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Bookmark (persistent url): https://dac-collection.wesleyan.edu/objects-1/info/10999
Interior View of the Ancient Temple of Bacchus, Now the Church of S. Urbano, Two Miles from Rome… (Veduta interna dell’ antico di Bacco in oggi Chiesa di S. Urbano due miglia distante da Roma fuori di porta S. Sebastiano…)
176718th century
425 x 606 mm (16.7 x 23.9 in.)
Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Italian, (1720–1778)
- architecture - Art or science of designing and building structures, especially habitable structures, in accordance with principles determined by aesthetic and practical or material considerations. Refers also to the structures created. [November 1994 related term added. October 1990 alternate term added.]
- Bacchus
- churches
- interior views - Use for photographs or other representations of the interior of a building or other structure. [April 1991 descriptor moved; lead-in term added.]
- Italy - TGN 1000080
- religions
- religious buildings
- Rome - TGN 7000874 (standard English name used here for this well-known city)
- temples - Use for religious buildings dedicated to the service of a deity or deities, often housing a cult image; do not use for such Christian or Islamic religious buildings, prefer "churches" or "mosques." May also be used for Protestant places of worship in France and some French-speaking regions. [February 1995 scope note added.]
- plate Dimensions: 425 x 606 mm (16.7 x 23.9 in.)
No open access image available
Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Italian, (1720–1778) . Interior View of the Ancient Temple of Bacchus, Now the Church of S. Urbano, Two Miles from Rome… (Veduta interna dell’ antico di Bacco in oggi Chiesa di S. Urbano due miglia distante da Roma fuori di porta S. Sebastiano…), 1767. From Views of Rome Drawn and Etched by Giambattista Piranesi, Venetian Architect (Vedute di Roma disegnate ed incise da Giambattista Piranesi Architetto Ve[nez]iano). Etching on laid paper. Second of four states. plate : 425 x 606 mm (16.7 x 23.9 in.). DAC accession number 1973.D1.128. Gift of George W. Davison (BA Wesleyan 1892), before 1953.