Following Hadrian:
Fragment of a fresco depicting the goddess Nemesis accompanied by a genius and a hunter, from the underground shrine of Nemesis in the amphitheatre, 2nd century AD, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Statue of Antinous, Paros marble, from the Villa of Els Munts, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Marble head of Livia, it may have stood in the Tarraco Theatre or in the Colonial Forum, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Portrait of a Julio-Claudian prince, from the Tarraco Theatre where it would have been part of the decorative programme, 1st century AD, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Portrait of a Julio-Claudian prince, possibly Germanicus, from the Tarraco Theatre where it would have been part of the decorative programme, 1st century AD, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Marble head of Hadrian, probably sculpted in a local workshop, discovered in the residential area near the Colonial Forum of Tarraco, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Marble head of Hadrian, probably sculpted in a local workshop, discovered in the residential area near the Colonial Forum of Tarraco, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Lucius Verus, found in the area of the Colonial Forum, probably made by a local workshop, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Portrait of the young Marcus Aurelius aged 23, found near the Colonial Forum, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Marble portrait of Claudius, it would have formed part of the decoration of the schola of the collegium fabrum (the seat of the corporation of building workers), National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Marble portrait of the prince Nero Julius Caesar, found in the area of the Colonial Forum where it would have been part of a gallery of statues of the imperial family, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Posthumous portrait of Tiberius wearing the civic crown, it would have been part of a gallery of portraits of the Julio-Claudian family in the Colonial Forum, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
The Medusa Mosaic, central emblema made with the opus vermiculatum technique, late 2nd - early 3rd century AD, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Statue of Antinous, Paros marble, from the Villa of Els Munts, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Statue of Antinous, Paros marble, from the Villa of Els Munts, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Fresco with a hunting scene that would have decorated the corridor of a luxurious domus in Tarraco, 2nd - 3rd century AD, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona
Following Hadrian:
Toe from a colossal statue, probably a seated statue of Augustus that would have presided over the Temple of Augustus in Tarraco, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Elements of decoration from the worship area of the Temple of Augustus in Tarraco, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Pedestal of the statue of Marcus Flavius Paulinus who benefited from a public horse awarded by the emperor Hadrian, dated to AD 117-138, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain
Following Hadrian:
Fragment of a monumental inscription referring to the construction of a gate in the amphitheatre of Tarraco by a flamen of the Provincia Hispania Citerior, 2nd century AD, National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Spain