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1930 Trojan with Voyageur caravan. Creator: Unknown1930 Trojan with Voyageur caravan
Venus and Anchises, c1889-1890, (c1930). Creator: Sir William Blake RichmondVenus and Anchises, c1889-1890, (c1930). Illustration to the " Epipsychidion", a poem by Percy Bysshe Shelley, depicting the illicit meeting of Venus, goddess of love
The Funeral of Hector, 1890. Creator: UnknownThe Funeral of Hector, 1890. In Greekand Roman mythology, Hector was a Trojan prince and hero of Troy in the Trojan War. Killed by Achilles his body was dragged through the dirt before being
Achilles and Hector in the siege of Troy, Achilles, the Greek hero of Iliad
Laocoon. Sculptural group representing the Trojan priest and his two sons strangled by snakes
Trojan saloon and tourer competing in the MCC Edinburgh Trial, 1929. Artist: Bill BrunellTrojan Pneumatic-tyred saloon. 1488 cc. Reg. No. VB2305. Entry No: 168. Driver: Gaskell, G.E. Right: Trojan Pneumatic-tyred tourer. 1926. Reg. No. MK6812. Entry No: 169. M.C.C. Edinburgh Trial
The Death of Troilus, 1927, (wood engraving)
Death of Penthesilea, 1484 (1964). From Jacques Milets L istoire de la Destruction de Troye la Grant (Story of the Destruction of Troy), Paris, 1484
Initial Q, 1490 (1964). From the Recueil des Hystoires Troyennes, printed by Michel Topie and Jacques Heremberck. A print from A History of Wood Engraving, by Douglas Percy Bliss, Spring Books
Venus and Aeneas, 17th century. Artist: Sebastien BourdonVenus and Aeneas, 17th century. According to Greem Mythology, Aeneas was aTrojan hero who was the son of Prince Anchises and Aphrodite, the Goddess of Love (Venus in the Roman pantheon)
Priam and Achilles, 17th century. Artist: PadovaninoPriam and Achilles, 17th century. Priam, King of Troy, pleading with Achilles for the return of the body of his son, Hector, who Achilles killed in combat
The Sacrifice of Polyxena, 1730s. Artist: Giovanni Battista Pittoni the YoungerThe Sacrifice of Polyxena, 1730s. According th Greek Mythology, Polyxena was the youngest daughter of King Priam of Troy and his queen, Hecuba
Origins of Rome, Legend Trojan, 1st Century AD. National Museum of Rome
Heracles Delivering Hesione, c1708-1737. Artist: Francois LemoyneHeracles Delivering Hesione, c1708-1737
Madame Sophie Schliemann, 1877. Madame Schliemann wearing jewellery excavated by her husband Heinrich at Troy (in modern Turkey) in 1876
Roman mosaic of Ganymede and Zeus, 3rd centuryRoman mosaic of Ganymede and Zeus from Souisse, Tunisa. Zeus is in the form of an eagle, and about to carry off the Trojan prince Ganymede to be his cupbearer, 3rd century
Trojans Deceived, 1830. The raiding party secreting themselves in the great wooden horse. The story of the legendary wars between the Greek confederation and Troy
The Greeks outside Troy, c1900. Scene from the legendary Trojan Wars (13th century to 12th century BC) between the Greek confederation and Troy
Cassandra, legendary Trojan prophetess, 16th century. In Greek mythology, Cassandra was the daughter of Priam, king of Troy, and Hecuba
Cassandra, legendary Trojan princess and prophetess, delivering a prophecy. The daughter of Priam and Hecuba, Cassandra was given the gift of seeing into the future by the god Apollo
Battle scene from Homers Iliad, c300 BC. The Iliad is an epic poem describing the final year of the legendary war between the Ancient Greeks and Troy, fought in the 12th or 13th century BC
Trojan War: King Priam of Troy mourning over the body of his son Hector, 16th century. The Trojan War was a legendary war fought between the Greeks and Trojans in the 12th or 13th century BC
The Procession of the Trojan Horse into Troy, c1760. Artist: Giovanni Battista TiepoloThe Procession of the Trojan Horse into Troy, c1760. From the National Gallery, London
Detail from the Francois Vase, Ajax carrying the body of Achilles, c6th century BC. Artists: Ergotimos, KleitiasDetail from the Francois Vase, Ajax carrying the body of Achilles, c6th century BC. Greek Vase signed by Clitias (painter) and Ergotimos (potter), c560 BC
Head of Ganymede. Detail from a Roman statue of Ganymede with the eagle, after a Greek original from the Praxiteles school of the 3rd century BC
Statue of Ganymede with the Eagle. Roman, after a Greek original from the Praxiteles school of the 3rd century BC. According to Homer, Ganymede was a Trojan prince and the most beautiful of mortals
Portrait bust of Paris, Son of the Trojan King Priam. Roman, after a Greek model of the 4th century BC. According to Greek Mythology, Paris abduction of Helen, wife of the Spartan King Menelaus