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Image of Naval Battle between Greeks and Trojans
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Naval Battle between Greeks and Trojans

1538
16th C.
Europe, Italy
15 15/16 in. x 25 1/16 in. (40.5 cm x 63.7 cm)

After
Giulio Romano Italian, 1499–1546
By (primary)
Giovanni Battista Scultori Italian, 1503–1575

Medium: Engraving
Credit Line: Lent by Kirk Edward Long
Accession Number: L.15.145.2007

Bibliography
Giovanni Paolo Lomazzo, Trattato dell'Arte de la Pittura (Milan: P.G. Pontio, 1584), VI, XXX, p. 355; Gori-Gandellini 1771, p. 198; Huber 17907-1802, III, n. 7, p. 136; Bartsch 1803-21 XV, n. 20, p. 383; Zani 1820, II, XViII, p. 280; Codde 1837, p. 30; Nagler 1835-52, p. 137; Zanetti 1837, n. 1190, p. 461; D'Arco 1840, n. 10, p. 68; Le Blanc 1854-58, II, n. 15, p. 294; Pittaluga 1928, p. 188; Disertori 1931, p. 32; Perina 1965, p. 672; Gioconda Albricci , "Le incisioni de G. Basttista Scultori," Print Collector , 33-34 (Sept.-Dec. 1976),, n. 20, pp. 46-48, ii/vi; Ferrar-D'amico 1977, n. 270; S. Massari, Incisori Mantovani del '500 Giovan Battista, Adamo, Diana Scultori e Giorgio Ghisi (Rome: De Luca, 1981), 6, i/iii; Massari, Giulio Romano, p. 106; Dieux et Heros (Geneva 1978), cat. 45; Emison, Simple Art (2006), cat. 37; Barryte 2015, app. 428

Keywords Click a term to view the records with the same keyword
soldiers
Use generally for those belonging to an army, whether that of a sovereign state, a faction or division within a sovereign state, or of an individual leader. Use also specifically for military personnel of enlisted rank, as distinguished from commissioned officers. For those trained for or engaged in the physical combat of warfare and sanctioned in that function by the society or group for which they fight, irrespective of actual membership in an army, use "warriors." [November 1997 scope note changed; related term added. November 1996 related term deleted, was "knights (landholders)". February 1993 scope note changed; descriptor moved. December 1992 related terms added; alternate term added. November 1990 descriptor added.]
warriors
Related Term
soldier's
Alternate Term
soldier
Alternate Term
armies
Related Term
soldiers'
Alternate Term
battles
Use for individual instances of armed conflict between two or more groups. [September 1993 related terms added. December 1992 scope note added. November 1990 descriptor added.]
battlefields
Related Term
battle
Alternate Term
military history
Related Term
deaths
death
Alternate Term
<weapon components>
weapons
Related Term
oceans
The main water areas of the earth, lying in basins; for shallow salt water areas lying on the margins of continents, use "seas." [March 1993 related term added.]
ocean
Alternate Term
seas
Related Term
armor (protective wear)
Use generally for that category of costume designed to be worn or carried to protect the body in combat. Armor pieces which are always physical parts of or are affixed to other pieces and cannot function alone are collocated under "." For specifically groups of armor pieces designed as a whole to possess particular physical characteristics in order to suit a particular purpose or occasion, use "armors." [April 1998 descriptor changed, qualifier added; UK alternate descriptor changed, qualifier added. January 1996 related term deleted, was "doublets".]
armaments
LCSH Link
armament
Use For Term
armor
LCSH Link
suits of armor
Use For Term
<armor components>
Related Term
armors
Related Term
armour (protective wear)
British Equivalent
Arms and armor
LCSH Link
swords
Use for edged weapons consisting basically of a blade, generally longer than that of daggers or knives, and a grip; designed for delivering cutting or thrusting blows or both.
sword
Alternate Term
ships
Use for watercraft generally larger and more seaworthy than boats; usually propelled by sails or engines.
ship
Alternate Term
Equus caballus (species)
Original populations of Equus caballus were once found in the steppe zone from Poland to Mongolia. Now domesticated, horses occur throughout the world and in feral populations in some areas. Three of the several early breeds of horse - Przewalski's horse from central Asia, the tarpan from eastern Europe and the Ukrainian steppes, and the forest horse of northern Europe - are generally thought to have been the ancestral stock of modern domestic horses. According to this line of thinking, Przewalski's horse and the tarpan formed the basic breeding stock from which the southerly 'warm-blooded' horses developed, while the forest horse gave rise to the heavy, 'cold-blooded' breeds. All modern breeds are divided as light, fast, spirited breeds typified by the modern Arabian, heavier, slower, and calmer working breeds typified by the Belgian, and intermediate breeds typified by the Thoroughbred. They are also classified according to where they originated (e.g., Percheron, Clydesdale, and Arabian), by the principal use of the horse (riding, draft, coach horse), and by their outward appearance and size (light, heavy, pony).
horses (animals)
horse (animal)

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Your current search criteria is: Keyword is "oceans" and [Object]Artist-Display Name is "Giovanni Battista Scultori".

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Last updated: 02/27/2021


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