Stèle Gallery
ultrapaulocanedolove
conlon
three
ovogi
red cake
Stele of King UnasView of a stele inside the Funerary Complex of King Unas, last ruler of the 5th Dy
egypt-museum:Stele of UnasA stele inside the funerary complex of the king Unas. Old Kingdom, 5th Dyn
Ancient Egyptian funerary stele for a bowman named Semin. Artist unknown; ca. 2120-2051 BCE (1
lionofchaeronea:The grave stele for an Athenian woman named Mynnia. She bids farewell to her m
Painted wood funerary stele of an ancient Egyptian noblewoman named Taperet, showing her worshiping
Stele of HayStele depicting goddess Meretseger “She Who Loves Silence”, with female body
holy-mountaineering:The back of Jimmy Page’s 1977 tour jacket featuring the Stele of Revealing
Stele of Siah from the 22nd dynasty, 825-712 B.C. Ancient Egypt
Funerary stele, made of limestone, of the freedman and sevir Q. Valerius Restitutus. Still alive, he
Diamo un senso alla stele dannunziana (presso Lido Azzurro Beach Village)
happy halloween, everyone celebrating with a (late) witch!clary and her trusty stele!
protective stele with the God Bes holding two snakes in His left and a blade in His right; on the to
A black stone stele of Krishna as a child, Nepal
grandegyptianmuseum: Egyptian stela with fertility gods Upper register of limestone stele of chief c
Stone stele from 300-100BC containing an Oscan inscription.It was found on the inner arch of the Nol
classicalmonuments: 1. Marble stele of a youth and a little girl Attica, Greece~530 BCE 423.4cm 2.&n
The Stele of Philae
Still in time to get a stele for this Halloween cosplay! #shadowhunters #notamundane #cosplay #hall
Stele with Law Code of Hammurabi, Susa, Iran. 1780 BCE. record of the first written compr
The Victory Stele of Naram-Sin, Susa, Iran. 2254 - 2218 BCE. made of pink sandstone; measures 6'7&am
lionofchaeronea:Fragment of an ancient Greek grave stele from the Piraeus Gate area, Athens, depicti
Victory stele of king Naram-Sin, limestone bas-relief, ca. 2254-2213 BC (Akkad), During Naram-
starsandepithets:Ear Stele, for when you really want the gods to hear.
Fragment of an Attic Funerary Stele, Late Classical, 4th century BC. Istanbul Archaeology Museum
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