Le Antichità di Ercolano Esposte  

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-'''''Le Antichità di Ercolano Esposte''''' (The Antiquities discovered in Herculaneum) was an 8 volume book. Its publication was initiated by command of [[Carlo III]] and printed in Naples from 1755 to 1792. +'''''Le Antichità di Ercolano Esposte'''''[http://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/ercolano1757ga] (The Antiquities discovered in [[Herculaneum]]) is an 8 volume book. Its publication was initiated by command of [[Charles III of Spain]] and printed in Naples from 1755 to 1792 under the direction of the [[Accademia Ercolanese]] (Herculaneum Academy).
 +These volumes were among the [[first descriptions of the excavations of the Herculaneum]] and were to have a decisive influence on incipient Neoclassicism, out of all proportion to its limited circulation; in the later 18th century, motifs from Herculaneum began to appear on stylish furnishings, from decorative wall-paintings and tripod tables to perfume burners and teacups.
 +
 +However, the book was not always favourably received. In 1775 the London review [[Monthly Review (London) |The Monthly Review]] called it "obscene trash" that "would be better consigned to oblivion".[http://bmcr.brynmawr.edu/2007/2007-05-39.html].
 +
 +==See also==
 +*[[Discovery of Pompeii]]
 +*[[Herculaneum]]
 +*[[Villa of the Papyri]]
 +*[[1740s in archaeology]]
 +*[[Neoclassicism]]
 +*[[Pseudo-Seneca]]
 +*[[Karl Jakob Weber]]
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Le Antichità di Ercolano Esposte[1] (The Antiquities discovered in Herculaneum) is an 8 volume book. Its publication was initiated by command of Charles III of Spain and printed in Naples from 1755 to 1792 under the direction of the Accademia Ercolanese (Herculaneum Academy).

These volumes were among the first descriptions of the excavations of the Herculaneum and were to have a decisive influence on incipient Neoclassicism, out of all proportion to its limited circulation; in the later 18th century, motifs from Herculaneum began to appear on stylish furnishings, from decorative wall-paintings and tripod tables to perfume burners and teacups.

However, the book was not always favourably received. In 1775 the London review The Monthly Review called it "obscene trash" that "would be better consigned to oblivion".[2].

See also




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