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Statue of the goddess Hygeia, Roman, 100 BCE - 100 CE
Hygeia was one of the daughters of Asklepios, the Greco-Roman god of medicine and healing. Hygeia was worshipped as the goddess of good health or cleanliness. Her name is where we get the word ‘hygiene’ from. This small statue is made from marble and was reputedly found in Ostia, Italy, in the early 1900s. maker: Unknown maker Place made: Roman Republic and Empire
Skaberen
- Science Museum, London
Emne
- statue
Skaberen
- Science Museum, London
Emne
- statue
Ejerinstiution
Aggregator
Rettigheder for medierne i denne optagelse (medmindre andet er angivet)
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Rettigheder
- Credit: Science Museum, London
Kilde
- L0057462
Identifikator
- L0057462
- Science Museum A113241
- vwh3pvny
Leverende land
- United Kingdom
Navn på samling
Første gang offentliggjort på Europeana
- 2019-06-09T11:22:33.200Z
Sidste gang opdateret fra den ejerinstiution
- 2019-06-09T11:22:33.200Z