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Gaius Marcius Coriolanus offering his services to the VolsciThe Roman general, Gaius Marcius Coriolanus, banished from Rome, offers his services to the Volsci, his former enemy
Coriolanus and the Matrons of Rome, illustration from PlutarchSTC412037 Coriolanus and the Matrons of Rome, illustration from Plutarchs Lives for Boys and Girls, retold by W.H. Weston, London c.1910 (colour litho) by Rainey
Interview between Coriolanus and his wife and mother (litho)STC416037 Interview between Coriolanus and his wife and mother (litho) by English School, (19th century); Private Collection; (add.info)
Fibula (copper alloy)1216335 Fibula (copper alloy) by Iron Age (7th Century BC); length: 26.8 cm; Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford, UK; (add.info.: Volscian, Early Iron Age (period III)
Laboureur, Francesco Massimiliano (1767-1831). Italian sculptor. Metabus and his daughter, 1820. Museum of Fine Arts. Budapest. Hungary
METABUS AND CAMILLA. After being deposed as king by the Volsci, Metabus appeals to the goddess Diana as he flees with his infant daughter, Camilla
O my mother, thou hast saved Rome, but thou hast lost thy son, c1912 (1912). Artist: Ernest Dudley HeathO my mother, thou hast saved Rome, but thou hast lost thy son, c1912 (1912). Veturia was a Roman matron and mother of the Roman general Gaius Marcius Coriolanus
Coriolanus begged by his mother to spare RomeGaius Marcius Coriolanus, attacking Rome on behalf of the Volsci, is begged by his mother Veturia to spare the city
Gaius Marcius taking CorioliGaius Marcius, the legendary Roman hero, taking the Volscian city of Corioli, resulting in his additional name, Coriolanus, and his promotion to general
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