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The muscular male figure is portrayed seated on an animal hide, and its precise identification remains open to debate. Though traditionally identified as a Heracles seated on the skin of the Nemean lion, recent studies [citation needed] have identified the skin as that of a panther, occasioning other identifications (with possibilities including Polyphemus and Marsyas). [3]
The sculpture is mentioned twice in the ancient sources. Pausanias writes: “In this place is a statue of Athena striking Marsyas the Silenus for taking up the flutes that the goddess wished to be cast away for good.” [1] Pliny records: “His other works include Ladas and a ‘Discobolos’ or Man Throwing a Discus, and Perseus, and The Sawyers, and The Satyr Marvelling at the Flute and ...
Stašo Forenbaher - Timonthy Kaiser: Palagruža, jadranski moreplovci i njihova kamena industrija na prijelazu iz bakrenog u brončano doba, Opuscula archaeologica, 21, Zagreb, 1997, 15–28 https://hrcak.srce.hr/en/5438; Blagoje Govedarica, Rano bronzano doba na području istočnog Jadrana, Sarajevo, 1989.
Swedish Institute in Rome, Opuscula Archaeologica (1935–present). Anna Gerstl, Supplementum Epigraphicum zu CIL III für Kärnten und Osttirol, 1902-1961 (Epigraphic Supplement to CIL III for Carinthia and East Tyrol), Vienna (1961). Giovanni Battista Brusin, Inscriptiones Aquileiae (Inscriptions of Aquileia), Udine (1991–1993).
Opuscula archaeologica – Opera dedicata in Professorem Thaddeum Malinowski, edited by Wojciech Dzieduszycki, University of Zielona Góra, 2007 Enzyklopädisches Handbuch zur Ur- und Frühgeschichte Europas , edited by Jan Filip , Vol. 2, Prag, 1969; Vol. 3, Praha, 1998
In a 2017 genetic study published in Nature, the remains of six individuals ascribed to the Sopot culture in Hungary were analyzed.Of the four samples of Y-DNA extracted, two belonged to G2a2b-L30 or various subclades of it, one belonged to I2-L596, and one belonged to J2.
Opuscula Archaeologica (in Croatian). 21 (1). Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb: 15–28
The toponym Delminium has the same root as the tribal name Dalmatae and the regional name Dalmatia. [1] [2] [3] It is considered to be connected to the Albanian dele and its variants which include the Gheg form delmë, meaning "sheep", and to the Albanian term delmer, "shepherd".