The Harpy Tomb: Lycian tomb, probably of king Xanthus, which was named after its reliefs of female figureswhich resemble Harpies. Several reliefs of the monument were removed by Charles Fellows and are today kept at the British Museum, London.

Dublin Core

Creator

FELLOWS, Charles, Sir

Title

The Harpy Tomb: Lycian tomb, probably of king Xanthus, which was named after its reliefs of female figureswhich resemble Harpies. Several reliefs of the monument were removed by Charles Fellows and are today kept at the British Museum, London.

Alternative Title

The Harpy tomb.

Date

1847

Bibliographic Citation

FELLOWS, Charles, Sir. Lycia, Caria, Lydia, illustrated by Mr. George Scharf with descriptive letter press by Sir Charles Fellows, London, Messrs. Paul and Dominic Colnaghi and Co., 1847.

Identifier

fellows1_26

Spatial Coverage

Xanthus

Asia Minor

Turkey

Subject

Art and antiquities

Geolocation

Item Relations

This item has no relations.

Files

Citation

FELLOWS, Charles, Sir , “The Harpy Tomb: Lycian tomb, probably of king Xanthus, which was named after its reliefs of female figureswhich resemble Harpies. Several reliefs of the monument were removed by Charles Fellows and are today kept at the British Museum, London.,” travelogues, accessed December 21, 2024, https://english.travelogues.gr/items/show/55096.