Erschienen in:
23.11.2020 | Historical Perspectives in Pathology
Metastatic Carcinoma with Associated Lymphoadenopathy and Acquired Horner’s Syndrome Portrayed in a Third Century CE Roman Bust
verfasst von:
Raffaella Bianucci, Casey L. Kirkpatrick, Francesco Maria Galassi, Antonio Perciaccante, Simon T. Donell, Otto Appenzeller, Andreas G. Nerlich
Erschienen in:
Head and Neck Pathology
|
Ausgabe 2/2021
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Excerpt
Over five centuries Roman portraiture developed through stylistic cycles. Physical elements of both politicians and wealthy individuals were alternatively represented as extremely veristic (realisitic) or classising (idealising) [
1,
2]. In the third century CE, the portraits of wealthy freedmen (
liberti) rather than the patrician élite were characterised by an unusual realism [
1,
2], and great care was applied to reproduce the physiognomy of the sitters, defects and pathologies included [
3]. In several cases, the Roman funerary art included the busts of the deceased [
3] and some of them are so detailed to show suggestive evidence of neurological conditions [
4]. …