedicated to Byzantine art and iconography in Berat, Albania. The museum is located inside the Church of the Dormition of St Mary in the castle quarter Berat. The museum was named to honor Onufri, an Albanian painting Headmaster of the 16th century. The museum features on display 173 objects chosen from a found of 1500 objects belonging to the found of Albanian Churches and Monasteries as well as to Berat.

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National Museum, New Delhi

The National Museum in New Delhi, also known as the National Museum of India, is one of the largest museums in India.

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National symbols of England

The national symbols of England are things which are emblematic, representative or otherwise characteristic of England or English culture.

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Native American fashion

Native American fashion (also known as Indigenous American fashion) encompasses the design and creation of high-fashion clothing and fashion accessories by the Native peoples of the Americas.

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Native Americans in the United States

Native Americans, also known as American Indians, Indians, Indigenous Americans and other terms, are the indigenous peoples of the United States.

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Nativity (Christus)

The Nativity is a devotional mid-1450s oil-on-wood panel painting by the Early Netherlandish painter Petrus Christus.

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Naumachia

The naumachia (in Latin naumachia, from the Ancient Greek ναυμαχία/naumachía, literally "naval combat") in the Ancient Roman world referred to both the staging of naval battles as mass entertainment, and the basin or building in which this took place.

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Navajo music

Navajo music is music made by Navajos, mostly hailing from the Four Corners region of the Southwestern United States and the territory of the Navajo Nation.

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Nazca culture

The Nazca culture (also Nasca) was the archaeological culture that flourished from beside the arid, southern coast of Peru in the river valleys of the Rio Grande de Nazca drainage and the Ica Valley.

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Nechung Oracle

The Nechung Oracle is the State Oracle of Tibet.

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Neimar

Neimar (Неимар) is an urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia.

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Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project

The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project is an international scholarly project aimed at collecting and publishing ancient Assyrian texts and studies based on them.

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New Skete

New Skete is the collective term for two Orthodox Christian monastic communities in Cambridge, New York (geographically in the neighboring town of White Creek).

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New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center, at 40 Lincoln Center Plaza, is located in Manhattan, New York City, at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts on the Upper West Side, between the Metropolitan Opera House and the Vivian Beaumont Theater.

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Niccolo Cosme

Niccolo Cosme (born May 15, 1980 in Cavite, Philippines) is a conceptual photographer based in Manila, Philippines.

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Nicholas Mukomberanwa

Nicholas Mukomberanwa (1940 - 12 November 2002) was a Zimbabwean sculptor and art teacher.

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Nicola Pisano

Nicola Pisano (also called Niccolò Pisano, Nicola de Apulia or Nicola Pisanus; c. 1220/1225 – c. 1284) was an Italian sculptor whose work is noted for its classical Roman sculptural style.

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Niello

Niello is a black mixture, usually of sulphur, copper, silver, and lead, used as an inlay on engraved or etched metal, especially silver.

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Nikolai Pavlovich

Nikolai Pavlovich (Bulgarian: Николай Павлович; 9 December 1835, Svishtov – 13 February 1894, Sofia) was a Bulgarian Nationalist painter, lithographer and illustrator.

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Nine bows

The nine bows is a term used in Ancient Egypt to represent the traditional enemies of Egypt.

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Noche Crist

Noche Crist (née Maria Nicola Olga Ioan) (1909, Craiova, Romania – May 17, 2004, Washington, D.C.) was an American artist.

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Noli me tangere

Noli me tangere is the Latin version of a phrase spoken, according to John 20:17, by Jesus to Mary Magdalene when she recognized him after his resurrection.

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Nona Orbach

Nona Orbach (born 1953)2001, ”Tel Nona”, Israeli National Maritime Museum, Haifa (Catalog), 47.

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Northern Mannerism

Northern Mannerism is the form of Mannerism found in the visual arts north of the Alps in the 16th and early 17th centuries.

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Northern Renaissance

The Northern Renaissance was the Renaissance that occurred in Europe north of the Alps.

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Nortia

Nortia is the Latinized name of the Etruscan goddess Nurtia (variant manuscript readings include Norcia, Norsia, Nercia, and Nyrtia), whose sphere of influence was time, fate, destiny, and chance.

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Norwich School (independent school)

Norwich School (formally King Edward VI Grammar School, Norwich) is a selective English independent day school in the close of Norwich Cathedral, Norwich.

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Notman Photographic Archives

The Notman Photographic Archives is an archive of photographic images originally collected by photographer William Notman.

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Notname

In art history, a Notname ("necessity-name" or "contingency-name") is an invented name given to an artist whose identity has been lost.

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Nottingham alabaster

Nottingham alabaster is a term used to refer to the English sculpture industry, mostly of relatively small religious carvings, which flourished from the fourteenth century until the early sixteenth century.

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Nuno Pinheiro (artist)

Nuno Pinheiro is a Portuguese graphic designer and illustrator.

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Nursing Madonna

The Nursing Madonna, Virgo Lactans, or Madonna Lactans, is an iconography of the Madonna and Child in which the Virgin Mary is shown breastfeeding the infant Jesus.

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Oaxaca Valley

The Central Valleys (Valles Centrales) of Oaxaca, also simply known as the Oaxaca Valley, is a geographic region located within the modern-day state of Oaxaca in southern Mexico.

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Odd Nerdrum

Odd Nerdrum (born 8 April 1944) is a Swedish-born, Norwegian figurative painter whose work is held by museums worldwide.

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Old Katholikon of the Trinity Lavra

The Trinity Cathedral (Тро́ицкий собо́р) is a cathedral church, the oldest of all the remaining buildings in the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius.

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Om Prakash Sharma (artist)

Om Prakash Sharma (born 14 December 1932) is an Indian painter, visual artist, professor, writer and sitarist based in New Delhi, India.

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Orientalism

Orientalism is a term used by art historians and literary and cultural studies scholars for the imitation or depiction of aspects in Middle Eastern, South Asian, and East Asian cultures (Eastern world).

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Osiris myth

The Osiris myth is the most elaborate and influential story in ancient Egyptian mythology.

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Our Lady of Ipswich

Our Lady of Ipswich (also known as Our Lady of Grace) was a popular English Marian shrine before the English Reformation.

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Our Lady of Perpetual Help

Our Lady of Perpetual Help (also known as Our Lady of Perpetual Succour)The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1911 uses the latter name.

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Our Lady of Sorrows

Our Lady of Sorrows (Beata Maria Virgo Perdolens), Our Lady of Dolours, the Sorrowful Mother or Mother of Sorrows (Latin: Mater Dolorosa), and Our Lady of Piety, Our Lady of the Seven Sorrows or Our Lady of the Seven Dolours are names by which the Virgin Mary is referred to in relation to sorrows in her life.

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Outhouse

An outhouse, also known by many other names, is a small structure, separate from a main building, which covers one or more toilets.

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Oxtotitlán

Oxtotitlán is the name of a natural rock shelter and archaeological site in Chilapa de Álvarez, Mexican state of Guerrero that contains murals linked to the Olmec motifs and iconography.

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Pablo Zelaya Sierra

Pablo Zelaya Sierra Honduran artist and painter.

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Pada (foot)

Pāda is the Sanskrit term for "foot" (cognate to English foot, Latin pes, Greek pous), with derived meanings "step, stride; footprint, trace; vestige, mark".

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Paddy Bedford

Paddy Bedford (circa 1922 – 14 July 2007), aka "Goowoomji", was a contemporary Indigenous Australian artist from Warmun in the Kimberley, and one of eight Australian artists selected for an architectural commission for the Musée du quai Branly.

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Pagoda

A pagoda is a tiered tower with multiple eaves, built in traditions originating as stupa in historic South Asia and further developed in East Asia or with respect to those traditions, common to Nepal, China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Myanmar, India, Sri Lanka and other parts of Asia.

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Painting

Painting is the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a solid surface (support base).

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Palais Rohan, Strasbourg

The Palais Rohan (Rohan Palace) in Strasbourg is the former residence of the prince-bishops and cardinals of the House of Rohan, an ancient French noble family originally from Brittany.

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Palatine Chapel, Aachen

The Palatine Chapel in Aachen is an early medieval chapel and remaining component of Charlemagne's Palace of Aachen in what is now Germany.

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Palekh

Palekh (Па́лех) is an urban locality (a settlement) and the administrative center of Palekhsky District of Ivanovo Oblast, Russia.

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Papyrus stem (hieroglyph)

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Parachutist Badge (United Kingdom)

The British Armed Forces award a range of Parachutist Badges to those qualified as military parachutists.

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Park Güell

The Park Güell (Parc Güell) is a public park system composed of gardens and architectonic elements located on Carmel Hill, in Barcelona, Catalonia (Spain).

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Paschal cycle

The Paschal cycle, in the Eastern Orthodox Church, is the cycle of the moveable feasts built around Pascha (Easter).

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Passion of Jesus

In Christianity, the Passion (from Late Latin: passionem "suffering, enduring") is the short final period in the life of Jesus covering his entrance visit to Jerusalem and leading to his crucifixion on Mount Calvary, defining the climactic event central to Christian doctrine of salvation history.

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Patriarchal cross

The Patriarchal cross (☨) is a variant of the Christian cross, the religious symbol of Christianity.

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Patriot movement

The patriot movement is a collection of various conservative, independent, mostly rural, small government, American nationalist social movements in the United States that include organized militia members, tax protesters, sovereign or state citizens, quasi-Christian apocalypticists/survivalists, and combinations thereof.

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Paul-Marie-Léon Regnard

Paul-Marie-Léon Regnard (7 November 1850, in Châtillon-sur-Seine – 18 April 1927, in Paris) was a French physician and physiologist.

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Pátio do Colégio

Pátio do Colégio (in Portuguese School Yard, written in the archaic orthography Pateo do Collegio) is the name given to the historical Jesuit church and school in the city of São Paulo, Brazil.

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Pázmány Péter Catholic University

Pázmány Péter Catholic University is a private university of the Catholic Church in Hungary, recognized by the state.

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Pectoral (Ancient Egypt)

The pectorals of ancient Egypt were a form of jewelry, often represented as a brooch.

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Pelican

Pelicans are a genus of large water birds that make up the family Pelecanidae.

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Pensive Christ

The Pensive Christ or Christus im Elend ("Christ in Distress" in German) or Christus in der Rast or Chrystus Frasobliwy ("Christ Sorrowful" in Polish) is a subject in Christian iconography depicting a contemplating Jesus, sitting with his head supported by his hand with the Crown of Thorns and marks of his flagellation.

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Perpetual virginity of Mary

The perpetual virginity of Mary is a Marian doctrine, taught by the Catholic Church and held by a number of groups in Christianity, which asserts that Mary (the mother of Jesus) was "always a virgin, before, during and after the birth of Jesus Christ." This doctrine also proclaims that Mary had no marital relations after Jesus' birth nor gave birth to any children other than Jesus.

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Persian art

Persian art or Iranian art has one of the richest art heritages in world history and has been strong in many media including architecture, painting, weaving, pottery, calligraphy, metalworking and sculpture.

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Petar Ubavkić

Peter Ubavkić (12 April 1852 in Belgrade – 28 June 1910 in Belgrade) was a Serbian sculptor and painter, recognized as the premier sculptor of Serbia, given the task to create a series of national monuments of which he authored many.

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Peter Murphy (artist)

Peter Murphy (born 1959) is a British artist working in traditional egg tempera and gold leaf techniques, and a member of the Stuckist art movement.

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Petronius of Bologna

Saint Petronius (San Petronio) (died ca. 450 AD) was bishop of Bologna during the fifth century.

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Philip II, Metropolitan of Moscow

Saint Philip II of Moscow (11 February 1507 – 23 December 1569) was a Russian Orthodox monk, who became Metropolitan of Moscow during the reign of Ivan the Terrible.

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Photo blanket

A photo blanket is a large, rectangular piece of fabric displaying images, pictures, or designs, often with bound edges, used as a blanket or decorative object.

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Physiologist (Russian literature)

Originally, Physiologist was an ancient collection of stories about nature, which probably appeared in Alexandria in 200 - 300 A.D. The ancient Russian Physiologist in its 15th-century version is a translation from Bulgarian.

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Piasa

The Piasa or Piasa Bird is a Native American dragon depicted in one of two murals painted by Native Americans on bluffs (cliffsides) above the Mississippi River.

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Picts

The Picts were a tribal confederation of peoples who lived in what is today eastern and northern Scotland during the Late Iron Age and Early Medieval periods.

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Pietà (Southern German, Cloisters)

Pietà (German: Vesperbild) a small painted wood sculpture dated to c. 1375–1400, now in the collection of the Cloisters, New York.

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Pieter Bruegel the Elder

Pieter Bruegel (also Brueghel) the Elder (c. 1525-1530 – 9 September 1569) was the most significant artist of Dutch and Flemish Renaissance painting, a painter and printmaker from Brabant, known for his landscapes and peasant scenes (so called genre painting); he was a pioneer in making both types of subject the focus in large paintings.

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Pindaya Caves

The Pindaya Caves (ပင်းတယရွှေဥမင်,; officially), located next to the town of Pindaya, Shan State, Burma (Myanmar) are a Buddhist pilgrimage site and a tourist attraction located on a limestone ridge in the Myelat region.

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Plague Column, Vienna

The Plague Column (Pestsäule), or Trinity Column (Dreifaltigkeitssäule) is a Holy Trinity column located on the Graben, a street in the inner city of Vienna, Austria.

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Plovdiv

Plovdiv (Пловдив) is the second-largest city in Bulgaria, with a city population of 341,000 and 675,000 in the greater metropolitan area.

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Poet and Muse diptych

The Poet and Muse diptych is a Late Antique ivory diptych that appears to commemorate, and to flatter, the literary pursuits of the aristocrat who commissioned it, so that it stands somewhat apart from the consular diptychs that were carved for distribution to friends and patrons when a man assumed the consular dignity during the later Roman Empire.

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Politikon

The politikon coinage is a series of Byzantine billon coins, struck around the middle of the 14th century, which are distinguished by the Greek inscription +ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΟΝ ("of the city, civic").

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Poor Man's Bible

The term Poor Man's Bible has come into use in modern times to describe works of art within churches and cathedrals which either individually or collectively have been created to illustrate the teachings of the Bible for a largely illiterate population.

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Portland Vase

The Portland Vase is a Roman cameo glass vase, which is dated to between AD 1 and AD 25, though low BC dates have some scholarly support.

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Portraiture of Elizabeth I of England

The portraiture of Elizabeth I of England illustrates the evolution of English royal portraits in the Early Modern period from the representations of simple likenesses to the later complex imagery used to convey the power and aspirations of the state, as well as of the monarch at its head.

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Portrayals of God in popular media

Portrayals of God in popular media have varied from a white-haired old man in Oh, God! to a woman in Dogma, from an entirely off-screen character to a figure of fun.

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Portuguese Romanesque architecture

The Romanesque style of architecture was introduced in Portugal between the end of the 11th and the beginning of the 12th century.

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Posthumous fame of El Greco

El Greco (Castilian for "The Greek"), 1541 – April 7, 1614) was a prominent painter, sculptor and architect of the Spanish Renaissance, whose dramatic and expressionistic style was met with puzzlement by his contemporaries but found appreciation in the 20th century.

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President of the Czech Republic

The President of the Czech Republic is the elected formal head of state of the Czech Republic and the commander-in-chief of the Military of the Czech Republic.

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Princeton University Chapel

The Princeton University Chapel is located on that university's main campus in Princeton, New Jersey, United States.

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Prohor Pčinjski

The Monastery of Venerable Prohor of Pčinja (Manastir Prepodobnog Prohora Pčinjskog / Манастир Преподобног Прохора Пчињског, commonly known as Prohor Pčinjski) is an 11th-century Serbian Orthodox monastery in the deep south in Serbia, located in the village of Klenike, south of Vranje, near the border with Macedonia.

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Promptuarium Iconum Insigniorum

Promptuarium Iconum Insigniorum (full title: Prima pars Promptuarii iconum insigniorum à seculo hominum, subiectis eorum vitis, per compendium ex probatissimis autoribus desumptis) is an iconography book by Guillaume Rouillé.

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Psalm 91

Psalm 91 (Greek numbering: Psalm 90), referred to by its Latin title Qui habitat (after its first line, "Whoso dwelleth under the defence of the Most High"), is known as the Psalm of Protection.

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Publius Licinius Crassus (son of triumvir)

Publius Licinius Crassus (86?/82? BC – 53 BC) was one of two sons of Marcus Licinius Crassus, the so-called "triumvir", and Tertulla, daughter of Marcus Terentius Varro Lucullus.

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Putto

A putto (plural putti) is a figure in a work of art depicted as a chubby male child, usually naked and sometimes winged.

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Quentin Metsys the Younger

Quentin Metsys the Younger (Quinten or Massys; c. 1543 – 1589) was a Flemish Renaissance painter, one of several of his countrymen active as artists of the Tudor court in the reign of Elizabeth I of England.

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R. D. Banerji

Rakhaldas Bandyopadhyay (12 April 1885 – 23 May 1930), also known as R. D. Banerji, was an Indian historian and a native Indian pioneer in the fields of Indian archaeology, epigraphy and palaeography.

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Rabbits and hares in art

Rabbits and hares are common motifs in the visual arts, with variable mythological and artistic meanings in different cultures.

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Rabbula Gospels

The Rabbula Gospels, or Rabula Gospels, (Florence, Biblioteca Mediceo Laurenziana, cod. Plut. I, 56) is a 6th-century illuminated Syriac Gospel Book.

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Radical chic

"Radical chic" is a term coined by journalist Tom Wolfe in his 1970 essay "Radical Chic: That Party at Lenny's" to describe the adoption and promotion of radical political causes by celebrities, socialites, and high society.

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Radivoje Kalajdzic

Radivoje "Rade" Kalajdzic (born 27 July 1991) is a Bosnian-American professional boxer of Serb ethnicity.

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Rakovica Monastery

Rakovica monastery is the monastery of the Serbian Orthodox Church, within the Belgrade-Karlovac Archbishopric, located in Belgrade suburb of Rakovica. It is dedicated to the archangels Мihailo and Gavrilo.

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Ramón Mujica Pinilla

Ramon Elias Mujica Pinilla is a Peruvian anthropologist and served under three Presidents as Director of the National Library of Peru.

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Ranch

A ranch is an area of land, including various structures, given primarily to the practice of ranching, the practice of raising grazing livestock such as cattle or sheep for meat or wool.

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Répertoire International de Littérature Musicale

Répertoire International de Littérature Musicale (International Repertory of Music Literature; Internationales Repertorium der Musikliteratur), commonly known by its acronym RILM, is an organisation which seeks to provide a comprehensive and accurate representation of musicology in all countries and languages, and across all disciplinary and cultural boundaries.

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Reading Egyptian Art: A Hieroglyphic Guide to Ancient Egyptian Painting and Sculpture

Reading Egyptian Art: A Hieroglyphic Guide to Ancient Egyptian Painting and Sculpture a primer on Egyptian hieroglyphs from the viewpoint of seeing hieroglyphs in the context of their use in iconography of sculpture, monuments, reliefs, tomb reliefs, literature, specifically the corpus of The Book of the Dead versions for various deceased Egyptians, and other areas.

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Red-figure pottery

Red-figure vase painting is one of the most important styles of figural Greek vase painting.

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Regina Vasorum

The Regina Vasorum or Queen of Vases is a 4th-century BC hydria from Cumae depicting Eleusinian divinities with gilded flesh in polychrome relief.

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Religious art

Religious art or sacred art is artistic imagery using religious inspiration and motifs and is often intended to uplift the mind to the spiritual.

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Rembrandt

Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (15 July 1606 – 4 October 1669) was a Dutch draughtsman, painter, and printmaker.

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Rest on the Flight into Egypt

The Rest on the Flight into Egypt is a subject in Christian art showing Mary, Joseph, and the infant Jesus resting during their flight into Egypt.

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Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Mola)

The Rest on the Flight into Egypt is an oil painting on copper by the Italian Baroque master Pier Francesco Mola (1612–1666), in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

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Resurrection of Jesus in Christian art

The Resurrection of Jesus has long been central to Christian faith and Christian art, whether as a single scene or as part of a cycle of the Life of Christ.

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Retablo

A retablo in Mexican folk art (also lámina) is a devotional painting, especially a small popular or folk art one using iconography derived from traditional Catholic church art.

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Richard Boys

Reverend Richard Boys MA (1785–1867) was a Church of England clergyman and author, most notable for his tenure as Chaplain on St. Helena at the time of Napoleon Bonaparte's exile there.

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Rio de Janeiro State University

Rio de Janeiro State Universityhttp://www.uerj.br/modulos/hotsite/index.php?lang.

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Robert Hite (artist)

Robert Hite (born 1956 in Richmond, Virginia) is an American visual artist.

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Robert Indiana

Robert Indiana (born Robert Clark; September 13, 1928 – May 19, 2018) was an American artist associated with the pop art movement.

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Roman art

Roman art refers to the visual arts made in Ancient Rome and in the territories of the Roman Empire.

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Roman glass

Roman glass objects have been recovered across the Roman Empire in domestic, industrial and funerary contexts.

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Romanesque art

Romanesque art is the art of Europe from approximately 1000 AD to the rise of the Gothic style in the 12th century, or later, depending on region.

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Romeyn de Hooghe

No description.

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Romulus and Remus

In Roman mythology, Romulus and Remus are twin brothers, whose story tells the events that led to the founding of the city of Rome and the Roman Kingdom by Romulus.

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Rosa Mystica

Rosa Mystica or Mystic Rose is a title of Mary in Catholic Marian devotion.

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Rosemary Joyce

Rosemary Joyce (born 1956) is an American anthropologist and social archaeologist who has specialized in research in Honduras.

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Rotwang

C.

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Royal entry

The Royal Entry, also known by various names, including Triumphal Entry, Joyous Entry, consisted of the ceremonies and festivities accompanying a formal entry by a ruler or his representative into a city in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Period in Europe.

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Royal Gold Cup

The Royal Gold Cup or Saint Agnes Cup is a solid gold covered cup lavishly decorated with enamel and pearls.

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Rudolf Koppitz

Rudolf Koppitz (4 January 1884 – 8 July 1936), often credited as Viennese or Austrian, was a Photo-Secessionist whose work includes straight photography and modernist images.

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Ryabushinsky Museum of Icons and Paintings

The Rybushinsky Museum of Icons and Paintings is a private museum with a collection of more than 2,000 items, comprising Medieval West European paintings and encaustics.

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Sacred architecture

Sacred architecture (also known as religious architecture) is a religious architectural practice concerned with the design and construction of places of worship or sacred or intentional space, such as churches, mosques, stupas, synagogues, and temples.

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Sacred tradition

Sacred Tradition, or Holy Tradition, is a theological term used in some Christian traditions, primarily those claiming apostolic succession such as the Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Assyrian, and Anglican traditions, to refer to the foundation of the doctrinal and spiritual authority of the Christian Church and of the Bible.

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Saddle

The saddle is a supportive structure for a rider or other load, fastened to an animal's back by a girth.

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Sagaris

The sagaris is an ancient Iranian shafted weapon used by the horse-riding ancient North-Iranian Saka and Scythian peoples of the great Eurasian steppe.

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Sail (hieroglyph)

The Ancient Egyptian Sail hieroglyph is Gardiner sign listed no.

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Saint Ambrose, Brugherio

Saint Ambrose (Chiesetta di Sant'Ambrogio) is a small church which is an annex to the farmhouse that takes its name from it, in Brugherio, Italy.

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Saint Bessus

Saint Bessus, sometimes Besse, (San Besso) is venerated as a member of the legendary Theban Legion, whose members were led by Saint Maurice and were martyred for their Christian faith in the 3rd century.

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Saint Blaise

Blaise (Սուրբ Վլասի, Soorp Vlasi; Άγιος Βλάσιος, Agios Vlasios; also known as Saint Blase), was a physician, and bishop of Sebastea in historical Armenia (modern Sivas, Turkey).

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Saint Catherine (Caravaggio)

Saint Catherine of Alexandria (c. 1598) is an oil painting by the Italian Baroque master Caravaggio.

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Saint Eustace

Saint Eustace, also known as Eustachius or Eustathius in Latin, is revered as a Christian martyr and soldier saint.

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Saint Fin Barre's Cathedral

Saint Fin Barre's Cathedral (Ardeaglais Naomh Fionnbarra) is a Gothic revival three spire cathedral in the city of Cork, Ireland.

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Saint George and the Dragon

The legend of Saint George and the Dragon describes the saint taming and slaying a dragon that demanded human sacrifices; the saint thereby rescues the princess chosen as the next offering.

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Saint George in devotions, traditions and prayers

Saint George is one of Christianity's most popular saints, and is highly honored by both the Western and Eastern Churches.

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Saint Ghislain

Saint Ghislain (died October 9, 680) was a confessor and anchorite in Belgium.

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Saint Jerome in His Study (Dürer)

Saint Jerome in His Study (Der heilige Hieronymus im Gehäus) is an engraving of 1514 by the German artist Albrecht Dürer.

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Saint Joseph

Joseph (translit) is a figure in the Gospels who was married to Mary, Jesus' mother, and, in the Christian tradition, was Jesus's legal father.

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Saint Luke Drawing the Virgin

Saint Luke Drawing the Virgin is a large oil and tempera on oak panel painting, usually dated between 1435 and 1440, attributed to the Early Netherlandish painter Rogier van der Weyden.

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Saint Nicholas

Saint Nicholas (Ἅγιος Νικόλαος,, Sanctus Nicolaus; 15 March 270 – 6 December 343), also called Nikolaos of Myra or Nicholas of Bari, was Bishop of Myra, in Asia Minor (modern-day Demre, Turkey), and is a historic Christian saint.

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Saint Peter

Saint Peter (Syriac/Aramaic: ܫܸܡܥܘܿܢ ܟܹ݁ܐܦ݂ܵܐ, Shemayon Keppa; שמעון בר יונה; Petros; Petros; Petrus; r. AD 30; died between AD 64 and 68), also known as Simon Peter, Simeon, or Simon, according to the New Testament, was one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus Christ, leaders of the early Christian Great Church.

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Saint Petroc

Saint Petroc or Petrock (Petrocus; Pedrog; Perreux; died) was a British prince and Christian saint.

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Saint Sava Serbian Orthodox Church (Merrillville, Indiana)

Saint Sava Serbian Orthodox Church (Црква светог Саве; Crkva svetog Save) was originally established February 14, 1914 in Gary, Indiana and is now located in Merrillville, Indiana since the consecration of the new church building in 1991.

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Saint Spyridon

Saint Spyridon, Bishop of Trimythous also sometimes written Saint Spiridon (Greek: Ἅγιος Σπυρίδων; c. 270 – 348) is a saint honoured in both the Eastern and Western Christian traditions.

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Saint Stephen

Stephen (Στέφανος Stéphanos, meaning "wreath, crown" and by extension "reward, honor", often given as a title rather than as a name), (c. AD 5 – c. AD 34) traditionally venerated as the protomartyr or first martyr of Christianity,, St.

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Saint symbolism

Christianity has used symbolism from its very beginnings.

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Salus Populi Romani

Salus Populi Romani (Protectress, or more literally health or salvation, of the Roman People) is a Roman Catholic title associated with the venerated image of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Rome.

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Salvador Dalí

Salvador Domingo Felipe Jacinto Dalí i Domènech, 1st Marquess of Dalí de Púbol (11 May 190423 January 1989), known professionally as Salvador Dalí, was a prominent Spanish surrealist born in Figueres, Catalonia, Spain.

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Salvator Mundi

Salvator Mundi, Latin for Saviour of the World, is a subject in iconography depicting Christ with his right hand raised in blessing and his left hand holding an orb (frequently surmounted by a cross), known as a globus cruciger.

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Samantabhadrī (tutelary)

Samantabhadri (Sanskrit; Devanagari: समन्तभद्री; IAST: samantabhadrī) is a dakini and female Buddha from the Vajrayana Buddhist tradition.

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San Jose de Moro

San José de Moro is a Moche archaeological site in the Pacanga District, Chepén Province, La Libertad Region, of Northwestern Peru.

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San Vito dei Normanni

San Vito dei Normanni (Sanvitese: Santu Vitu) is an Italian town of 19,947 inhabitants of the province of Brindisi in Apulia.

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San Zeno Altarpiece (Mantegna)

The San Zeno Altarpiece is a triptych by the Italian Renaissance painter Andrea Mantegna, from c. 1457-1460.

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Sanchi Yakshi Figure

The Sanchi Yakshi Figure is a sandstone statue of the Shalabhanjika Yakshi from the ancient Buddhist site of Sanchi in the state of Madhya Pradesh, India.

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Sanctissimus Dominus Noster

Sanctissimus Dominus Noster is a papal bull of Pope Urban VIII which was given on 13 March 1625.

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Sandpainting

Sandpainting is the art of pouring coloured sands, and powdered pigments from minerals or crystals, or pigments from other natural or synthetic sources onto a surface to make a fixed, or unfixed sand painting.

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Sandro Botticelli

Alessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi (c. 1445 – May 17, 1510), known as Sandro Botticelli, was an Italian painter of the Early Renaissance.

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Sanghyang Kamahayanikan

Sang Hyang Kamahayanikan is a prose literature of old Javanese people.

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Santa Barraza

Santa Barraza (born April 7, 1951) is an American mixed-media artist and painter who is well known for her colorful, retablo style painting.

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Santa Prisca Church (Rome)

Santa Prisca is a titular church of Rome, on the Aventine Hill, for Cardinal-priests.

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Santa Pudenziana

The basilica of Santa Pudenziana is a 4th-century church of Rome, dedicated to Saint Pudentiana, sister of Saint Praxedis and daughter of Saint Pudens.

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Santa Reparata, Florence

Santa Reparata is the former cathedral of Florence, Italy.

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Santa Sabina

The Basilica of Saint Sabina (Basilica Sanctae Sabinae, Basilica di Santa Sabina all'Aventino) is a historical church on the Aventine Hill in Rome, Italy.

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Santo (art)

A santo (English: 'saint') is a piece of one of various religious art forms found in Spain and areas that were colonies of the Kingdom of Spain, consisting of wooden or ivory statues that depict various saints, angels, or Marian titles, or one of the personages of the Holy Trinity.

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Sarcophagus of Junius Bassus

The Sarcophagus of Junius Bassus is a marble Early Christian sarcophagus used for the burial of Junius Bassus, who died in 359.

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Sassetti Chapel

The Sassetti Chapel (Italian: Cappella Sassetti) is a chapel in the basilica of Santa Trinita in Florence, Italy.

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Savvas the New of Kalymnos

One of the newest contemporary saints of the Eastern Orthodox church, Saint Savvas of Kalymnos (also known as Saint Savvas the New) is the patron saint of the Greek island of Kalymnos, where he lived during the last twenty years of his life as the priest and spiritual father of the nuns of the Convent of All Saints.

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Say Yes (Michelle Williams song)

"Say Yes" is a song recorded by American recording artist Michelle Williams, taken from her fourth studio album Journey to Freedom (2014).

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Scandix pecten-veneris

Scandix pecten-veneris (shepherd's-needle, Venus' comb, Stork's needle) is a species of edible plant belonging to the parsley family.

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Scrovegni Chapel

The Scrovegni Chapel (Cappella degli Scrovegni, also known as the Arena Chapel), is a church in Padua, Veneto, Italy.

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Scythian art

Scythian art is art, primarily decorative objects, such as jewellery, produced by the nomadic tribes in the area known to the ancient Greeks as Scythia, which was centred on the Pontic-Caspian steppe and ranged from modern Kazakhstan to the Baltic coast of modern Poland and to Georgia.

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Seapunk

Seapunk is a subculture that originated on Tumblr in 2011.

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Seated Woman of Çatalhöyük

The Seated Woman of Çatalhöyük (also Çatal Höyük) is a baked-clay, nude female form, seated between feline-headed arm-rests.

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Secondary products revolution

Andrew Sherratt's model of a secondary products revolution involved a widespread and broadly contemporaneous set of innovations in Old World farming.

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Self-fashioning

Self-fashioning, a term introduced by Stephen Greenblatt (Renaissance Self-Fashioning, 1980), is used to describe the process of constructing one's identity and public persona according to a set of socially acceptable standards.

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Serbian Orthodox Church

The Serbian Orthodox Church (Српска православна црква / Srpska pravoslavna crkva) is one of the autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Christian Churches.

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Sergei Gribkov

Sergei Ivanovich Gribkov (Russian: Сергей Иванович Грибков; 4 July 1822, Kasimov - 16 December 1893, Moscow) was a Russian painter of historical and genre scenes in the Realistic style, as well as an iconographer.

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Serpents in the Bible

Serpents (נחש nāḥāš) are referred to in both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament.

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Seshat's emblem

The Seshat emblem is a hieroglyph representing the goddess Seshat in Ancient Egypt.

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Seven Seas

The "Seven Seas" (as in the idiom "sail the Seven Seas") is an ancient phrase for all of the world's oceans.

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Seven-dots glyph

The 7-dot glyph, (or globes) are first known in Mittanian art, (Turkey, or ancient Anatolia), The 7-dot glyph was at first six dots surrounding a central dot; later two rows of 3-dots ended with a 7th as the finial.

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Seventy disciples

The seventy disciples or seventy-two disciples (known in the Eastern Christian traditions as the Seventy Apostles) were early emissaries of Jesus mentioned in the Gospel of Luke.

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Shahba

Shahba (شهبا / ALA-LC: Shahbā) is a city located 87 km south of Damascus in the Jabal el Druze in As-Suwayda Governorate of Syria, but formerly in the Roman province of Arabia Petraea.

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Shakespeare's funerary monument

The Shakespeare funerary monument is a memorial to William Shakespeare located inside Holy Trinity Church at Stratford-upon-Avon, the church in which Shakespeare was baptised and where he was buried in the chancel two days after his death.

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Shamordino Convent

The Convent of St. Ambrose and Our Lady of Kazan (Казанская Амвросиевская ставропигиальная женская пустынь) is a stauropegial Russian Orthodox convent in the village of Shamordino, Kaluga Oblast, Russia.

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Sheep

Domestic sheep (Ovis aries) are quadrupedal, ruminant mammal typically kept as livestock.

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Shen Jingdong

Shen Jingdong (born 1965 in Nanjing), is a contemporary Chinese artist, noted for his paintings and sculpture of Chinese iconography.

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Shirley Purdie

Shirley Purdie is a contemporary Indigenous Australian artist, notable for winning the 2007 Blake Prize for Religious Art.

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Shiva

Shiva (Sanskrit: शिव, IAST: Śiva, lit. the auspicious one) is one of the principal deities of Hinduism.

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Shostakovich (1969-1981)

Shostakovich (1969-1981) is a series of thirty oil paintings by Aubrey Williams.

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Shoulder angel

A shoulder angel is a plot device used for dramatic and/or humorous effect in fiction, mainly in animation and comic books/strips.

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Shuti hieroglyph (two-feather adornment)

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Shy Abady

Shy Abady is an Israeli artist (born 24 September 1965 in Jerusalem).

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Sican culture

This article concerns the Sican Culture of what is now Peru.

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Sid Bradley

Sid (Sidney Arthur James) Bradley (born 1936) is an academic, author and specialist in Anglo-Saxon literature.

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Sigüenza Cathedral

The Cathedral of Sigüenza, officially Catedral de Santa María de Sigüenza, is the seat of the bishop of Sigüenza, in the town of Sigüenza, in Castile-La Mancha, Spain.

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Simulacrum

A simulacrum (plural: simulacra from simulacrum, which means "likeness, similarity") is a representation or imitation of a person or thing.

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Siribhoovalaya

The Siribhoovalaya (ಸಿರಿಭೂವಲಯ) is a work of multi-lingual literature written by Kumudendu Muni, a Jain monk.

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Sistine Chapel ceiling

The Sistine Chapel ceiling, painted by Michelangelo between 1508 and 1512, is a cornerstone work of High Renaissance art.

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Sivagurunathan Tamil Library

Sivagurunathan Tamil Library (சிவகுருநாதன் செந்தமிழ் நூல் நிலையம்), a private library, is located at Kumbakonam in Thanjavur district of Tamil Nadu.

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Sky (hieroglyph)

The ancient Egyptian Sky hieroglyph, (also translated as heaven in some texts, or iconography), is Gardiner sign listed no.

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Sky burial

Sky burial (lit. "bird-scattered") is a funeral practice in which a human corpse is placed on a mountaintop to decompose while exposed to the elements or to be eaten by scavenging animals, especially carrion birds.

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Slasher film

A slasher film is a film in the sub-genre of horror films involving a violent psychopath stalking and murdering a group of people, usually by use of bladed tools.

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Slavery in ancient Greece

Slavery was a common practice in ancient Greece, as in other societies of the time.

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Slavic dragon

A slavic dragon is any dragon in Slavic mythology, including the Russian zmei (or zmey; змей), known in Ukraine as zmiy, and its counterparts in other Slavic cultures: the Bulgarian zmei (змей), the Polish italic, the Serbian and Croatian zmaj (змај, italic).

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Society of the Cincinnati

The Society of the Cincinnati is a hereditary society with branches in the United States and France, founded in 1783, to preserve the ideals and fellowship of officers of the Continental Army who served in the Revolutionary War.

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Socrate Sidiropoulos

Socrate Sidiropoulos born in 1947 in Attica, Greece, is a Greek Painter and Sculptor.

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Sodi family

Sodi is a well-known Mexican family who are descendants of Demetrio Sodi Candiani, son of Italian engineer Carlos Sodi, (From Liberal To Revolutionary Oaxaca, page 250) major landlord of the Mexican southern state of Oaxaca and federal senator for the state of Michoacán for about 25 years, during the government of General Porfirio Díaz.

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Sophia (wisdom)

Sophia (wisdom) is a central idea in Hellenistic philosophy and religion, Platonism, Gnosticism, and Christian theology.

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Sotiris René Sidiropoulos

Sotiris René Sidiropoulos (born in 1977 in Paris) is a French painter and sculptor.

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Southeastern Ceremonial Complex

The Southeastern Ceremonial Complex (formerly the Southern Cult), aka S.E.C.C., is the name given to the regional stylistic similarity of artifacts, iconography, ceremonies, and mythology of the Mississippian culture that coincided with their adoption of maize agriculture and chiefdom-level complex social organization from 1200 to 1650 CE.

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Spanish art

Spanish art has been an important contributor to Western art and Spain has produced many famous and influential artists including Velázquez, Goya and Picasso.

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Sparlösa Runestone

The Sparlösa Runestone, listed as Vg 119 in the Rundata catalog, is located in Västergötland and is the second most famous Swedish runestone after the Rök Runestone.

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Special Air Service

The Special Air Service (SAS) is a special forces unit of the British Army.

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Spikenard

Spikenard, also called nard, nardin, and muskroot, is a class of aromatic amber-colored essential oil derived from Nardostachys jatamansi, a flowering plant of the valerian family which grows in the Himalayas of Nepal, China, and India.

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Spiro Mounds

Spiro Mounds (34 LF 40) is a major Northern Caddoan Mississippian archaeological site located in present-day Eastern Oklahoma.

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St Andrew's Greek Orthodox Theological College

St Andrew's Greek Orthodox Theological College is an Eastern Orthodox Christian seminary located in Redfern, a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

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St Augustine Gospels

The St Augustine Gospels is an illuminated Gospel Book which dates from the 6th century.

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St Augustine's, Kilburn

Saint Augustine's, Kilburn, is an Anglican church in the area of Kilburn, in North London, United Kingdom.

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St Mark's Basilica

The Patriarchal Cathedral Basilica of Saint Mark (Basilica Cattedrale Patriarcale di San Marco), commonly known as Saint Mark's Basilica (Basilica di San Marco; Baxéłega de San Marco), is the cathedral church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Venice, northern Italy.

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St. Dimitrija Solunski Macedonian Orthodox Church, Markham, Ontario

St.

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St. Ignatius Cathedral

St.

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St. Nicholas Cathedral (Washington, D.C.)

St.

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St. Spyridon Greek Orthodox Church

St.

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Stanford Memorial Church

Stanford Memorial Church (also referred to informally as MemChu) is located on the Main Quad at the center of the Stanford University campus in Stanford, California, United States.

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Stanislaus of Szczepanów

Stanislaus of Szczepanów, or Stanisław Szczepanowski, (July 26, 1030 – April 11, 1079) was a Bishop of Kraków known chiefly for having been martyred by the Polish king Bolesław II the Bold.

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Star of Bethlehem

The Star of Bethlehem, or Christmas Star, appears only in the nativity story of the Gospel of Matthew, where "wise men from the East" (Magi) are inspired by the star to travel to Jerusalem.

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Stefan Lochner

Stefan Lochner (the Dombild Master or Master Stefan; c. 1410 – late 1451) was a German painter working in the late "soft style" of the International Gothic.

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Steven Carrington

Steven Daniel Carrington is a fictional character on the American prime time soap opera Dynasty. Steven is noteworthy as one of the earliest gay main characters on American television. Despite identifying as homosexual, Steven has relationships with both men and women throughout the series. The role was originated by Al Corley in the show's first episode in 1981; Corley left at the end of the second season in 1982 after complaining about Steven's "ever-shifting sexual preferences" and wanting "to do other things." The character was recast in 1983 with Jack Coleman, the change in appearance attributed to plastic surgery after an oil rig explosion. Coleman remained on the show until 1988, but Corley returned to the role of Steven for the 1991 miniseries Dynasty: The Reunion when Coleman was unavailable due to scheduling conflicts. In the 2017 reboot of the series, Steven is played by actor James Mackay.

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Still life

A still life (plural: still lifes) is a work of art depicting mostly inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects which are either natural (food, flowers, dead animals, plants, rocks, shells, etc.) or man-made (drinking glasses, books, vases, jewelry, coins, pipes, etc.). With origins in the Middle Ages and Ancient Greco-Roman art, still-life painting emerged as a distinct genre and professional specialization in Western painting by the late 16th century, and has remained significant since then.

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Stipo a bambocci

Stipo a bambocci (plural: Stipi a Bambocci) is a writing cabinet, which was made during the Renaissance in Upper Italy and which can be locked by a fall-front.

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Study (Flandrin)

Study (Young Male Nude Seated beside the Sea) (French: Jeune Homme nu assis au bord de la mer, figure d'étude) is a painting by Hippolyte Flandrin executed between 1835 and 1836.

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Style (visual arts)

In the visual arts, style is a "...distinctive manner which permits the grouping of works into related categories" or "...any distinctive, and therefore recognizable, way in which an act is performed or an artifact made or ought to be performed and made".

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Sun

The Sun is the star at the center of the Solar System.

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Sutton Hoo purse-lid

The Sutton Hoo purse-lid is one of the major objects excavated from the Anglo-Saxon royal burial-ground at Sutton Hoo in Suffolk, England.

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Swatow ware

Swatow ware or Zhangzhou ware is a loose grouping of mainly late Ming dynasty Chinese export porcelain wares initially intended for the Southeast Asian market.

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Swayambhunath

Swayambhunath (Devanagari: स्वयम्भू स्तूप; स्वयंभू; sometimes Swayambu or Swoyambhu) is an ancient religious architecture atop a hill in the Kathmandu Valley, west of Kathmandu city.

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Sword of Stalingrad

The Sword of Stalingrad is a bejewelled ceremonial longsword specially forged and inscribed by command of King George VI of the United Kingdom as a token of homage from the British people to the Soviet defenders of the city during the Battle of Stalingrad.

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Sylvie Deswarte-Rosa

Sylvie Deswarte-Rosa (born 1945) is an art historian who specialises in the study of the Renaissance.

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Symbolism (arts)

Symbolism was a late nineteenth-century art movement of French, Russian and Belgian origin in poetry and other arts.

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Symbology (disambiguation)

Symbology concerns the study of symbols.

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Symbols of Ukrainian people

National symbols are the sacred attributes for Ukrainian people.

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Synaulia

Synaulia is a team of musicians, archeologists, paleorganologists and choreographers dedicated to the application of their historical research to ancient music and dance, in particular to the ancient Etruscan and Roman periods.

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T. J. Clark (art historian)

Timothy James "T.J." Clark (born on 12 April 1943 in Bristol, England) is a British art historian and writer.

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Tablet of Shamash

The Tablet of Shamash is a stone tablet recovered from the ancient Babylonian city of Sippar in southern Iraq in 1881; it is now a major piece in the British Museum's ancient Middle East collection.

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Tablets of Stone

The Tables of the Law as they are widely known in English, or Tablets of Stone, Stone Tablets, or Tablets of Testimony (in Hebrew: לוחות הברית Luchot HaBrit - "the tablets the covenant") in the Hebrew Bible, were the two pieces of stone inscribed with the Ten Commandments when Moses ascended Mount Sinai as written in the Book of Exodus.

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Tal-Mintna Catacombs

The Tal-Mintna Catacombs are a hypogea complex in Mqabba, Malta.

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Tamamushi Shrine

The is a miniature shrine owned by the Hōryū-ji temple complex of Nara, Japan.

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Tapestry

Tapestry is a form of textile art, traditionally woven on a vertical loom.

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Taweret

In Ancient Egyptian religion, Taweret (also spelled Taurt, Tuat, Taouris, Tuart, Ta-weret, Tawaret, Twert, Thoeris and Taueret, and in Greek, Θουέρις – Thouéris and Toeris) is the protective ancient Egyptian goddess of childbirth and fertility.

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Taxi Driver

Taxi Driver is a 1976 American neo-noir psychological thriller film directed by Martin Scorsese, written by Paul Schrader, and starring Robert De Niro, Jodie Foster, Cybill Shepherd, Harvey Keitel, Peter Boyle, Albert Brooks and Leonard Harris.

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Technology of the Discworld

The technology depicted in Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels takes two forms: magical and mechanical.

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Tecpatl

In the Aztec culture, a tecpatl was a flint or obsidian knife with a lanceolate figure and double-edged blade, with elongated ends.

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Temple Adas Israel (Brownsville, Tennessee)

Temple Adas Israel is a historic synagogue located at the intersection of Washington and College streets in Brownsville, western Tennessee, United States.

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Temple of the Cross Complex

The Temple of the Cross is the largest and most significant pyramid within a complex of temples at the Maya ruins of Palenque in the state of Chiapas in Mexico.

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Terra sigillata

Terra sigillata is a term with at least three distinct meanings: as a description of medieval medicinal earth; in archaeology, as a general term for some of the fine red Ancient Roman pottery with glossy surface slips made in specific areas of the Roman Empire; and more recently, as a description of a contemporary studio pottery technique supposedly inspired by ancient pottery.

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Tetramorph

A tetramorph is a symbolic arrangement of four differing elements, or the combination of four disparate elements in one unit.

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Thai art

Traditional Thai art is primarily composed of Buddhist art and scenes from the Indian epics.

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Thai folklore

Thai folklore is a diverse set of traditional beliefs held by the Thai people.

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The Allegory of Faith

The Allegory of Faith, also known as Allegory of the Catholic Faith, is a painting created by Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer in about 1670–72.

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The Art of Painting

The Art of Painting, also known as The Allegory of Painting, or Painter in his Studio, is a 17th-century oil on canvas painting by Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer.

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The Birth of Venus

The Birth of Venus (Nascita di Venere) is a painting by the Italian artist Sandro Botticelli probably made in the mid 1480s.

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The Burial of the Count of Orgaz

The Burial of the Count of Orgaz (Spanish: El Entierro del Conde de Orgaz) is a painting by El Greco, a prominent Renaissance painter, sculptor, and architect of Greek origin.

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The Chemicals

"The Chemicals" is a stand-alone single released by alternative rock band Garbage for Record Store Day 2015.

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The Da Vinci Code (film)

The Da Vinci Code is a 2006 American mystery thriller film directed by Ron Howard, written by Akiva Goldsman, and based on Dan Brown's 2003 best-selling novel of the same name.

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The Four Seasons (Poussin)

The Four Seasons (fr Les Quatre Saisons) was the last set of four oil paintings completed by the French painter Nicolas Poussin (1594–1665).

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The Garden of Earthly Delights

The Garden of Earthly Delights is the modern title given to a triptych oil painting on oak panel painted by the Early Netherlandish master Hieronymus Bosch, housed in the Museo del Prado in Madrid since 1939.

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The Graham Children

The Graham Children is an oil painting completed by William Hogarth in 1742.

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The Immaculate Conception (Tiepolo)

The Immaculate Conception is a painting by Italian painter Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (16961770).

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The KLF

The KLF (also known as The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, furthermore known as The JAMs and The Timelords and by other names) were a British electronic band of the late 1980s and early 1990s.

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The Last Judgment (Fra Angelico, Florence)

The Last Judgment (tempera on panel) is a painting by the Renaissance artist Fra Angelico.

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The Magdalen Reading

The Magdalen Reading is one of three surviving fragments of a large mid-15th-century oil-on-panel altarpiece by the Early Netherlandish painter Rogier van der Weyden.

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The Mystical Nativity

The Mystical Nativity is a painting of circa 1500–1501 by the Italian Renaissance master Sandro Botticelli, in the National Gallery in London.

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The Olmec-Maya and Now

The Olmec-Maya and Now (1981–1985) is a series of large, oil-on-canvas paintings by Aubrey Williams.

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The Power of Love (Frankie Goes to Hollywood song)

"The Power of Love" is a song originally recorded and released by English band Frankie Goes to Hollywood.

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The Power-House

The Power-House is a novel by John Buchan, a thriller set in London, England.

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The Primitive Hut

The Primitive Hut is a concept that explores the origins of architecture and its practice.

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The Ride (The Sopranos)

"The Ride" is the 74th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the ninth of the show's sixth season.

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The Tribute Money (Masaccio)

The Tribute Money is a fresco by the Italian renaissance painter Masaccio, located in the Brancacci Chapel of the basilica of Santa Maria del Carmine, Florence, and completed by his senior collaborator, Masolino.

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The Trinity in art

The Trinity is most commonly seen in Christian art with the Spirit represented by a dove, as specified in the Gospel accounts of the Baptism of Christ; he is nearly always shown with wings outspread.

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The Virgin of the Navigators

The Virgin of the Navigators (La Virgen de los Navegantes) is a painting by Spanish artist Alejo Fernández, created as the central panel of an altarpiece for the chapel of the Casa de Contratación in Alcázar of Seville, Seville, southern Spain.

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The Wrestler (sculpture)

The Wrestler is an ancient basalt statuette that is one of the most important sculptures of the Olmec culture.

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Theological aesthetics

Theological aesthetics is the interdisciplinary study of theology and aesthetics, and has been defined as being "concerned with questions about God and issues in theology in the light of and perceived through sense knowledge (sensation, feeling, imagination), through beauty, and the arts".

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Theophilos Hatzimihail

Theophilos Hatzimihail (Θεόφιλος Χατζημιχαήλ or Θεόφιλος Κεφαλάς; born c. 1870, Vareia, near Mytilene, island of Lesbos; died in Vareia, Greece, 24 March 1934), known simply as Theophilos, was a major folk painter of modern Greek art.

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Theotokos of Pochayiv

Theotokos of Pochayiv (Почаївська ікона Пресвятої Богородиці) is an Eastern Orthodox icon of the Virgin Mary, painted in a late Byzantine style, of the Eleusa iconographic type.

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Theotokos of Vladimir

The Theotokos of Vladimir (Θεοτόκος του Βλαντίμιρ), also known as Our Lady of Vladimir, Vladimir Mother of God, or Virgin of Vladimir (Владимирская Икона Божией Матери, Вишгородська ікона Божої Матері) is a medieval Byzantine icon of the Virgin and Child.

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Thetford Hoard

The Thetford Hoard (also known as the Thetford Treasure) is a hoard of Romano-British metalwork found by Arthur and Greta Brooks at Gallows Hill, near Thetford in Norfolk, England, in November 1979, and now in the British Museum.

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Thornography

Thornography is the seventh studio album by English extreme metal band Cradle of Filth.

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Three hares

The three hares (or three rabbits) is a circular motif or meme appearing in sacred sites from the Middle and Far East to the churches of Devon, England (as the "Tinners' Rabbits"), and historical synagogues in Europe.

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Three Roots

The Three Roots (Tibetan: tsa sum) of the Tibetan Buddhist tradition are the lama (Sanskrit: guru), yidam (Sanskrit: ishtadevata) and protector, which may be a khandroma (Sanskrit: dakini) or chokyong (Sanskrit: dharmapala).

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Throw stick (hieroglyph)

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Tibetan art

For more than a thousand years, Tibetan artists have played a key role in the cultural life of Tibet.

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Timotesubani

Timotesubani (ტიმოთესუბანი) is a medieval Georgian Orthodox Christian monastic complex located at the eponymous village in the Borjomi Gorge, Georgia's Samtskhe-Javakheti region.

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Tinchy Stryder videography

This is the videography of Tinchy Stryder (Kwasi Danquah III), and it consists of twenty-five music videos as a lead artist, fifteen music videos as a featured artist, and three music video cameo appearances, one film and one television appearances.

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Titles of Mary

Mary is known by many different titles (Blessed Mother, Madonna, Our Lady), epithets (Star of the Sea, Queen of Heaven, Cause of Our Joy), invocations (Theotokos, Panagia, Mother of Mercy) and other names (Our Lady of Loreto, Our Lady of Guadalupe).

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Tjurkö bracteates

The Tjurkö Bracteates, listed by Rundata as DR BR75 and DR BR76, are two bracteates (medals or amulets) found on Tjurkö, Eastern Hundred, Blekinge, Sweden, bearing Elder Futhark runic inscriptions in Proto-Norse.

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Tlaltecuhtli

Tlaltecuhtli is a pre-Columbian Mesoamerican deity, identified from sculpture and iconography dating to the Late Postclassic period of Mesoamerican chronology (ca. 1200–1519), primarily among the Mexica (Aztec) and other Nahuatl-speaking cultures.

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Toledo Cathedral

The Primate Cathedral of Saint Mary of Toledo (Catedral Primada Santa María de Toledo) is a Roman Catholic church in Toledo, Spain.

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Toltec

The Toltec culture is an archaeological Mesoamerican culture that dominated a state centered in Tula, Hidalgo, Mexico in the early post-classic period of Mesoamerican chronology (ca. 900–1168 CE).

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Tom of Finland

Touko Valio Laaksonen (8 May 1920 – 7 November 1991), best known by his pseudonym Tom of Finland, was a Finnish artist known for his stylized highly masculinized homoerotic fetish art, and for his influence on late twentieth century gay culture.

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Tom Palin

Tom Palin is a British painter.

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Tomb of Antipope John XXIII

The Tomb of Antipope John XXIII is the marble-and-bronze tomb monument of Antipope John XXIII (Baldassare Cossa, c. 1360–1419), created by Donatello and Michelozzo for the Florence Baptistry adjacent to the Duomo.

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Tomb of the Bulls

The Tomb of the Bulls (Tomba dei Tori) is an Etruscan tomb in the Necropolis of Monterozzi near Tarquinia, Italy.

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Tourism in Lebanon

The tourism industry in Lebanon has been historically important to the local economy and remains to this day to be a major source of revenue for Lebanon.

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Townsite-city-region (hieroglyph)

The Ancient Egyptian Townsite-city-region (hieroglyph) is Gardiner sign listed no.

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Traditional Berber religion

The traditional Berber religion is the ancient and native set of beliefs and deities adhered to by the Berber autochthones of North Africa.

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Transfiguration of Jesus

The Transfiguration of Jesus is an event reported in the New Testament when Jesus is transfigured and becomes radiant in glory upon a mountain.

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Transgender history

Transgender history dates back to the first recorded instances of transgender individuals in ancient civilizations in Asia.

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Treasure of Gourdon

The Treasure of Gourdon (Trésor de Gourdon) is a hoard of gold, the objects of which date to the end of the fifth or the beginning of the sixth century AD.

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Tree of life

The tree of life is a widespread myth (mytheme) or archetype in the world's mythologies, related to the concept of sacred tree more generally,Giovino, Mariana (2007).

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Trefoil knot

In topology, a branch of mathematics, the trefoil knot is the simplest example of a nontrivial knot.

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Trinity

The Christian doctrine of the Trinity (from Greek τριάς and τριάδα, from "threefold") holds that God is one but three coeternal consubstantial persons or hypostases—the Father, the Son (Jesus Christ), and the Holy Spirit—as "one God in three Divine Persons".

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Triple deity

A triple deity (sometimes referred to as threefold, tripled, triplicate, tripartite, triune or triadic, or as a trinity) is three deities that are worshipped as one.

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Troilus

Troilus (or; Troïlos; Troilus) is a legendary character associated with the story of the Trojan War.

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Trois morceaux en forme de poire

The Trois morceaux en forme de poire (Three Pieces in the Form of a Pear) is a 1903 suite for piano duet by French composer Erik Satie.

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Tsepelovo

Tsepelovo (Τσεπέλοβο) is a village in the Zagori region (Epirus region).

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Tu'er Ye

Tu'er Ye, also known as the Rabbit God, is a deity of Chinese folk religion unique to Beijing, where his sculptures are traditionally crafted.

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Tudwal

Saint Tudwal (died c. 564), also known as Tual, Tudgual, Tugdual, Tugual, Pabu, Papu, or Tugdualus (Latin), was a Breton monk.

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Turbo-folk

Turbo-folk (турбо фолк turbo folk better known as "serbwave") is a musical genre that originated in Serbia.

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Turin Erotic Papyrus

The Turin Erotic Papyrus (Papyrus 55001, also called the Erotic Papyrus or even Turin Papyrus) is an ancient Egyptian papyrus scroll-painting that was created during the Ramesside Period, approximately in 1150 B.C.David O'Connor. Archaeology Odyssey, September–October, 2001A A Shokeir and M I Hussein.

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Turin-Milan Hours

The Turin-Milan Hours (or Milan-Turin hours, Turin Hours etc.) is a partially destroyed illuminated manuscript, which despite its name is not strictly a book of hours.

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Twyfelfontein

Twyfelfontein (Afrikaans: uncertain spring), officially known as ǀUi-ǁAis (Damara/Nama: jumping waterhole), is a site of ancient rock engravings in the Kunene Region of north-western Namibia.

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Uday Shankar

Uday Shankar (8 December 1900 – 26 September 1977) was an Indian dancer and choreographer, best known for creating a fusion style of dance, adapting European theatrical techniques to Indian classical dance, imbued with elements of Indian classical, folk, and tribal dance, which he later popularised in India, Europe, and the United States in 1920s and 1930s.

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United Office Building

United Office Building, now known as the Giacomo, is a historic Mayan Revival, a subset of art deco, skyscraper in Niagara Falls, New York, US.

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University of Rijeka

The University of Rijeka (Sveučilište u Rijeci) is in the city of Rijeka with faculties in cities throughout the regions of Primorje, Istria and Lika.

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Unlucky Mummy

The Unlucky Mummy is an Ancient Egyptian artifact in the collection of the British Museum in London.

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Uppland Runic Inscription 1144

Uppland Runic Inscription 1144 or U 1144 is the Rundata catalog designation of a Viking Age memorial runestone in a churchyard that is located five kilometers southwest of Tierp, Uppsala County, Sweden, which was in the historic province of Uppland.

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Urban iconography

Urban iconography is a branch of iconography, a term used both extensively, to mean a collection of illustrations of a specific subject and, within art history, the study of the subject matter of figurative representations.

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Urnes Stave Church

Urnes Stave Church (Urnes stavkyrkje) is a 12th-century stave church at Ornes, along the Lustrafjorden in the municipality of Luster in Sogn og Fjordane county, Norway.

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Use of costume in Athenian tragedy

Some authors have argued that use of costume in Athenian tragedy was standardized for the genre.

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Utrecht Psalter

The Utrecht Psalter (Utrecht, Universiteitsbibliotheek, MS Bibl. Rhenotraiectinae I Nr 32.) is a ninth-century illuminated psalter which is a key masterpiece of Carolingian art; it is probably the most valuable manuscript in the Netherlands.

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Vadstena bracteate

The Vadstena bracteate (Rundata Ög 178) is a gold C-bracteate found in the earth at Vadstena, Sweden, in 1774.

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Vahana

Vahana (वाहन,, literally "that which carries, that which pulls") denotes the being, typically an animal or mythical entity, a particular Hindu deity is said to use as a vehicle.

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Vajra

Vajra is a Sanskrit word meaning both thunderbolt and diamond.

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Valeriy Igoshev

Valeriy Victorovich Igoshev (born March 4, 1956, Moscow, Russia; Russian: Игошев, Валерий Викторович) is a Russian scientist.

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Vandalism of art

Vandalism of art refers to intentional damage of an artwork (for unintentional damage see accidental damage of art).

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Varadamudra

Varadamudra is a mudra, and it indicates a gesture by the hand and symbolizes dispensing of boons.

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Vasudhara

Vasudhārā, whose name means "stream of gems" in Sanskrit, is the Buddhist bodhisattva of wealth, prosperity, and abundance.

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Vatican Mythographers

The so-called Vatican Mythographers (Mythographi Vaticani) are the anonymous authors of three Latin mythographical texts found together in a single medieval manuscript, Vatican Reg.

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Vädersolstavlan

(Swedish for "The Sun Dog Painting") is an oil-on-panel painting depicting a halo display, an atmospheric optical phenomenon, observed over Stockholm on 20 April 1535.

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Velificatio

Velificatio is a stylistic device used in ancient Roman art to frame a deity by means of a billowing garment.

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Veneration

Veneration (Latin veneratio or dulia, Greek δουλεία, douleia), or veneration of saints, is the act of honoring a saint, a person who has been identified as having a high degree of sanctity or holiness.

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Venus and Mars (Botticelli)

Venus and Mars (or Mars and Venus) is a panel painting of about 1485 by the Italian Renaissance painter Sandro Botticelli.

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Vietnamese Nôm Preservation Foundation

The Vietnamese Nôm Preservation Foundation (Hội Bảo Tồn Di Sản Chữ Nôm; Hán Nôm), shortened as the Nôm Foundation and abbreviated as VNPF, is an American nonprofit agency for language preservation headquartered in Cary, North Carolina, with an office in Hanoi, Vietnam.

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Villa Farnese

The Villa Farnese, also known as Villa Caprarola, is a mansion in the town of Caprarola in the province of Viterbo, Northern Lazio, Italy, approximately 50 kilometres north-west of Rome.

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Vinča symbols

The Vinča symbols, sometimes called the Danube script, Vinča signs, Vinča script, Vinča–Turdaș script, Old European script, etc., are a set of symbols found on Neolithic era (6th to 5th millennia BC) artifacts from the Vinča culture of Central Europe and Southeastern Europe.

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Vincent van Gogh

Vincent Willem van Gogh (30 March 185329 July 1890) was a Dutch Post-Impressionist painter who is among the most famous and influential figures in the history of Western art.

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Virgin and Child Enthroned

The Virgin and Child Enthroned (also known as the Thyssen Madonna) is a small oil-on-oak panel painting dated 1433, usually attributed to the Early Netherlandish artist Rogier van der Weyden.

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Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele

The Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele is a large oil-on-oak panel painting completed around 1434–36 by the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck.

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Virgin and Child with Four Angels

Virgin and Child with Four Angels (or Virgin and Child with Angels) is a small oil-on-panel painting by the Early Netherlandish artist Gerard David.

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Virgin of Mercy

The Virgin of Mercy is a subject in Christian Art, showing a group of people sheltering for protection under the outspread cloak, or pallium of the Virgin Mary.

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Vishvarupa

Vishvarupa ("Universal form", "Omni-form"), also known popularly as Vishvarupa Darshan, Vishwaroopa and Virata rupa, is an iconographical form and theophany of the Hindu god Vishnu or his avatar Krishna.

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Vision Serpent

The Vision Serpent is an important creature in Pre-Columbian Maya mythology, although the term itself is now slowly becoming outdated.

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Vitis

Vitis (grapevines) is a genus of 79 accepted species of vining plants in the flowering plant family Vitaceae.

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Vleeshuis

The Vleeshuis (Butcher's Hall, or literally Meat House) in Antwerp, Belgium is a former guildhall.

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W. Stanley Proctor

W.

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Warlugulong

Warlugulong (1977) is an acrylic on canvas painting by Indigenous Australian artist Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri.

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Watanabe no Tsuna

(953-1025) was a Japanese samurai, a retainer of Minamoto no Yorimitsu (also known as Raikō), one of the earliest samurai to be famed for his military exploits.

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Western painting

The history of Western painting represents a continuous, though disrupted, tradition from antiquity until the present time.

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Westminster Psalter

The Westminster Psalter, British Library, MS Royal 2 A XXII, is an English illuminated psalter of about 1200, with some extra sheets with tinted drawings added around 1250.

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Wierix family

The Wierix family, sometimes seen in alternative spellings such as Wiericx, were a Flemish family of artists who distinguished themselves as printmakers and draughtsmen in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.

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Will Cotton

Will Cotton (born 1965 in Melrose, Massachusetts, U.S.) is an American painter.

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William Gibson

William Ford Gibson (born March 17, 1948) is an American-Canadian speculative fiction writer and essayist widely credited with pioneering the science fiction subgenre known as cyberpunk.

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William of York

William of York (late 11th century – 8 June 1154) was an English priest and Archbishop of York.

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William Spratling

William Spratling (September 22, 1900 – August 7, 1967) was an American-born silver designer and artist, best known for his influence on 20th century Mexican silver design.

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Winchester Psalter

The Winchester Psalter is an English 12th-century illuminated manuscript psalter (British Library, Cotton MS. Nero C.iv), also sometimes known as the Psalter of Henry of Blois, and formerly known as the St Swithun's Psalter.

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Wintjiya Napaltjarri

Wintjiya Napaltjarri (born between ca. 1923 to 1934) (also spelt Wentjiya, Wintjia or Wentja), and also known as Wintjia Napaltjarri No.

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Women in Classical Athens

The study of the lives of women in Classical Athens has been a significant part of classical scholarship since the 1970s.

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Women in Maya society

Ancient Maya women had an important role in society: beyond propagating the culture through the bearing and raising of children, Maya women participated in economic, governmental and farming activities.

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Wycliffe's Bible

Wycliffe's Bible is the name now given to a group of Bible translations into Middle English that were made under the direction of John Wycliffe.

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Xindi (Star Trek)

The Xindi is the collective term for six fictional races in the science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise.

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Xochicalco

Xochicalco is a pre-Columbian archaeological site in Miacatlán Municipality in the western part of the Mexican state of Morelos.

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Yali (mythology)

Yali, Yāḷi; also known as Vyala or Vidala in Sanskrit) is a mythical creature seen in many Hindu temples, often sculpted onto the pillars. It may be portrayed as part lion, part elephant and part horse, and in similar shapes. Also, it has been sometimes described as a leogryph (part lion and part griffin), with some bird-like features. Yali is a motif in Indian art and it has been widely used in south Indian sculpture, notably by Nayak Rulers. Descriptions of and references to yalis are very old, but they became prominent in south Indian sculpture in the 16th century. Yalis are believed to be more powerful than the lion/Tiger or the elephant.

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Yannis Tsarouchis

Yannis Tsarouchis (Γιάννης Τσαρούχης; 13 January 1910 – 20 July 1989) was a Greek painter.

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Yaroslav Levchenko

Yaroslav Levchenko Yury (born September 5th, 1987) is a Russian artist based in Greece.

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Yidam

Yidam is a type of deity associated with tantric or Vajrayana Buddhism said to be manifestations of Buddhahood or enlightened mind.

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Yixian glazed pottery luohans

A set of life-size glazed pottery sculptures of luohans usually assigned to the period of the Liao dynasty (907–1125) was discovered in caves at I Chou (I-chou, Yizhou) in Yi xian or Yi County, Hebei, south of Beijing, before World War I. They have been described as "one of the most important groups of ceramic sculpture in the world." They reached the international art market, and were bought for Western collections.

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Yreina Cervantez

Yreina Cervantez (born 1952) is an American artist and Chicana activist who is known for her multimedia painting, murals, and printmaking.

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Yves Morvan

Yves Morvan (French:iv moʁɑ̃; born January 13, 1932 in Uzel) is a French archaeologist, specialist of the romanesque art and of the iconography of Blaise Pascal.

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Zazel

Zazel: The Scent of Love (also known as "Zazel: Philip Mond's Scent of Love" and "ZTSOL") is a highly regarded award-winning American adult erotic film, photographed in October 1995 and released the following year.

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Zemun Cemetery

Zemun cemetery is the public cemetery situated in Zemun on the Gardoš Hill.

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Zoomorphism

The word zoomorphism derives from the Greek ζωον (zōon), meaning "animal", and μορφη (morphē), meaning "shape" or "form".

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1360s in art

The decade of the 1360s in art involved some significant events.

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1620 in art

Events from the year 1620 in art.

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1691 in art

Events from the year 1691 in art.

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1950s

The 1950s (pronounced nineteen-fifties; commonly abbreviated as the 50s or Fifties) was a decade of the Gregorian calendar that began on January 1, 1950, and ended on December 31, 1959.

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1973 in archaeology

The year 1973 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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446

Year 446 (CDXLVI) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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5th Special Air Service

The 5th Special Air Service or 5th SAS was an elite airborne unit during World War II, consisting entirely of Belgian volunteers.

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Christian Iconography, Christian icon, Christian iconography, Iconographer, Iconographic, Iconographical, Iconographies, Iconography, Christian, Iconological, Iconologist, Marian iconography, Religious iconography.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iconography

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