Cast Gallery catalogue number: A120j
Inhabitants of a besieged city escaping, one on horseback, and part of a fight.
- Plaster cast: Height: 61cm, Width: 1.35m.
- Copy of part of a limestone frieze.
- The frieze:
- is from the interior of the west wall of the Heroon at Trysa (in Lycia).
- was made about 390-380 BC.
- was taken to Vienna in 1883.
- is now in Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum.
Detailed Record
Commentary Prepared by Dr. Julia Lenaghan, Ashmolean Museum
A 120 J
City Siege; Trysa Heroon West Wall
Limestone
Architectural Relief
W (total) 618 cm
First discovered in 1841 but soon forgotten, the Trysa heroon was rediscovered in 1881 by Otto Benndorf, then Professor of Classical Archaeology in Vienna. In 1882/83 the friezes of the heroon were transferred to Vienna.
Austria, Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum
Late Classical, ca. 370 BC
Preservation:The entire surface of the relief is heavily weathered, the figures are very badly worn and abraded.
Description:Four figures are depicted in this scene, all moving to the right: To the left a man in a short chiton, in the centre a woman sitting sideways on a mount. She wears a chiton and a veil or mantle that is draped over her head. To the right, separated from the first group by rocky terrain, are two warriors. One stands upright; he wears a short chiton and a Corinthian helmet and is armed with shield and sword. In the foreground, a second figure, much destroyed, lies on the ground.
Discussion:The relief shows some of the inhabitants fleeing the city, in this case a noble woman on a mount accompanied by a man. The two warriors on the right already belong to a different subject depicted on the west frieze, an amazonomachy.
For the Trysa heroon in general see also A 119a and A 120a.
Bibliography:O. Benndorf and G. Niemann,
Das Heroon von Gjölbaschi-Trysa (Vienna 1889) esp. 51; 123-129 pls. 11; 112-113
The basic first publication of the monument.F. Eichler,
Die Reliefs des Heroon von Gjölbaschi-Trysa (Vienna 1950) esp. 61-63 pls. 18-21
Detailed guide with a description of the monument and the individual reliefs.R. Noll,
Das Heroon von Gjölbaschi-Trysa. Ein fürstlicher Grabbezikr griechischer Zeit in Kleinasien [= Führer durch das Kunsthistorische Museum Nr. 16] (Vienna 1971) esp. p. 5
A short guide with a detailed description of the various reliefs.W. A. P. Childs,
"Prolegomena to a Lycian Chronology, II: The Heroon from Trysa" (RA 2 1976) 281-316
Gives a detailed stylistic comparison between the reliefs from Trysa and sculptures from the Greek mainland and the rest of Lycia. The Heroon at Trysa is dated to ca. 370 BC.W. A. P. Childs,
The City-Reliefs of Lycia [= Princeton Monographs in Art and Archaeology XLII] (Princeton N. J. 1978) esp. 13-14; 31-36; 78 pls. 1.2; 13.2-17
Shows that the siege scene from Trysa forms part of the typical iconography of Lycian reliefs and ultimately derives from Near Eastern, particularly Assyrian sources that were slightly adapted under Greek influence.C. Bruns-Özgan,
Lykische Grabreliefs des 5. Und 4. Jahrhunderts v. Chr. [= IstMitt Beiheft 33] (Tübingen 1987) 56-81; 256-257 pls. 9-11.2; 12-13.2
Argues that the friezes from Trysa show an advanced style of ca. 370 BC and are influenced by the iconography of Greek paintings of the Classical period, probably through the use of established pattern books.B. S. Ridgway,
Fourth-Century Styles in Greek Sculpture (London 1997) esp. 88-94 pls. 24-25
Good summary and bibliography of previous research on the heroon.