- Source: Capuan bust of Hannibal
The Capuan bust, is a sculpture often identified as Carthaginian general Hannibal. Made of marble, it was discovered in the Italian city of Capua in 1667 and is housed in the Naples National Archaeological Museum. The bust is depicted on the five dinar banknote of Tunisia, 2013 series, the site of ancient Carthage.
Identity
The bust's identity has been disputed. Naples Museum's catalogue of 1888 put a question mark in its attribution to Hannibal. According to Eve MacDonald, the bust features a cloak of a Roman commander (paludamentum). According to Australian historian Dexter Hoyos, there are "strong suspicions" that the bust is a Renaissance work rather than an ancient one.
19th-century iconographer Francis Pulzky believed the bust, instead of Hannibal, shows "the ideal representation of a hero" from the silver coins of Dernes of Phoenicia and Pharnabazus III.
British scholar W. H. D. Rouse defended the bust's identification as Hannibal. American historian Theodore Ayrault Dodge regarded the Capuan bust as the only portrait "which has any claim to authenticity".
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Capuan bust of Hannibal
- Hannibal
- 1660s in archaeology
- Hannibal's crossing of the Alps
- Second Punic War
- Coinage of Capua
- Cumae