Numskull Resident Evil Nemesis Figure 11" 30cm Collectible Replica Statue - Official Resident Evil Merchandise - Exclusive Limited Edition

£49.995
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Numskull Resident Evil Nemesis Figure 11" 30cm Collectible Replica Statue - Official Resident Evil Merchandise - Exclusive Limited Edition

Numskull Resident Evil Nemesis Figure 11" 30cm Collectible Replica Statue - Official Resident Evil Merchandise - Exclusive Limited Edition

RRP: £99.99
Price: £49.995
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In Greek literature, Nemesis first appears as a personified deity in Hesiod (eighth/seventh century BCE), who outlines her genealogy and attributes in his Theogony (223–24) and Works and Days (197–200). In the Cypria, a lost sixth-century BCE epic poem, Nemesis was raped by Zeus and became the mother of Helen of Troy—a myth known from a few other early sources, including a lost play, the Nemesis, by the comedian Cratinus (mid-fifth century BCE) as well as the Library (3.10.7), a mythological handbook attributed to Apollodorus or “Pseudo-Apollodorus” (first century CE or later). The meta-physicists believed that Nemesis was the mother of the famous “face that launched a thousand ships.” Roßbach, O. “Nemesis.” In W. H. Roscher, Ausführliches Lexikon der griechischen und römischen Mythologie, Vol. 3.1, 117–66. Leipzig: Teubner, 1898–1902.

Nemesis did not seek retribution for just anything, and she did not express indignation at the petty affairs that occupied the minds of most people. Lady Peinforte shows her servant, Richard Maynarde, his grave. The Sixth Doctor explained to Peri that if he took her to Earth after she had died, she could see her own gravestone. ( TV: Revelation of the Daleks) The Eleventh Doctor would later see his own tomb on Trenzalore. ( TV: The Name of the Doctor) The temple shares a similar style (slender columns, continuous friezes) with three other temples: the Hephaesteum and the temple of Ares in Athens, and a temple at Sunium. This suggests that they were designed by the same architect. She is the central figure of very few myths, but factors into many of them. She rarely speaks and rarely even acts, but she is a constant in the stories of the gods. Many parts of the original statue have been recovered and reconstructed [18] [19] from the hundreds of fragments found scattered about after the destruction of the cult image by early Christians, and this allowed the identification of a total of eleven Roman copies on a smaller scale. The base of the statue, approximately 90cm high and 240cm wide, has also been reconstructed; on three sides of the base, the nearly-in-the-round scene shows the presentation of Helen to her mother Nemesis by Leda. [20]A remarkable piece of archaeological detec­tive work—in effect the solving of a three-dimen­sional jigsaw puzzle—has “recovered” one of the few Greek cult statues extant, and of these it is one of the earliest. It is the heroic-size marble figure of Nemesis sculpted by Pheidias’ favorite pupil, Agorakritos of Paros, at her shrine at Rhamnous, near Marathon.

In common usage, though, the invocation of the Roman deity’s name had a meaning much closer to that of Nemesis. Invidia wasn’t used to describe any type of envy, it usually referred specifically to the reaction to undeserved wealth, misused authority, or shameless injustice.Miles, M.M. "The Reconstruction of the Temple of Nemesis at Rhamnous", Hesperia 58 (1989), 134-256. Working reciprocally from fragments to copies and copies to fragments—and from the combination to determine style and workmanship —Despinis has now made bold to make further identifications of Agorakritos’ other works. Again, the identifications have not so far been challenged by other Classical scholars. He declares that the richness and variety of the dresses of the group of Aphrodite in the East Pediment of the Par­thenon, the group of Iris in the West Pediment and the group of Hermes, Dionysos, Demeter andAres in the East Frieze proclaim them as the work of Agorakritos and his atelier. In ancient Greek religion and myth, Nemesis ( / ˈ n ɛ m ə s ɪ s/; Ancient Greek: Νέμεσις, romanized: Némesis) also called Rhamnousia (or Rhamnusia; Ancient Greek: Ῥαμνουσία, romanized: Rhamnousía, lit.'the goddess of Rhamnous' [1]), was the goddess who personified retribution for the sin of hubris; arrogance before the gods.

For example, when a king cut down a tree that was sacred to Demeter, Nemesis was said to be there to record his confession. Demeter herself punished him by cursing him with an insatiable hunger. O. Gruppe (1906) and others connect the name with "to feel just resentment". From the fourth century onward, Nemesis, as the just balancer of Fortune's chance, could be associated with Tyche. Nemesis was thought the haunt the daily life of the Greek people, but she was most often referenced in mythology for her role in punishing those who offended the gods.

Portrait of a Bastich

Tourists at Windsor - Nicholas Courtney, Graeme Curry, Fiona Cumming, Peter Moffat, Kathleen Bidmead, Pat Worth, Andrew Morgan, Ian Fraser, Sally Anne Meese, Kevin Clarke (DWM 244) According to Hesiod, Nemesis was one of the fatherless children born to the primordial goddess Nyx, “Night” personified; her siblings thus included other dark cosmic forces such as Thanatos (“Death”), Hypnos (“Sleep”), Eris (“Strife”), and the Moirae (“Fates”), among others. [19] This was no doubt the most widespread and familiar tradition about the goddess’ parentage, but it was not the only one that existed. In her important cult in Rhamnus, Nemesis was worshiped as one of the daughters of the Titan Oceanus—that is, as one of the “ Oceanids.” [20] In another tradition, she was the daughter of Zeus (or Zeus and Demeter). [21] And in Mesomedes’ Hymn to Nemesis she was the daughter of Dike, the personification of justice. [22] The Roman version was also never truly revered as a goddess. She had no cult or temples and no hymns written in her honor. Gaming merchandiser Numskull has confirmed the next addition to its Resident Evil statue line-up: Nemesis. This high-quality collectible 12” statue features notable details fans will adore such as Lord Shaxx’s iconic helmet, signature armor color scheme, finely detailed fur pauldrons, and confident stance. For any Guardian, this statue is a must-have!"



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
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