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  2. Cramond Lioness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cramond_Lioness

    The Cramond Lioness in the National Museum of Scotland. The Cramond Lioness is a Roman-era sculpture recovered in 1997 from the mouth of the River Almond at Cramond in Edinburgh, Scotland. The sculpture, one of the most important Roman finds in Scotland for decades, was discovered by ferryman Robert Graham. [1] It depicts a bound male prisoner ...

  3. Cramond Roman Fort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cramond_Roman_Fort

    The Cramond Lioness, now in the National Museum of Scotland, is carved from a single block of stone. The most famous sculpture is the Cramond Lioness recovered from the mouth of the River Almond in 1997. The sculpture, in a non-local white sandstone, shows a lioness devouring her prey, a naked bearded male torso. [17]

  4. Tarasque of Noves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarasque_of_Noves

    The Cramond Lioness devouring a bound male. The monster, which Megaw described as a "great ithyphallic carnivore", [3] has been identified as a lion, a wolf, a bear, or some unidentifiable mythological creature. [1]: 43 [4]: 102 [3] The Tarasque is a man-eating dragon of medieval French legend, so the name is rather an anachronism.

  5. Sculpture in Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sculpture_in_Scotland

    The Cramond Sculpture Park was set up in Edinburgh in 1985 to accommodate the mixed media work emerging from art schools in Scotland. The Highland Sculpture Park, Glenshee and Cramond all closed within a few years, but there are numerous other parks within Scotland. [114] Current sculpture parks include: Art in Galloway Forest Park Programme

  6. Cramond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cramond

    The medieval parish church of Cramond parish (which retains its late medieval western tower in altered form), was built within the Roman fort. The Cramond Lioness in the National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh. Though knowledge of the Roman presence at Cramond was recorded afterwards, the remains of the fort itself were only rediscovered in 1954.

  7. Prehistoric art in Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_art_in_Scotland

    The Torrs Pony-cap and Horns, around 200 BCE, National Museum of Scotland, as displayed in 2011. Prehistoric art in Scotland is visual art created or found within the modern borders of Scotland, before the departure of the Romans from southern and central Britain in the early fifth century CE, which is usually seen as the beginning of the early historic or Medieval era.

  8. Mmuseumm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mmuseumm

    The Mmuseumm was founded by Alex Kalman [3] [4] and the Safdie brothers. [5] [6] It curates its content and locations by "seasons", reflective of its original summer hours, [7] and has called two locations home on Cortlandt Alley between Franklin Street and White Street, sometimes known as Mmuseumm Alley. [8]

  9. Long Island Museum of American Art, History, and Carriages

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Island_Museum_of...

    The Tally-ho Road Coach (1875) was given to the museum by the Museum of the City of New York in 2008. Made by Holland & Holland, of London, the carriage was purchased and brought to the United States by Col. Delancey Astor Kane (1844–1915), a wealthy founder of New York's Coaching Club. A canary yellow and beautifully-proportioned road coach ...

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