Portable Altar from the Roman Era - Cleveland Museum of Art
It is an 11th century Romanesque art piece, produced around 1045, possibly from Lower Saxony, Germany. Made of precious materials such as gold, enamel, porphyry, gemstones, pearls, black lacquer, and wood cores, it is collected at the Cleveland Museum of Art and is a gift from the John Huntington Institute of Art and Technology Trust Fund. It was commissioned by Countess Gertrude to commemorate her husband, Count Leopold, shortly after his death. There are four apostles worshiping the cross on the front, seven apostles on each side, and five apostles at the back. There is also a mechanism at the bottom to open and store items.
Popular Models
Shrine
115 View
King Kong Hercules Wood Carving
166 View
The bell tower of a Japanese temple
189 View
Random Model
Vibrio cholerae
168 View
Ant 3D Model
165 View
Toyota Celica GT4 Rally Racing
130 View
Sony KV-1300E color TV
169 View
Black Lip Mussel Shell
158 View
Harley-Davidson FXDB 2017
204 View
Skipjack specimen
123 View
Solid Wood Radio
155 View
P-305 Soviet Radio
145 View