Page:An Elementary History of Art.djvu/209

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

Persian Sculpture. 179 Persia. There are bat few remains of Persian sculpture extant, and these few consist almost entirely of bas-reliefs on the walls of the palaces and the fronts of the rock-cut tombs. The principal, from the royal palace of Persepolis (Fig. 75), date from about 521-467 B.C., the golden age of the Persian monarchy. In these bas-reliefs the working of Fig. 75. — Persian bas-relief, from Persepolis. Assyrian and Egyptian influence can be distinctly traced, combined with a character peculiarly their own. In Persian works, historical events are frequently represented ; but scenes of the chase or of war, so common amongst the Assyrians and Egyptians, are almost entirely unknown. Everywhere we see the king in an attitude of dignified N 2