简体版 繁體版 English
登録 ログイン

medici lionの例文

例文モバイル版
  • The main entrance is guarded by white marble Medici lions.
  • The Medici lions have been copied, directly or with variations, in many other locations.
  • The lions are the best known among several Medici lions and other lion sculptures in Saint Petersburg.
  • The Medici lions are also known for the copies placed in the Throne Room of the Royal Palace of Madrid.
  • The entrance is guarded by two lion sculptures, inspired by the " Medici lions " in Florence.
  • The original Medici lions ( 1598 ) are since 1789 standing at the Loggia dei Lanzi, Piazza della Signoria, Florence.
  • The lions are a work of Wilhelm von R黰ann, added in 1906 in imitation of the Medici lions of the Loggia dei Lanzi.
  • The park's largest gardens feature a fountain built with Italian marble and a number of statues including a pair of Medici Lions.
  • Bronze sculptures include the Four Cardinal Virtues, four of the Seven Planets, Satyr, Germanicus, and four Medici lions flanking the dual throne.
  • The models for the lions, inspired by the Medici lions in Villa Medici in Rome, were approved by King Charles X Gustav's campaign in Denmark.
  • It gets its name from two Carrara marble " Medici lions " statues that are copies of those found in the Loggia dei Lanzi in Florence, Italy.
  • Among the city's public sculptures, two sets of " Medici lions " can be noted, at the Vorontsov Palace as well as the Starosinnyi Garden.
  • He founded the Villa Medici in Rome and acquired many works of art ( including the " Medici lions " ), which he then brought back to Florence with him.
  • It features three pairs of " Medici lions " near the staircase leading up to the palace's southern fa鏰de, carved out of carrara marble by sculptor Giovanni Bonnani.
  • The sculptor Flaminio Vacca ( d 1605 ) claimed that the life-size Medici lion he carved to match a Roman survival, now in Florence, was made from a single capital from the temple.
  • The marble Medici lions by the stairs to the courtyard served as inspiration for Bernard Foucquet's bronze lions at the Lejonbacken ( lion slope ) on the northern side of the Royal Palace in Stockholm in 1700-1704.
  • Among remaining sculptures are the bronze Medici lions from the Room of Mirrors, of which four now are present in the throne room of the current Royal Palace of Madrid, and the remaining eight in the Museo del Prado.
  • In the summer of 1848, the palace and its grounds were enhanced by the addition of three pairs of white marble " Medici lions "; this statuary was placed alongside the wide flight of steps climbing the terraces to the palace.
  • During his time in Rome, Vel醶quez commissioned twelve bronze copies of the Medici lions by Matteo Bonucelli da Lucca for the " Room of Mirrors " at the Royal Alcazar of Madrid, now in the Royal Palace of Madrid and the Museo del Prado.
  • "' The Medici lions "'are a pair of marble sculptures of lions, one of which is of ancient origin, the other a 16th-century pendant; both were by 1598 placed at the Villa Medici, Rome, and since 1789 have been displayed at the Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence.