Archaeological Museum of Olympia

Archaeological Museum of Olympia

Building edit

Bronze Age edit

Greek Geometric style edit

General views of small votive pieces edit

Terracotta figurines in Geometric style edit

1000-680 BC (maybe inclusive of submycenaean)

Bronze figurines in Geometric style edit

Other small bronzes in Geometric style edit

Greek Archaic period edit

Archaic Statues edit

Archaic small bronzes edit

Imported Asyrian and Neo-hittite bronzes edit

Greek archaic small bronzes edit

Greek archaic pottery edit

Treasury of Megara edit

520 BC

Greek Classical period edit

Greek Classical sculptures edit

Fragments of the Temple of Zeus edit

East Pediment‎ edit

A solemn moment before the chariot race between Pelops and Oinomaos waged for the hand of Oinomaos' daughter, Hippodameia (and the inheritance of Oinomaos' kingdom). The moment when each side stands in array is believed to represent the taking of the oath to Zeus, god of righteousness, which neither man has any intention of honoring.

West Pediment‎ edit

Victory of the Lapith people against marauding centaurs. Apollo at the center stretches out the hand of fiat, believed symbolic of the triumph of order over disorder.

Metopes‎ edit

Panels below the pediments, six on an end, each containing a relief sculpture representing a labor of Hercules.

Zeus abducts Ganymede edit

Late archaic larger terracotta, 110 cm, 480-470 BC, T2

Nike of Paionios edit

421 BC (Roman copy of the head is in the Ancient Agora Museum in Athens)

Hermes bearing the child Dionysos edit

Praxiteles, 330 BC

Other Greek Classical artifacts edit

From the workshop of Feidias in Olympia edit

From the workshop of Feidias in Olympia, ca 430 BC

Vases edit

Hellenistic period edit

Roman Age edit

Roman Age Sculptures edit

Sculptures from the Nymphaeum edit

Sculptures from the Nymphaeum of Herodes Atticus, mostly 149-153 AD

Roman Age Glassware edit

Unspecified pieces edit