RFG1HD7K–Statue of Hellenistic-Egyptian god Serapis and his attributes in Colosseo, Rome, Italy
RMAG19NB–Serapis, egyptian god, full length, engraving, 19th century, throne, Egypt, religion, antiquity, ancient world, mythologie, Kerberos, Cerberus, ,
RMMC6GWF–EGYPTIAN MYTHOLOGY - SERAPIS (OF EGYPT) A Roman mythological image of the Egyptian god Serapis. From the 1792 edition of the engravings based on the designs of Jacopo Guarana: Oracoli, Auguri, Aruspici, Sibille, indovinia della Religione Pagana
RM2JE6M95–Serapis a Graeco-Egyptian deity, painted 100-200AD in tempera on a Egyptian fig wood door panel.
RMJR31DX–Gold Serapeum plaque, Greek with Egyptian heiroglyphs. Serapis was the official chief god of Hellenistic Egypt. His cult was introduced by Ptolemy I, the founder of the Ptolemaic dynasty which ruled over Egypt after Alexander the Great. Ptolemy wished to unite the native Egyptians and the Greek colonists under his authority and that of a common God in order to establish a greater interior unity, which was necessary to turn Egypt into a powerful Hellenistic state. Because the Greeks were not interested in the traditional Egyptian animal gods, Serapis was represented in a human form like the Gre
RM2A5NR96–Roman Marble Sculpture of the Egyptian God Serapis from the London Mithraeum or Mithreum, AD180-200. Aka the Temple of Mithras, Walbrook London
RM2A2X2JG–Photograph - Cooking, Egypt, Captain Edward Albert McKenna, World War I, 1914-1915, One of 108 images in an album from World War I likely to have been taken by Captain Edward Albert McKenna. The album contains photographs of the 7th Battalion in Egypt. Image of a statue depicting a group of men cooking at Serapeum. The Serapeum (or 'Sarapeion') was a temple built in Ptolemaic Alexandria to honour the Greco-Egyptian god Serapis, a hybrid of the Egyptian gods Osiris and Apis
RMHPTT78–High Clerk in the cult of Serapis 230-240 AD Egypt Egyptian (Serapis or Sarapis is a Graeco-Egyptian god. )
RMMR5KMK–Bust of the God Serapis, Greco-Egyptian, Marble, Roman work, 1st Century AD
RMW9ET7H–Bust of Serapis Antinoe Egypt 2nd century AD Egyptian
RMAG19NC–Serapis, egyptian god, full length, engraving, 19th century, Egypt, religion, antiquity, ancient world, mythologie, snake, ,
RM2X43M7H–Jupiter Sarapis or Serapis, a Graeco-Egyptian god , Greek Egyptian, historic illustration 1884
RMAG19ND–Serapis, egyptian god, full length, engraving, 19th century, Egypt, religion, antiquity, ancient world, mythologie, , Artist's Copyright has not to be cleared
RM2BD2W4X–Egypt, Cairo, Egyptian Museum, detail of a diadem belonging to the treasure of Dush, found in a cache in Dush temple : The god Serapis.
RMC56T8M–18th century engraving, 'Il Tempio di Giove Serapide a Pozzuoli.' The Temple of Serapis in Pozzuoli, Italy.
RMED3XXK–Bust of Serapis. Marble, roman copy, after a Greek original from the 4th century BC, stored in the Serapaeum of Alexandria. Copy
RMWHAPGA–Head of Serapis, god of fertility, from the Walbrook temple of Mithras. 2nd Century AD . Serapis is a Greek-Egyptian god, worshipped in Egypt, but also in other parts of the Mediterranean and Roman. The god was in Alexandria closely related to the king's house.
RM2HHXBRF–Bronze votive tablet ca. 2nd century A.D. Roman The tablet is in the form of a small tabula ansata, often used as the frame for dedicatory or funerary inscriptions. Here it is inscribed on both sides with a dedication in Greek to the Egyptian god Serapis.. Bronze votive tablet 251144
RFHCDXX6–Service, worship, to Serapis, Sarapis, a Graeco-Egyptian god, 350 AD, the story of the ancient Rome, roman Empire, Italy
RM2T698TJ–Egyptian chair, carved in an obelisk in the Barberini garden 1, and an Egyptian priest of the god Serapis consulting a serpent 2. Copperplate engraving by Pietro Ruga after an illustration by Lorenzo Rocceggiani from his own 100 Plates of Costumes Religious, Civil and Military of the Ancient Egyptians, Etruscans, Greeks and Romans, Franzetti, Rome, 1802.
RMCXRAH6–Egyptian Art. Ptolemaic period (332-30 BCE). Stele. Relief we see a king sacrificing to Isis and Serapis. Carlsberg Glyptotek.
RMBMREGM–Serapis
RM2HMTC73–Egyptian chair, carved in an obelisk in the Barberini garden 1, and an Egyptian priest of the god Serapis consulting a serpent 2. Copperplate engraving by Pietro Ruga after an illustration by Lorenzo Rocceggiani from his own 100 Plates of Costumes Religious, Civil and Military of the Ancient Egyptians, Etruscans, Greeks and Romans, Franzetti, Rome, 1802.
RFR9FXEG–Astrology Alphabet: SERAPIS / Osiris-Apis (Userhapi), the Hellenistic Egyptian god of abundance, fertility, underworld and afterlife. Hieroglyphics.
RM2R59Y3M–Graeco-Egyptian deity Serapis in breastplate and modius headdress. Roman Emperor Julian (331-363) rejected Christianity and was depicted as the god Serapis in this engraved cornelian gem. Serapis Incis in Corneola. Copperplate engraving from Francesco Valesio, Antonio Gori and Ridolfino Venuti’s Academia Etrusca, Museum Cortonense in quo Vetera Monumenta, (Etruscan Academy or Museum of Cortona), Faustus Amideus, Rome, 1750.
RM2DNT0N1–Bust of the god Sarapis, Marble, chiseled, Marble, chiseled, Total: Height: 48,50 cm; Width: 34,50 cm; Depth: 20,00 cm, Three-dimensional sculptures, Serapis, Egyptian gods, demigods, heroes, Middle Empire, Roman copy after a Greek original. Originally intended for a niche installation, this sculpture reproduces one of the most frequently copied works of antique sculpture in a bust cutout and in a strong reduction: The famous large cult statue in the Alexandrian sanctuary of Sarapis, dating from around 300 B.C.
RFPJ7M8H–The Goddess Sekhmet, an Egyptian goddess. Partly reconstructed.
RMMR5KMR–Bust of the God Serapis, Greco-Egyptian, Marble, Roman work, 1st Century AD
RMCW33PY–Statue of Serapis at Alexandria
RMA7MKA6–Bust of the god Serapis, Greco-Roman Museum, Alexandria, Egypt
RF2WKF855–The Temple of Maharraqa on Lake Nasser, Egypt
RM2A82GXB–Egyptian gods: Anubis 1,2, Aries 3,4 and Serapis 5. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Andrea Bernieri from Giulio Ferrrario's Costumes Antique and Modern of All Peoples (Il Costume Antico e Moderno di Tutti i Popoli), Florence, 1843.
RM2AW3G5G–Egypt, Cairo, Egyptian Museum, diadem belonging to the treasure of Dush, found in a cache in Dush temple. Roman Period, in gold. The god Serapis.
RM2GJ5FN8–Osiris, Apis and Serapis, ancient Egyptian and Greek gods. Osiris with staff, attended by a three-headed animal encircled by a snake, Isis with bucket and cymbal, and Apis the sacred bull. Copperplate engraving from Andrew Tooke’s The Pantheon, Representing the Fabulous Histories of the Heathen Gods, London, 1757.
RMED3XXH–Bust of Serapis. Marble, roman copy, after a Greek original from the 4th century BC, stored in the Serapaeum of Alexandria.
RM2A82GXW–Egyptian gods in the Graeco-Roman style: Isis from a Greek temple 1, Isis with snake from a Roman temple, and Serapis with snake from a Greek temple 3. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Andrea Bernieri from Giulio Ferrrario's Costumes Antique and Modern of All Peoples (Il Costume Antico e Moderno di Tutti i Popoli), Florence, 1843.
RM2HHTRJ8–Terracotta lamp handle 2nd century A.D. Roman Zeus Serapis, enthroned, holds a scepter in his left hand and rests his right hand on the head of Cerberos, the guard dog of Hades. Since the Roman Serapis is equated with Osiris, the Egyptian god of the Underworld, it seems appropriate to pair him with another representative of Hades, Cerberos. The association between the Greek god Zeus and the Egyptian god Serapis descends from Ptolemaic cult and highlights Serapis as a guarantor of royal power.. Terracotta lamp handle 250456 Roman, Terracotta lamp handle, 2nd century A.D., Terracotta, L. 2 5/8
RMM0E9AH–Marble sculpture of Asclepius, Greek god of medicine. 2nd century BC. Emporion, Girona, Spain.
RM2T6CPBA–Graeco-Egyptian deity Serapis in breastplate and modius headdress. Roman Emperor Julian (331-363) rejected Christianity and was depicted as the god Serapis in this engraved cornelian gem. Serapis Incis in Corneola. Copperplate engraving from Francesco Valesio, Antonio Gori and Ridolfino Venutis Academia Etrusca, Museum Cortonense in quo Vetera Monumenta, (Etruscan Academy or Museum of Cortona), Faustus Amideus, Rome, 1750.
RMCXRAHR–Egyptian Art. Ptolemaic period (332-30 BCE). Stele. Relief we see a king sacrificing to Isis and Serapis. Carlsberg Glyptotek.
RM2X3R6JT–Zeus-Serapis. 1st-2nd century AD. White marble. Musei Reali. Archaelogical Museum. Turin.
RM2JFFND4–Isis and Serapis. Serapis, Greaco-Egyptian sun deity wearing a modius or calato, a cylindrical crown decorated with vine leaves and rushes. Isis, Egyptian earth goddess, with peach leaves on her head. In cornelian. Iside et Serapide. In corniola. Copperplate engraving by Giovanni Battista Galestruzzi after Leonardo Agostini from Gemmae et Sculpturae Antiquae Depicti ab Leonardo Augustino Senesi, Abraham Blooteling, Amsterdam, 1685.
RFR9K1YD–Astrology Alphabet: SERAPIS / Osiris-Apis (Userhapi), Hellenistic Egyptian god of abundance, fertility, underworld and afterlife. Hieroglyphic sign.
RMM0E9B9–Marble statue of Asclepius, Greek god of medicine. 2nd century BC. Emporion, Spain. Head detail
RMDDKMCC–Head of Serapis, the lord of the dead. Artist: Unknown
RFPJ7M83–The Goddess Sekhmet, an Egyptian goddess. Partly reconstructed.
RMMR5KFH–Bust of the God Serapis, Greco-Egyptian, Marble, Roman work, 1st Century AD
RMCW33RA–Ruins of the Temple of Serapis in Pozzuoli
RMA7MKA4–Bust of the god Serapis, Greco-Roman Museum, Alexandria, Egypt
RF2WKF845–The Temple of Maharraqa on Lake Nasser, Egypt
RFR0ATME–Video Image of the Roman statues of Persephone (Isis), Pluto (Sarapis) from the Temple of the Egyptian Dieties in Gortyn (2nd century AD) .
RM2BD2TWX–Egypt, Cairo, Egyptian Museum, Roman collar belonging to the treasure of Dush, found in a cache in Dush temple. The collar is made with gold amulets.
RF2HTWPHF–Art inspired by Terracotta lamp handle, Imperial, 2nd century A.D., Roman, Terracotta, L. 2 5/8 in. (6.7 cm.), Vases, Zeus Serapis, enthroned, holds a scepter in his left hand and rests his right hand on the head of Cerberos, the guard dog of Hades. Since the Roman Serapis is equated, Classic works modernized by Artotop with a splash of modernity. Shapes, color and value, eye-catching visual impact on art. Emotions through freedom of artworks in a contemporary way. A timeless message pursuing a wildly creative new direction. Artists turning to the digital medium and creating the Artotop NFT
RM2AJJ7PT–Photo taken during the opening visit of the exhibition “Osiris, Egypt's Sunken Mysteries”. Bust of the god Serapis.
RMDFXK12–Basalt bust of the god Serapis - Rome 2nd century A.D. Vatican Museums - Rome, Italy The god Serapis was a composite of several Egyptian and Hellenistic deities introduces at the beginning of the Tolemaic Period (reign og Tolemy I, 304-284 B.C.). The new deity was created to form a brodge between the two cultures. He was portrayed in anthropomorphic form as a man wearing a Greeck-style robe with Greeck hairstyle and full beard and usually bearing a tall corn modius or measure on his head. His consort was Isis and their son the child god Harpocrates. The cult centre was the great serapeum templ
RM2RA2K15–France, Alpes Maritimes, Mougins, Mougins Classical Art Museum, Marble statue of the Graeco Egyptian god Zeus-Serapis, with Cerberus, the 3 headed dog that guarded the underworld and a Linocut, Head of a Woman in Profile (1959), by Pablo Picasso
RF2B96PPW–Photograph - Cooking, Egypt, Captain Edward Albert McKenna, World War I, 1914-1915, One of 108 images in an album from World War I likely to have been taken by Captain Edward Albert McKenna. The album contains photographs of the 7th Battalion in Egypt. Image of a statue depicting a group of men cooking at Serapeum. The Serapeum (or 'Sarapeion') was a temple built in Ptolemaic Alexandria to honour the Greco-Egyptian god Serapis, a hybrid of the Egyptian gods Osiris and Apis., Reimagined by Gibon, design of warm cheerful glowing of brightness and light rays radiance. Classic art reinvented with
RMPANK1R–Harpokrates in an Egyptianizing Crown and holding the club of Herakles. Dimensions: H. 18.5 cm. Date: A.D. 1st century. Harpokrates, or 'Horus the child,' the son of Isis and Osiris/Serapis, is here represented as a chubby toddler with a plump, crooked forefinger reaching toward his small mouth. He holds the knobby club of the Greek god Herakles and on his head wears a vestigial Egyptian double crown detailed with striations and dots. The crown is obscured in the front by a very large sun disk bearing a uraeus. A rarely noted deep blue corrosion gives the piece a rich tone. Harpokrates, the
RF2KF0MMX–The Red Basilica ruins in Bergama, Turkey. Temple of the Egyptian Gods
RMW7EBM2–Statue of Serapis, Greco- Egyptian God of the Underworld. Artist: Unknown
RM2HH7R8E–Gold statuette of Zeus Serapis 2nd century A.D. Roman Serapis was essentially a construct of the Ptolemaic Greek rulers of Egypt, a conflation of the local gods Osiris and Apis. Although gradually subsumed into the all-pervading cult of Isis, Serapis was worshipped throughout the Roman world in the guise of Zeus, ruler of the heavens, or that of Hades, god of the Underworld. This small figure wears the Egyptian modius (grain measure) headdress and carries a cornucopia (horn of plenty) to symbolize a plentiful food supply.. Gold statuette of Zeus Serapis. Roman. 2nd century A.D.. Gold. Mid-Impe
RFRG726F–Astrology Alphabet: SERAPIS / Osiris-Apis (Userhapi), Hellenistic Egyptian god of abundance, fertility, underworld and afterlife. Hieroglyphic sign.
RM2HHTWD7–Harpokrates in an Egyptianizing Crown and holding the club of Herakles A.D. 1st century Roman Period Harpokrates, or 'Horus the child,' the son of Isis and Osiris/Serapis, is here represented as a chubby toddler with a plump, crooked forefinger reaching toward his small mouth. He holds the knobby club of the Greek god Herakles and on his head wears a vestigial Egyptian double crown detailed with striations and dots. The crown is obscured in the front by a very large sun disk bearing a uraeus. A natural but infequently noted deep blue corrosion gives the piece a rich tone.Harpokrates, the quint
RF2P53MAG–The Red Basilica ruins in Bergama, Turkey. Temple of the Egyptian Gods
RFPJ7M88–The Goddess Sekhmet, an Egyptian goddess. Partly reconstructed.
RMMR5KMH–Bust of the God Serapis, Greco-Egyptian, Marble, Roman work, 1st Century AD
RF2WKF85G–The Temple of Maharraqa on Lake Nasser, Egypt
RF2G5XF1M–Antique Egyptian Art -Jewelry - Amulets, god figures, jewellery, papyrus, etc. - By The Ornament 1880.
RMKC8746–Bronze votive tablet, Imperial, ca. 2nd century A.D., Roman, Bronze, H.: 1 3/4 x 5 1/16 in. (4.4 x 12.9 cm), Bronzes, The tablet
RF2E1Y9F8–Archways in the ruins of the ancient city of Pergamon Izmir, Turkey. View of ancient ruins in Asklepion in Bergama
RM2AJJ799–Photo taken during the opening visit of the exhibition “Osiris, Egypt's Sunken Mysteries”. Bust of the god Serapis.
RMKC75TX–Terracotta lamp handle, Imperial, 2nd century A.D., Roman, Terracotta, L. 2 5/8 in. (6.7 cm.), Vases, Zeus Serapis, enthroned
RF2HTWR16–Art inspired by Bronze votive tablet, Imperial, ca. 2nd century A.D., Roman, Bronze, H.: 1 3/4 x 5 1/16 in. (4.4 x 12.9 cm), Bronzes, The tablet is in the form of a small tabula ansata, often used as the frame for dedicatory or funerary inscriptions. Here it is inscribed on both sides, Classic works modernized by Artotop with a splash of modernity. Shapes, color and value, eye-catching visual impact on art. Emotions through freedom of artworks in a contemporary way. A timeless message pursuing a wildly creative new direction. Artists turning to the digital medium and creating the Artotop NFT
RM2WMF9T3–Serapis, the god double-faced, Osiris-Apis on a loto flower, marble, Tivoli, Villa Adriana, imperial Roman period, Gregorian Egyptian Museumn Musei Va
RMPPJP6P–SERAPIS. Hellenistic God born from the union of Osiris and Apis. Lord of the underworld, medicine and fertility. His cult was of great importance in Rome. HEAD OF SERAPIS. Mitreo (2nd century AD). National Museum of Roman Art. Merida Province of Badajoz. Estremadura. Spain.
RF2KF0MMR–The Red Basilica ruins in Bergama, Turkey. Temple of the Egyptian Gods
RMW7EBM4–Statue of Serapis, Greco- Egyptian God of the Underworld. Artist: Unknown
RF2HW9496–Art inspired by Harpokrates in an Egyptianizing Crown and holding the club of Herakles, Roman Period, A.D. 1st century, From Egypt, Bronze, H. 18.5 cm, Harpokrates, or 'Horus the child,' the son of Isis and Osiris/Serapis, is here represented as a chubby toddler with a plump, crooked, Classic works modernized by Artotop with a splash of modernity. Shapes, color and value, eye-catching visual impact on art. Emotions through freedom of artworks in a contemporary way. A timeless message pursuing a wildly creative new direction. Artists turning to the digital medium and creating the Artotop NFT
RFRA02RJ–Astrology Alphabet: SERAPIS / Osiris-Apis (Userhapi), Hellenistic Egyptian god of abundance, fertility, underworld and afterlife. Hieroglyphics sign.
RMD87KXW–Dis Pater
RF2P53YRY–The Red Basilica ruins in Bergama, Turkey. Temple of the Egyptian Gods
RMKC47M5–Harpokrates in an Egyptianizing Crown and holding the club of Herakles, A.D. 1st century
RMMR5KFD–Bust of the God Serapis, Greco-Egyptian, Marble, Roman work, 1st Century AD
RFPJ7M7G–The Red Basilica, also called variously the Red Hall, is a monumental ruined temple in the ancient city of Pergamon, now Bergama, in western Turkey
RFRK9C67–Pergamon, Turkey. The structure called the Red Courtyard or the Basilica was built by to commemorate the Egyptian gods in the 2nd century AD.
RM2CJ7XH7–. The Mythology of all races .. . Fig. 218. Antaeus-Serapis EGYPTIAN RELIGION 241. (p. 197). As the supreme official divinity of the conqueringEgyptian empire between the Eighteenth and Twentieth Dy-nasties, the ram-headed Amon also became known as the high-est god in Libya, west ofEgypt, as is shown by thename of the Oasis ofAmon and its famousoracle In the Libyan Des-ert. The influence asmanifested in Asia andearlier Europe was lessdirect, although Egyptianart Imported many Niloticmotifs thither. Since Phoe-nician art was always muchmore strongly influencedby the Egyptian style ^ -Pj , , . F
RM2AJJ6EG–Photo taken during the opening visit of the exhibition “Osiris, Egypt's Sunken Mysteries”. Bust of the god Serapis.
RFTD9NRM–Egyptian Goddess Statue in Red Bazilica of Antique City Bergama in Turkey
RM2AHN9JF–Egypt, Alexandria, Archeological museum of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, head of the god Serapis, with his typical curly hair and beard.
RMP7C9PD–Egyptian gods: Anubis 1,2, Aries 3,4 and Serapis 5. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Andrea Bernieri from Giulio Ferrrario's Costumes Antique and Modern of All Peoples (Il Costume Antico e Moderno di Tutti i Popoli), Florence, 1843.
RM2AJJ1XY–Photo taken during the opening visit of the exhibition “Osiris, Egypt's Sunken Mysteries”. Head of the god Serapis.
RF2KF0N0G–The Red Basilica ruins in Bergama, Turkey. Temple of the Egyptian Gods
RM2AJGBEK–Egypt, Alexandria, Archeological museum of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, head of the god Serapis, with his typical curly hair and beard. Marble.
RFRBB3NM–Astrology Alphabet: SERAPIS / Osiris-Apis (Userhapi), Hellenistic Egyptian god of abundance, fertility, underworld and afterlife. Hieroglyphic sign.
RM2CADR02–Egypt, Cairo, Egyptian Museum, Roman collar belonging to the treasure of Dush, found in a cache in Dush temple. Made with gold amulets.
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