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Archaic through Hellenistic Greek. 600 B.C.E.–150 C.E. Plan.
Archaic Greek. c. 530 B.C.E. Marble with remnants of paint.
Archaic Greek. c. 530 B.C.E. Marble, painted details.
Etruscan. c. 520 B.C.E. Terra cotta.
Master sculptor Vulca. 175c. 510–500 B.C.E. Original temple of wood, mud brick, or tufa (volcanic rock); terra cotta sculpture.
Tarquinia, Italy. Etruscan. c. 480–470 B.C.E. Tufa and fresco.
Anonymous vase painter of Classical Greece known as the Niobid Painter. c. 460–450 B.C.E. Clay, red-figure technique (white highlights).
Polykleitos. Original 450–440 B.C.E. Roman copy (marble) of Greek original (bronze).
Athens, Greece. Iktinos and Kallikrates. c. 447–410 B.C.E. Marble.
Attributed to Kallimachos. c. 410 B.C.E. Marble and paint.
Hellenistic Greek. c. 190 B.C.E. Marble.
Asia Minor (present-day Turkey). Hellenistic Greek. c. 175 B.C.E. Marble (architecture and sculpture).
Nabataean Ptolemaic and Roman. c. 400 B.C.E.–100 C.E. Cut rock.
Republican Roman. c. 75–50 B.C.E. Marble.
Pompeii, Italy. Imperial Roman. c. second century B.C.E.; rebuilt c. 62–79 C.E. Cut stone and fresco.
Pompeii. Republican Roman. c. 100 B.C.E. Mosaic.
Imperial Roman. Early first century C.E. Marble.
Rome, Italy. Imperial Roman. 70–80 C.E. Stone and concrete.
Rome, Italy. Apollodorus of Damascus. Forum and markets: 106–112 C.E.; column completed 113 C.E. Brick and concrete (architecture); marble (column).
Imperial Roman. 118–125 C.E. Concrete with stone facing.