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Ghirza - North Cemetery (B) |
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| These photo's of the North
Cemetery of Ghirza
show Mausoleum B, which was built in the second quarter of the fourth century
CE. Like Mausoleum
A, it is square, built on a hight platform, and resembles a temple.
There are five Corinthian columns on each side; the arches -where one would
have expected a straight architrave- are an Alexandrine
influence. Again, the entrance faces east. It was constructed by Marchius
Metusan for his mother Flavia Thesylgum and father Marchius Fydel (who
had built Mausoleum A for his parents Marchius Nasif and Marchia Mathlich).
The name of the mother, Flavia Thesylgum, is interesting, because it suggests that her Libyan family was recognized as Roman by the emperor Constantine the Great (r.306-337), who belonged to the gens Flavia. |
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| A photo of the entrance, with a false door and a splendid architrave. Both have parallels in Egyptian funerary architecture (in which the false door represents the gate to the afterlife) and make the tomb look like a little house. It is easy to understand why the Arabs and Berbers of the Middle Ages believe that Ghirza was a petrified city. | ||||||
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This relief, which is now on display in the Museum of Lepcis Magna, was once above the entrance. It shows a clan leader on a chair, receiving a gift, and two attendants. Below, you can see other reliefs, which can today be admired in the Museum of the Jamahirjia in Tripoli: hunting scenes that do not deny that the hunter can sometimes become the victim. The scene to the right appears to be the capture of a slave, which tells something about the non-human status of these people. | |||||
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>> to part four >> |
Livius.Org, 2006 Revision: 29 May 2007 |
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