Helios statue uv map 3d model12/10/2023 In this contribution different types of documents and classes of materials from Seleucia on the T. The different interpretations advanced by scholars in the last decades completely change the framework of the panel’s commission and sculpturing, which are of basic importance for the understanding of the events characterizing the history of the region in which it was carved: ancient Elymais. The exact meaning and chronology of the represented figures have been particularly debated, to the extent that dates spanning from the 2nd century BC to the 2nd century AD were alternatively proposed for the sculpting –or re-sculpting– of the scene. The project’s aim was to acquire new data, and shed new light, on the Parthian rock carving there located, one of the most famous and disputed panels of ancient Iran for the incoherent scene it depicts and remote place in which is located. more This report makes available the results of the research conducted between 20 by the Iranian-Italian Joint Expedition in Khuzestan in the valley of Hung-e Azhdar (or Hung-e Nauruzi), about 17 km north of the modern city of Izeh. This report makes available the results of the research conducted between 20 by the Ir. He is affiliated to the Centro Ricerche Archeologiche e Scavi di Torino per il Medio Oriente e l’Asia, the ISMEO, and the Societas Iranologica Europæa, and member of the editorial boards of the Journals Parthica, Open Archaeology and Abstracta Iranica.Īmong his key qualifications and research interests, are ‘cultural interactions in the ancient Near East and Mediterranean’, 'institutional landscape of empires', ‘new methods for documentation and preservation of endangered Heritage, ‘new technologies for Cultural Heritage’, ‘administration procedures in the ancient world’, ‘royal ideology in Hellenistic Asia’. He is the Director of the Shool of Archaeology (University of Torino) and served as visiting professor and researcher at the University Lyon 2, University of Rome La Sapienza, and Getty Research Institute. He is the PI of the projects (in)visible collections, Afterlife, Lost Hellenistic Sculptures of Mesopotamia and Iran and Pietro della Valle, held in collaboration with international Institutions. He is co-director of, and took part in, archaeological campaigns in Iran, Iraq and Turkmenistan. Vito Messina is Professor in Archaeology of ancient Asia (University of Torino).
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