Kybernis - definição. O que é Kybernis. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é Kybernis - definição


Kybernis         
Kybernis or Kubernis (ruled 520-480 BCE), also abbreviated KUB on his coins in Lycian, called Cyberniscus son of Sicas by Herodotus, was a dynast of Lycia, at the beginning of the time it was under the domination of the Achaemenid Empire. He is best known through his tomb, the Harpy Tomb, the decorative remains of which are now in the British Museum.
Harpy Tomb         
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  • Harpy Tomb Reconstructed, 1905
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  • Reconstruction of the marble chamber.
  • Probable depiction of the Lycian ruler [[Kybernis]] (520-480 BC), Harpy Tomb.
  • Location of Lycia
  • The Harpy Tomb reliefs in the British Museum
  • View of the Roman theatre at Xanthos with the Acropolis lying behind it. The Harpy Tomb can be seen in the background to the right of the theatre. It is adjacent to, and north of, a later Lycian pillar tomb nearer the centre of the picture. The structure in the foreground in front of the Harpy Tomb is a Lycian house tomb.
  • The replacement copies of the reliefs on the Harpy Tomb
TOMB IN XANTHOS, A UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITE IN TURKEY
Tomb of Kybernis; Harpy monument
The Harpy Tomb is a marble chamber from a pillar tomb that stands in the abandoned city of Xanthos, capital of ancient Lycia, a region of southwestern Anatolia in what is now Turkey. Built in the Persian Achaemenid Empire, and dating to approximately 480–470 BC, the chamber topped a tall pillar and was decorated with marble panels carved in bas-relief.