EditorialTerracotta lekythos (oil flask), Classical, ca. 460?450 B.C., Greek, Attic, Terracotta; red-figure, H. 15 in. (38.1 cm), Vases, Obverse, Apollo with kithara (lyre) and palm tree. Leto was said to have given birth to Apollo beneath a date palm on the Cy...
EditorialThe Delphic Triade: Leto, Apollo and Artemis. Leto holds in her hand the symbols for both her children, Apollo's lyre and Artemis' moon-sickle. H: 85 cm.
EditorialRoman sarcophagus. About 160 AD. Apollo and Artemis kill Niobe's 14 children. Revenge of Leto. Send your children Apollo and Artemis killing the children of Niobe. Glyptothek. Munich. Germany.
EditorialPergamon Altar. Built by order of Eumenes II Soter. 164-156 BC by artists of the school of Pergamon. Marble and limestone. East frieze. Gigantomachy. Leto fights using a torch against titan Tityos. At her other side Apollo fights armed with bow and arr...
EditorialThe filled-in Sacred Lake and the Agora of the Italiotes, Delos. According to myth, this is the place where Leto, pursued by Hera, gave birth to Apollo and Artemis.
EditorialHouse of Hermes on the island of Delos. According to Greek myths, it was the island on which Leto gave birth to Zeus' twins Apollo and Artemis, but strong merchant guilds composed of free men and liberated slaves venerated the God of Trade Hermes (6th-...
EditorialBenito Manuel de Ag?ero / 'Landscape with Leto and the Peasants Transformed into Frogs'. Third quarter of the XVII century. Oil on canvas. Apollo. DIANA (MYTHOLOGY). LATONA.
EditorialBenito Manuel de Ag?ero / 'Landscape with Leto and the Peasants Transformed into Frogs'. Third quarter of the XVII century. Oil on canvas. Apollo. DIANA (MYTHOLOGY). LATONA.
EditorialThe filled-in Sacred Lake and the Agora of the Italiotes, Delos. According to myth, this is the place where Leto, pursued by Hera, gave birth to Apollo and Artemis.
EditorialThe Delphic Triade: Leto, Apollo and Artemis. Leto holds in her hand the symbols for both her children, Apollo's lyre and Artemis' moon-sickle. H: 85 cm.
EditorialHouse of Hermes on the island of Delos. According to Greek myths, it was the island on which Leto gave birth to Zeus' twins Apollo and Artemis, but strong merchant guilds composed of free men and liberated slaves venerated the God of Trade Hermes (6th-...
EditorialThe filled-in Sacred Lake and the Agora of the Italiotes, Delos. According to myth, this is the place where Leto, pursued by Hera, gave birth to Apollo and Artemis.
EditorialPergamon Altar. Built by order of Eumenes II Soter. 164-156 BC by artists of the school of Pergamon. Marble and limestone. East frieze. Gigantomachy. Leto fights using a torch against titan Tityos. At her other side Apollo fights armed with bow and arr...
EditorialTerracotta lekythos (oil flask), Classical, ca. 460?450 B.C., Greek, Attic, Terracotta; red-figure, H. 15 in. (38.1 cm), Vases, Obverse, Apollo with kithara (lyre) and palm tree. Leto was said to have given birth to Apollo beneath a date palm on the Cy...
EditorialCOMODO, Lucio Aurelio (Lanuvio,161-Roma,192). Emperador romano (180-192). El 31 de diciembre de 192 Comodo se retir? a la escuela de gladiadores del monte Celio, dispuesto a presentarse al pueblo al d?a siguiente a la vez como c?nsul y gladiador. Marci...
EditorialLeto venus moth (Hepialus venus), purple tiger, Rhyparia purpurata (Chelonia purpurea), and hebe tiger moth, Arctia festiva (Chelonia hebe). Handcolored engraving by Fournier after an illustration by Blanchard from Charles d'Orbigny's "Dictionnaire Uni...
EditorialLeto venus moth (Venus moth, Phalaena venus). Illustration drawn and engraved by Richard Polydore Nodder. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from George Shaw and Frederick Nodder's "The Naturalist's Miscellany," London, 1810.
EditorialRoman sarcophagus. About 160 AD. Apollo and Artemis kill Niobe's 14 children. Revenge of Leto. Send your children Apollo and Artemis killing the children of Niobe. Glyptothek. Munich. Germany.
EditorialPergamon Altar. Built by order of Eumenes II Soter. 164-156 BC by artists of the school of Pergamon. Marble and limestone. East frieze. Gigantomachy. Leto fights using a torch against titan Tityos. At her other side Apollo fights armed with bow and arr...
EditorialLatone et les paysans de Lycie-Latona (Roman form of Leto, mother of Apollo and Diana) and the farmers of Lykia. Around 1604 Canvas,75 x 70 cm Depot du Louvre,Inv.2.
EditorialThe Delphic Triade: Leto, Apollo and Artemis. Leto holds in her hand the symbols for both her children, Apollo's lyre and Artemis' moon-sickle. H: 85 cm.
EditorialHouse of Hermes on the island of Delos. According to Greek myths, it was the island on which Leto gave birth to Zeus' twins Apollo and Artemis, but strong merchant guilds composed of free men and liberated slaves venerated the God of Trade Hermes (6th-...
EditorialThe filled-in Sacred Lake and the Agora of the Italiotes, Delos. According to myth, this is the place where Leto, pursued by Hera, gave birth to Apollo and Artemis.