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Silver statuette of Mercury. Holding the brim of his petasus (sun-hat).
Silver statuette of Mercury. Holding his caduceus (staff) and purse.
Silver statuette of Mercury. Holding his caduceus (staff) and purse. A cock stands next to him.
Silver statuette of Zeus, seated; in his right hand he holds a gilded thunderbolt, the left is raised and holds a sceptre; he has thick, curling hair and a wreath; his feet rest on a stool; drapery, wreath-tie and laces of sandals gilded.
Silver statuette of the moon-goddess Luna. She originally held a torch in her right hand.
Silver statuette of Jupiter. Holding a sceptre and thunderbolt, and with a goat.
Silver statuette of Genius. Personifying the guiding spirit of a place or group of people, carrying a cornucopia and a patera (libation dish).
Silver statuette of the Gallo-Roman goddess Tutela. With a cornucopia and the mural crown worn by the protectress of a city. Standing on a twelve-sided, ribbed base, the goddess holds a patera (libation dish) in her right hand and in her left a double cornucopia, with heads of Diana and Apollo. Her long wings carry busts of Castor and Pollux (Kastor and Polydeukes), and support a stand on which rest seven busts representing the gods of the days of the week. After Saturn, the eldest of the gods, come Sol (sun), Luna (moon), Mars, Mercury, Jupiter and Venus. Gilding is applied to the patera, the wings and robe of the goddess, and the clothing and ornaments of the busts.
Circular silver dish with a fluted rim. The interior is decorated with floral motifs set in linked roundels. In the central medallion, a man pours a libation at an altar.
L.Trommenschlager (20.04.16). Updated by C. Gazdac (July 2020).