Exhibition: ‘Riding through time: The Art of horse riding from Antiquity to the Middle Ages’
.jpg)
Ιn the latter part of the fourth millennium BC, somewhere on the central Asian tundra, the horse ceased to a mere prey and its fate began to interweave ever more closely with that of man.
"The place where the taming of the horse first occurred and was further developed is still one of the most hotly debated issues in scholarly literature today. But it would seem illogical to imagine that the horse began its age-old history of coexistence with man anywhere other than in eastern European and the Eurasian tundra", Camin and Paolucci note in the catalogue published by Sillabe.The circa 100 items on display, from dozens of Italian and foreign museums, cover a period of over 2,000 years stretching from the Early Iron Age to the later Middle Ages.
Of unique interest are also two horse skulls unearthed during excavations in the western necropolis of Himera, and now in the Museo Pirro Marconi in the Parco Archeologico di Himera. The skulls on display here still have their bronze ring bits of a kind found primarily in the Iberian peninsula, which would seem to bear out Herodotus' contention (VII, 165) that the Carthaginian army included Hispanic mercenaries in its ranks. This was a fairly unique find because horse burials were uncommon in 5th century Greece and Magna Graecia, but the victory was clearly considered such a magnificent feat that the soldiers and their mounts were afforded special recognition.
The last beast to be tamed, the horse proved capable of carving out a major role for itself in the art, society and literature of the ancient world thanks to its innate beauty and nobility, which inevitably ended up reflecting also on its rider. As Eike Schmidt, Director of the Gallerie degli Uffizi, notes: "The whole concept of this exhibition appears to be encapsulated in one of the exhibits on display, a splendid pair of 4th century BC bronze and ivory chanfrons designed to protect the horse's forehead, nose and muzzle: the silhouette of the metal sheeting, shaped and embossed follows the outline of the horse's elongated anatomy, but on the inside, far from displaying the anatomy of a horse, it depicts the features of a human face sporting a helmet on its head. The horse and its rider become a single, fused being. From the Old Stone Age to the end of the 16th century, the exhibition explores this relationship which has marked the history of mankind from the outset and which is still so surprisingly relevant to our own time".
"Riding Through Time", a multivision product devised and directed by Gianmarco D'Agostino, completes the exhibition with some 300 square metres of screenings. The visual correspondence between the exhibits on display and images from life paired with an immersive soundtrack will unquestionably enrich the visitor's exploration of the friendship between man and horse down the centuries.
archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com