Tigriss-Griffin Byzantine Mosaic

Illustration

Rome and Byzantium
by Hagia Sophia Research Team
published on 11 January 2018
Tigriss-Griffin Byzantine Mosaic Download Full Size Image

The tigriss-griffin: This tigriss (female) Griffin has two horns and wings and a wild look on its face. Crimson drops of blood come out of its mouth. Period: Early Byzantine, circa 6th. century C.E. Place: Constantinople, (Modern Istanbul, Turkey). Great Palace Mosaic Museum, Istanbul, Turkey.

The Great Palace Mosaic Museum was inaugurated in 1987 CE. The mosaics in the museum mostly depict animals and humans in nature, mythological, pastoral motifs and hunting scenes. Once located in today’s Sultan Ahmet District, the Great Palace of Constantinople was built by Constantine the Great. The Palace area extended from the Hippodrome to the coastline. Destroyed in the Nika Riot in the 6th century CE, the Great Palace was rebuilt by Justinian I. The mosaics, decorating the floors of the museum today date back to that restoration time. The mosaics are just one-seventh of the original work.

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APA Style

Team, H. S. R. (2018, January 11). Tigriss-Griffin Byzantine Mosaic. World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://www.worldhistory.org/image/7825/tigriss-griffin-byzantine-mosaic/

Chicago Style

Team, Hagia Sophia Research. "Tigriss-Griffin Byzantine Mosaic." World History Encyclopedia. Last modified January 11, 2018. https://www.worldhistory.org/image/7825/tigriss-griffin-byzantine-mosaic/.

MLA Style

Team, Hagia Sophia Research. "Tigriss-Griffin Byzantine Mosaic." World History Encyclopedia. World History Encyclopedia, 11 Jan 2018. Web. 31 Oct 2024.

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