Faculty of Classics - University of Cambridge

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Grave Stele of Aristion

This stele, or marker stone, is carved in low relief and shows the deceased young man in profile. He is named in the inscription at the bottom as Aristion. His armour suggests that he was a heavy-infantryman or hoplite.

Hoplites were the ordinary soldiers in Greek armies. Aristion has all the equipment of the hoplite except the round shield and bronze helmet: protective shin guards, called greaves, on his legs, protective body armour, and a spear, as well as the felt skull-cap to cushion the helmet. Hoplites had to provide all their equipment and armour themselves when they were required to fight for their city-state

Material: 
Pentelic marble
Location of Original: 

Athens National museum 29

Size: 
2.24m
Accession: 

Presented by Oscar Browning to the Fitzwilliam in October 1876. Transferred to the Museum in 1884

References: 

Lippold: Griechische Plastik, 84 (n.6), pl. 27.2
Johansen: the Attic Grave Reliefs of the Classical Period (1951), fig.52
Richter: Archaic Attic Gravestones (1934), 99, fig.93
Walston: Catalogue of Casts in the Museum of Classical Archaeology (1889), 16, no.43
Reporter: 19 June 1885, 891, no.37
Stewart: Greek Sculpture, pls. 145-6
Inscription: IG I(3), 1256

Date: 
c.510 BCE
Sculptor: 
Aristocles
Inscription: 

The work of Aristokles
Of Aristion

Provenance: 

Found at Velanideza near Marathon in Attica

Number: 
43

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