Grave relief. Pentelic marble. Found near Larisis railway station, Athens. Two slabs joined together. At the right edge a young Ethiopian groom attempts to restrain a large horse covered with a panther skin. He holds a whip in his raised right hand and the reins in his left. Above the back of the horse there is an impression in the shape of a Macedonian helmet. The prominence given to the horse suggests that the owner of the monument, which has the form of a naiskos, was a military man.
The representation will have been completed by other figures, either in relief or carved in the round, possibly the warrior and his young servant carrying his equipment. The relief is thought to have belonged to a funerary monument and has been dated to the late 4th c BC. However, according to another view, it is a Classincising work of the 1st c BC, executed in honour of a ruler, possibly Mithridates, king of Pontos.
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