The Kouros of Samos is an ancient Greek sculpture created in the 6th century BCE. On stylistic grounds it is attributed to a Samian artist, who probably made it on Samos itself.[1]

The Kouros of Samos

In September 1980, a German team of archaeologists uncovered the marble statue during a routine topographical excavation on the Sacred Way in the Heraion. The Kouros stands 5.25 meters tall and its body is mostly intact. Its head remained missing until autumn of 1984 when it was found and joined to the rest of the body. The Kouros now stands in the Samos Archaeological Museum.[1]

According to the inscription on the left thigh of the Kouros, it was a dedication made in the sanctuary by one Isches, son of Rhesis (Ἰσχῆς ἀνέθηκεν ὁ Ῥήσιος), who is not otherwise known.[2] Aideen Carty proposes that he was one of the Geomori who ruled Samos in the early sixth century BC.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b Kyrielis (1996)
  2. ^ Klaus Hallof: Inscriptiones Graecae XII, 6, 2 Inscriptiones Sami insulae. De Gruyter, Berlin 2000, No. 560.
  3. ^ Carty, Aideen (2015). Polycrates, Tyrant of Samos: New Light on Archaic Greece. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 47. ISBN 9783515108980.

Bibliography

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  • Helmut Kyrieleis: The large kouros of Samos. In: Great Moments in Greek Archaeology. J. Paul Getty Museum Los Angeles 2007, p. 338-341.
  • Helmut Kyrieleis: Der große Kuros von Samos (= Samos Vol. 10). Habelt, Bonn 1996, ISBN 3-7749-2771-5
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