one
Fractured Narratives: Writing the
Biography of a Votive Offering
Jessica Hughes
For historians interested in the religious beliefs and practices of classical
antiquity, votive offerings constitute a resource of almost immeasurable
richness. Gifts to the gods—anathemata in Greek, dona in Latin—have
been found at sites all over the ancient world, from the peak sanctuaries
of Minoan Crete to the chilly streams of Roman Britain.1 Over the last
few decades, scholars have become increasingly attentive to this form
of material religion, and have adopted a wide range of approaches for
studying it. Votives have been used, among other things, as documents
for the study of social and gender history, as evidence for the develop-
ment and transmission of religious beliefs, as sources for art historical
analyses of ancient craft industries, and for the retrospective diagnosis
of ancient illnesses. Although these studies differ widely in their aims
and methods, they nevertheless share a common feature: they all con-
sider the votives collectively, either in broader categories of form and/
or medium (e.g., votive heads from terra-cotta, marble votive reliefs), or
in the context of larger votive assemblages from particular sanctuaries or
geographical areas.
This chapter will adopt a different approach to the ancient votive offer-
ing by tracing the “biography” of a single votive through time and across
space. Object biographies and life cycles have become very popular in
material culture studies recently and have been applied to a wide range of
artifacts including Neolithic ceramics, Roman sarcophagi, and Japanese
netsuke.2 The object biography is a promising mode of analysis for vo-
tives, given that these are often small and inherently mobile items, which
23
24 Ex Voto
Fig. 1. Terra-cotta figu-
rine from Nemi, fourth–
second centuries BCE,
front view. Photograph
courtesy of Nottingham
City Museums and Gal-
leries.
inevitably—at least in the case of ancient Greco-Roman offerings—move
over time from a sacred to a secular context. The biographical approach
also encourages us to shift our attention away from the moment of ritual
dedication (which has tended to dominate most scholarly analyses of vo-
tives) and onto later, equally interesting stages of the offering’s history.
For the function and meaning of a votive are not fixed at the moment of
dedication; rather, these properties change as the object moves through
time and space and as it becomes entangled in new associations with
things and people. The process of compiling a votive’s biography also
has the potential to enhance that object’s value and meaning for modern
Fractured Narratives 25
audiences, not only because it allows us to attach engaging stories to the
material offering, but also because it enables us to measure change in
beliefs and attitudes in later historical periods, including our own.
The ancient Roman offering that will serve as my case study in this
chapter is a three-dimensional figurine made from terra-cotta, now in
the stores of Nottingham Castle Museum (fig. 1).3 This fragmentary ob-
ject, which measures about 10½ inches (26.5 cm) long, depicts a female
body draped in robes. The head, left shoulder, and feet are missing. In
her left hand, which is held straight down by her side, she carries a small
circular object, which might itself be interpreted as a representation of a
votive offering–possibly a piece of fruit. On her abdominal area is a sche-
matic representation of the internal organs. A small rectangular piece
of paper has been attached to the figure’s back, on which the following
words have been written in pen: “Anatomical Votive Offering for some
internal malady or childbirth from Artemision, Nemi, 1885” (fig. 2). As
well as suggesting an interpretation of the votive’s original meaning, this
fading annotation points us toward its earliest known location—the sanc-
tuary of Diana Nemorensis, which lies about twelve and a half miles (20
km) southeast of Rome and which was one of the most important cult
sites in Roman Italy.4
Fig. 2. Terra-cotta figurine from Nemi, fourth–second centuries BCE,
back view. Photograph courtesy of Nottingham City Museums and Gal-
leries.
26 Ex Voto
Modern scholars place this figurine within a broader class of ancient
“anatomical votives,” which comprises models of all different parts of
the human body, including arms, legs, heads, hands, feet, torsos, and
individual internal organs.5 Hundreds of thousands of anatomical vo-
tives survive from all over the ancient world, with the greatest number
of examples coming from the area of central Italy corresponding to
the modern regions of Tuscany, Lazio, and Campania. This particular
type of “dissected” figure—which is often referred to as a “polyvisceral”
model—is one of the less common types of anatomical votives, although
a handful of other examples dating to the same period have been found
at sanctuaries in the same area of central Italy.6 Such polyvisceral mod-
els represent both male and female bodies, which are either naked or
clothed. Sometimes these bodies have heads and legs, but more often
they are truncated torsos—an effective visual device for drawing atten-
tion to the middle portion of the body (fig. 3).
Fig. 3. Votive male torso
from the Roman Repub-
lican period, reportedly
excavated from Isola
Farnese near Rome
between 1871 and 1900.
Photograph courtesy of
Science Museum, Lon-
don / Wellcome Images.
Fractured Narratives 27
The figurine from Nemi is one of very few anatomical votives that
has both a documented ancient findspot and a traceable later history
of collection and display. Not only do we possess information about its
excavation and exportation from Italy in the late nineteenth century, we
also have records of where and how it was displayed, stored, and used
over the decades since then. This votive is better documented than many
others largely because of its relatively unusual iconography (the open
torso), which has led to its being singled out for comment and display
during the later stages of its biography. This is a paradoxical aspect of
the method of object biography: although one aim shared by many of its
practitioners is to focus attention on the “insignificant” and previously
overlooked, the historian’s dependence on documentation means that
we are inevitably drawn to examples that have been significant and sa-
lient throughout their lifetime. That said, there are still many parts of
this votive’s biography that have left no trace in the historical record, and
these gaps will be evident in the pages that follow. The early stages of the
votive’s life are particularly hard to reconstruct; thus, close visual analysis
of the object needs to be supplemented with tentative references to our
general knowledge about the votive industry in central Italy.7 In practice,
this means that some early parts of this chapter present the “ideal” or
“imagined” life of a votive of this type rather than the “truth” about this
particular example, which might itself have been appropriated in unex-
pected and unpredictable ways. It should be clear, however, that my aim
is not to write a comprehensive documentary history of a single votive but
rather to show through a case study how the functions and meanings of
a votive change as it moves through different contexts and becomes em-
bedded in different relationships with gods mortals, and other objects.
Earth to Earth: The Votive’s Life in Antiquity
The figurine was made at some point between the fourth and second
centuries BCE. As with most other anatomical votives from this area, we
cannot be more precise about the date of her manufacture, partly be-
cause of the conditions of her excavation (which will be discussed later)
and also because the widespread use of molds for this kind of votive
problematizes any attempt to date them on stylistic grounds.8 We might
assume that she was made either at Nemi, where she was found, or at
a nearby city, such as Ardea, Segni, Rome, or Lavinium.9 The compari-
28 Ex Voto
son of votive terra-cottas from these sites shows that they were frequently
pressed from the same molds, which suggests that votives were either
exported from a centralized place of production or produced by itiner-
ant craftsmen who traveled around the various sites carrying their molds
with them. The second alternative is perhaps the more likely because the
finished votives would have been heavy and bulky to transport; indeed,
many types of votive found at Nemi do not appear elsewhere in Italy,
which might suggest that there was a local industry based at the sanctu-
ary of Diana.
The figurine is made from a reddish clay, rich with mica. It is hollow
and open at the bottom; it also has a hole in the back, which ensured
even firing and enabled the figurine to be suspended from a nail at a
later stage of its biography. It was made in two pieces, front and back,
each of which would have been pressed from a different mold (the molds
would themselves have been pressed at an earlier time from a prototype
figurine). The molds produced a standard “Tanagra” type figurine (a
draped female body, named after the city in Greece in which many ex-
amples were found), and the representation of inner organs would have
been added by hand before the firing process. We do not know whether
the figurine ever had a head or whether, like other “truncated” types of
polyvisceral models (such as the torso shown in figure 3), she was origi-
nally cropped at the neck. Presumably, it would have been easy enough
for our craftsman to produce a headless body; many of the “normal”
Tanagra-type figurines have separately molded heads that are fastened
on with a tenon.
The representation of internal organs on the figurine raises its
own questions about production. Are we to think that the viscera were
drawn from life, as was often the case with anatomical illustrations in
later periods of history? The scientific dissection of human bodies was
forbidden in classical antiquity, apart from a brief period in Hellenis-
tic Alexandria.10 It is not impossible, however, that the Italic craftsmen
had seen human organs in other contexts, such as surgery or accidents.
Jean Macintosh Turfa has argued that some of the internal organ models
must have been modeled on real human anatomy because they contain
details that do not appear in most animal species. The clay uteri, for
instance, are oval with a single “neck” and do not resemble the “bicor-
nuate” (appearing as two distinct horns or tubes) uteri of animals such
as cows, horses, pigs, and dogs.11 Turfa also notes that some uteri have
anomalous features, such as rounded knobs, which she suggests may be
Fractured Narratives 29
Fig. 4. Bronze mirror
showing mythical harus-
pex Calchas, from Vulci,
ca. 400 BCE. Vatican
Museums. Drawing used
with the kind permission
of Nancy de Grummond.
schematic representations of fibroid tumors, a double cervix, or extra
appendages, which perhaps represent congenital malformations. With
the exception of fibroids, which might have been detected through
nonsurgical examination, these anomalies must have been observed in
postmortem dissection. The most likely context for seeing excised uteri
would have been postmortem Caesarean sections, and Turfa draws atten-
tion to written evidence for this practice in antiquity—in particular the
lex regia de mortuo inferendo (a law forbidding the burial of any woman who
died when pregnant until the baby had been removed from her body),
which was recorded in Justinian’s Corpis iuris civilis but attributed to the
regal period of Rome’s history.
Turfa’s work makes it clear that there were in fact occasions when
the human interior might be viewed and suggests how this informa-
tion might have been incorporated into polyvisceral offerings such as
the figurine from Nemi. At the same time, we must not forget that art-
ists would have had multiple opportunities to observe the dissection of
animal bodies, particularly in the context of ritual sacrifice.12 Numerous
artifacts from Etruscan sites depict the internal organs of the sacrificial
animal, which are often being examined by a haruspex engaged in the act
of “extispicy” (reading the will of the gods from the entrails of the sac-
rificial animal), as shown in figure 4.13 The conceptual overlap between
30 Ex Voto
the votive figurine and images of sacrifice and extispicy is a theme that
will resurface later in this chapter, but for now it is enough to point out
that the dissection of animal bodies may have furnished the votive crafts-
man with knowledge that he then incorporated into a human anatomi-
cal image. Some scholars who have examined this type of figurine have
even identified specific animal organs within the opened human torso.14
This “transplanting” of animal organs into the human body might be
seen as a material equivalent of the comparative anatomy practiced by
the scientists of antiquity, who dissected pigs, goats, monkeys, and apes
and transferred their observations to the human body.
After the two halves of the figurine had been pressed together, it
would have been put into the kiln for baking. At this point, the trans-
formation of the clay from a damp and malleable substance to a dry and
hard one may have had a symbolic significance, given that votives such as
this one often seem to have embodied requests and thanks for some sort
of change from the status quo. Paint may have been used to add color to
the model after it had cooled. Traces of paint survive on a small number
of other anatomical votives from central Italy: one polyvisceral plaque
now in the British Museum, for instance, has organs of different colors,
and a heart from the Etruscan site of Tarquinia has the major blood ves-
sels highlighted with red paint.15 The resolutely orange figure that we see
today may originally have been highly colored, and the colors may have
reflected ideas about the internal composition of the human body that
have now faded from history.
If the polyvisceral figurine had been a personal commission, at this
stage it may have passed directly to its new owner; otherwise, it may have
been displayed among other votives in a stall or shop, awaiting a pur-
chaser. Scholars usually assume that votive limbs and other moldmade
body parts were bought “off the peg,” with customers choosing the
most appropriate offering from a ready-made selection. There is some
evidence, however, that offerings were tailor-made for individuals. For
instance, we know of a handful of votive body parts that bear inscribed
dedications; several others seem to incorporate individualized–perhaps
in some instances pathological–bodily features. The comparative rarity
and handmade elements of the Nemi votive might lend support to the
idea that it was a personal commission; the identity of the buyer remains
unknown, however, as does the reason he or she bought it. According
to the usual logic of votive dedications, we might suppose that this figu-
rine was bought by, or on behalf of, the person who was going to offer it
Fractured Narratives 31
and that this person, like the figurine, was female. As far as the buyer’s
intentions are concerned, because the label on the figure’s back sug-
gests either “some internal malady” or “childbirth,” these two plausible
alternatives have been attached to this object. It is not necessarily the
case, however, that anatomical votives were always used for healing or
fertility, and the figurine may well have been used to express something
quite different.16
In addition to the specific meaning that it held for the dedicant, the
figurine also fits into broader narratives about Diana and her sanctuary
at Nemi. Diana was a Roman goddess who was intimately concerned with
the lives of women, particularly with the transitional states of childbirth,
healing, and death. She was frequently identified with the Greek goddess
Artemis, who was also associated with fertility and childbirth, and with
the Italian birth goddess, Lucina (the name is derived from the Latin lux,
lucis), whose job it was to deliver children “to the light.” Besides our figu-
rine, other archaeological finds from Nemi also appear to be associated
with childbearing and healing. These include clay models of uteri and
seated couples with infants, as well as other body parts, including heads,
limbs, and male genitalia. A number of medical instruments made from
metal have also been discovered, which were probably votive dedications
rather than tools for on-site surgery.17 These various offerings may have
been dedicated to Diana or to the local Italian deity Virbius, who was also
worshipped in the sanctuary and who had his own link to divine healing.
His story, as recounted by Ovid and Virgil, begins with the death of the
Greek hero Hippolytus, who was brought back to life by Asklepios, the
god of healing, and then taken to the grove at Nemi by Artemis/Diana,
who changed Hippolytus’s name to Virbius.18 This tale of bodily resurrec-
tion—the ultimate healing miracle—would surely have resonated with
anyone who visited the sanctuary hoping for their own restoration to
health and well-being.
Another set of narratives about Nemi might be particularly relevant
to our figurine because they deal with the theme of human sacrifice. The
“incision” in the body of the clay woman would have recalled the cut that
was routinely made in the body of the sacrificial beast, producing a star-
tling image of human (self-) sacrifice that underscores the dedicant’s de-
sire to place herself in the care of the deity.19 The sacrificial resonances of
our female figurine would have been palpable in any ancient sanctuary,
but they arguably had particular significance at Nemi because human
sacrifice featured in the story of this sanctuary’s origins as well as in its
32 Ex Voto
on-going ritual life. In Nemi’s foundation narrative, the sanctuary was an
offshoot of the cult of Tauric Artemis, who, in the words of James Frazer,
“could only be appeased with human blood.”20 Authors of the Roman
period connected the barbarous Scythian origins of the cult with Nemi’s
violent ritual of priestly succession–the ritual of the rex nemorensis. This
ritual involved a runaway slave challenging Diana’s priest to a fight by
hitting him with a branch from the sacred grove–if the slave killed the
priest, he would become priest himself and stay in office until killed by
his successor.21 The votive figurine may have been seen as a particularly
appropriate offering for a temple in which human sacrifice played such
an important role; in turn, this offering served as a visual mnemonic, re-
minding visitors of the sanctuary’s foundational narrative.
After the votive had been purchased, it would have been prepared for
dedication (dedicatio, or consecratio). This would have involved, among
other things, a journey through the sanctuary to the place where the vo-
tive was to be left. Such intermediary stages leave no trace in the archaeo-
logical record and are therefore often sidelined in academic discussions,
but they would nevertheless play an important role in shaping the vo-
tive’s meaning. For instance, the time that the new owner spent holding
and looking at the votive before relinquishing it to a god would have
helped to construct the all-important relationship between object and
giver; meanwhile, any hardship or difficulty experienced during the “pil-
grimage” to the spot of dedication would have enhanced the value of the
offering and intensified its meaning. We have no evidence for special rit-
uals of dedication other than the placement of votives on a chosen spot.
But at the moment it was handed over, the votive became the property of
the deity, marking either the opening or closure of a transaction. In the
first instance, the dedicant was asking for a divine favor (as suggested by
the Latin formula do ut des: “I give so that you may give”); in the second,
they were repaying a favor that had already been awarded (as suggested
by the common inscription votum solvit libens merito: “The vow fulfilled, I
pay my debt freely”).
Where in the Nemi sanctuary might the votive have been left? Very
few excavated ancient sanctuaries have votives at the site of their dedica-
tion, but the exceptions suggest possible locations for the deposition of
our votive at Nemi. At the sanctuary of the Thirteen Altars at Lavinium,
for example, votives body parts were found strewn over the surfaces of
the altars and on the platform areas between them.22 At Nemi, the main
altar stood in front of the northeastern corner of the temple, at the
Fractured Narratives 33
Fig. 5. Plan of the sanctuary of Diana at Nemi. Photograph from G. H.
Wallis, Illustrated Catalogue of Classical Antiquities from the Site of the
Temple of Diana, Nemi, Italy (Nottingham, 1893).
point marked “N” on the sanctuary plan shown in Figure 5. Had our vo-
tive been dedicated on or near this altar, the sacrificial overtones of the
image would be brought to the fore. Another possible location for the
dedication of our figurine is suggested by comparison with the temple
complex of Gravisca near Tarquinia. At Gravisca, terra-cotta votives were
found clustered around a series of marble bases, which probably sup-
ported cult statues of the divinities who were worshipped there.23 The
sanctuary of Nemi contained more than one representation of Diana,
including the famous triple image represented on Republican coins, and
it may be that the figurine was offered directly to the material embodi-
ment of the goddess, as are offering to a modern-day saint or Madonna.24
The figurine would have remained in the sanctuary when the dedi-
cant left, its physical presence functioning as a monumentum of a tran-
sient, on-site interaction with the divinity. Of course, because the figurine
was not inscribed, other visitors to the sanctuary would have been left to
guess the identity of the dedicant and the nature of the vow it commemo-
rated.25 In this case, we might see the hermetic anonymity of the votive
offering as performing an important function insofar as it was a token of
a private dialogue between dedicant and deity from which all other mor-
34 Ex Voto
tal onlookers were excluded. As time passed and the physical space of
the sanctuary became more crowded, the offerings in the sanctuary may
well have been moved around by the temple priests or caretakers. Other
dedicants may have rearranged the display, moving the figurine farther
back so that their own offerings were more prominent. Our votive figu-
rine would now have played a role in legitimating these new offerings by
symbolizing the long ritual tradition of which they formed part.26
During this period of display in the sanctuary, the meaning of the
votive offering would be shaped by the assemblage of objects that were
placed around it. For instance, if the figurine had been displayed along-
side the other body parts found at the site–which included heads, ears,
nose, tongues, breasts, arms, hands, legs, and feet–viewers may have in-
terpreted it by default as another request for healing, in this case for the
intestinal area. Had it been seen next to one or more of the “normal”
Tanagra-type figurines from the site (those without intestines), these
would have set up a normative model from which our figurine deviated,
offering a striking visual contrast between open and closed, revelation
and secrecy.27 Had it instead been viewed alongside the set of medical
tools mentioned earlier, the figurine could have appeared as the object
of an operation performed by an invisible “surgeon” goddess. Although
we cannot know exactly which objects and images would have been juxta-
posed with the figurine, the range of possibilities outlined here intimates
how far the alternative settings for the votive figurine had the potential
to nuance its meaning.
One other object that might have been viewed alongside the poly-
visceral figurine is a now lost marble relief that was found in 1791 not
far from the ruins of the temple. In his notes on the 1885 excavations at
Nemi, the archaeologist R. P. Pullan identified the scene as a representa-
tion of the rex nemorensis ritual, in which the vanquished priest lies on the
ground “with his entrails protruding from a wound in his side; over him
stands the victor with the fatal sword in his grasp, surrounded by four
females in Etruscan robes who seem to be rejoicing at his success and giv-
ing thanks to the god for it.”28 This marble relief is important because it
reminds us again that the area of Nemi was redolent with the stories and
imagery of human sacrifice and that visitors to the sanctuary—unlike the
modern viewer—would have been primed to notice the sacrificial sym-
bolism of our polyvisceral figurine. It may also be significant that the lost
marble relief displays human entrails in the context of a rite of passage
(the changeover of Diana’s priests); the votive figurine may also have
Fractured Narratives 35
been dedicated to ensure some kind of transition, such as the passage
from sickness to healing or the successful delivery of a child.
As time passed, the figurine may have become shabby, discolored,
or broken. Such material disintegration would have underlined its new
function as a general symbol of the sanctuary’s past and as a visual re-
minder of Diana’s power and longevity. But eventually it was taken off
display, perhaps to make space for new dedications. As at other sites in
Greece and Italy, the sanctuary was periodically cleared of many of its
older offerings, which were stored or buried in favisae (pits or under-
ground chambers).29 The polyvisceral figurine was placed in a pit more
than twenty feet deep at the southern corner of the temple platform (fig.
5, D) along with more than three hundred other clay offerings.30 The
relatively good state of preservation of these objects suggests that they
were placed gently in the pit rather than in carelessly—a sign, perhaps,
of continued reverential treatment of the goddess’s property. After this,
the pit was filled in with earth, creating a damp, dark, and silent environ-
ment in which our figurine was to spend the next twenty centuries.
Excavation, Classification, Redisplay
The modern arc of the votive figurine’s biography begins in 1885, when
it was discovered by the British diplomat and archaeologist Sir John Sa-
vile Lumley, First Baron Savile of Rufford (1818–1896).31 By this time,
the site of Nemi was in possession of Prince Filippo Orsini, who sold
Savile a license to excavate Giardino del Lago, at the foot of the town
and castle of Nemi. At this site, Savile found portions of a wall nearly
thirty-three feet (ten meters) high and a row of very large niches made
from opus incertum (irregular work) that formed part of the sanctuary en-
closure. Pullan’s report, written two years later, describes how “trenches
were opened in front of these niches, and at a distance of thirty feet from
them numerous terra-cotta ex votos were found, chiefly heads with a great
variety of head-dresses, hands and feet of different dimensions; amongst
them were two rude representations of a horse and a cow and two or
three anatomical figures.” According to Pullan, these artifacts “were evi-
dence of the existence of a temple in the vicinity, for when the temples
became crowded with votive offerings, such as these terra-cotta figures, it
was the custom for the priests to bury them. . . . Between three and four
hundred of these ex-votos are dug up.”32
36 Ex Voto
Fig. 6. Selection of objects from the excavations at Nemi. Courtesy of
Nottingham City Museums and Galleries.
An illustration of a selection of these objects allows us to see our
polyvisceral figurine at the left of the image, situated nonchalantly
underneath a disembodied hand (fig. 6). Pullan’s mention of “two or
three anatomical figures” is intriguing, insofar as it suggests that our
figurine was not a unique specimen among the Nemi finds. Recently,
Ann Inscker, collections access officer for archaeology and industry at
Nottingham City Museums and Galleries, has identified another figurine
produced from the same mold as our figurine; however, because only
the knee, drapery, and hand (holding the same round object) remain,
it is impossible to tell whether this figurine also had intestines in her ab-
dominal area.33 Apart from this possibility, several polyvisceral models in
modern museums are without any provenance, and one or more of these
models may have been excavated at Nemi.
Our figurine was one of the first objects to be discovered in Savile’s
excavation; presumably, she was kept in storage for the rest of the spring
and summer. Because the handwriting has been identified as Savile’s
own, it is possible that the paper label was glued to the figure’s back
during this time. At this point, the Nemi phase of her life was nearly
Fractured Narratives 37
over. Savile disapproved of Prince Orsini’s mercenary attitude to the
discovered objects and decided to withdraw from the excavations after
eight months. What happened next shows how a single votive’s trajectory
can be influenced by contemporary ideas about beauty and value. The
finds that had been excavated up to that point were divided between
the two men, with Orsini claiming the “better half”—the marble statues,
herms (stone posts topped by a head or bust), and portrait busts from
the imperial period, together with all imperial coins—while Savile was
left with the Republican material, including terra-cottas, small bronzes,
coins, inscriptions, and miscellaneous finds. It is perhaps unsurprising
that the clay models of body parts were allocated to Savile, for although
these objects were already arousing the interest of the medical commu-
nity, contemporary art historians found them lacking in merit.34 So while
Nemi’s more illustrious marble imperial-age sculptures soon made their
way onto the international antiquities market, making a tidy profit for
Orsini, our small figurine was packed into one of twenty-three wooden
crates with Savile’s other pieces and sent by ship to England.
After returning home, Savile donated his portion of the Nemi ma-
terial to Nottingham Castle Museum, which was located in the same
county as his family residence, Rufford Abbey. From 1891 on, our votive
figurine was displayed along with the rest of the Nemi finds in the Sav-
ile Gallery, re-presented, as it were, for a museum-bound, secular audi-
ence. In antiquity, the figurine may well have been appreciated for its
aesthetic qualities, but these would have been inextricable from its sa-
cred function. In the new museum context, the sacred function became
secondary to the figurine’s status as an objet d’art, even if one of great
historical significance. The exhibition curator, G. H. Wallis, compiled a
catalogue that was prefaced with an introductory essay written by Savile.35
The polyvisceral figurine was singled out for special discussion in the
text, in which Savile reflected on the possible function of this object in
antiquity: “The question whether this can be considered as a true ana-
tomical representation, indicating a pathological condition, the cure of
which was the object of the offering, has been decided in the negative by
competent authorities, the representation of the viscera being arbitrary
and conventional, produced by a modeler who has no exact notion of
human anatomy.”36
Savile’s interest in the accuracy of the intestinal representation was
typical of the period in which he was writing. Until the second half of
the twentieth century, much of the published work on anatomical votives
38 Ex Voto
appeared in medical journals, penned by “competent authorities”—that
is, medical historians or physicians with an interest in the history of their
profession. These writers paid most attention to those models of body
parts showing signs of pathological conditions and to the polyvisceral
representations that closely corresponded to the current anatomical
teaching models. In the medical journals, as in Savile’s commentary, the
emphasis was on the (in)accuracy of the representation; articles were
frequently illustrated with line-drawing reproductions of the votives with
various individual organs labeled, ending with broad statements about
anatomical knowledge in antiquity and subsequent medical progress.37
Significantly, such statements inverted the original relationship between
organs and knowledge that operated in the Roman sanctuary, where the
internal organs were seen as active imparters of knowledge—through
the rituals of extispicy, the will of the gods was to be discovered. Instead,
the late-nineteenth-century commentaries on these votives present the
internal body as a passive entity to be known, mapped, and labeled.
On one level, then, Savile’s description of the figurine reflects con-
temporary medical interest in the accuracy of ancient anatomical
representations and was written within the framework of a teleologi-
cal narrative of biomedical progress. Beyond that, his interpretation is
rather opaque. It is not clear whether he means that the “arbitrary and
conventional” representation of the votive necessarily excludes a heal-
ing interpretation, and, if so, why he changed his mind after writing the
figurine’s label. More recent discussions of votive offerings emphasize
the functional importance of mimesis and accuracy. David Freedberg,
for instance, notes that “the operational effectiveness” of votive body
parts “is perceived as deriving from the closest possible form of real-
ism available to maker and consumer.”38 But the moldmade production
of ancient Italic terra-cottas suggests that during that period the votive
did not necessarily have to resemble the dedicant’s own body to be ef-
fective. Perhaps this was Savile’s point, but the awkward syntax of his
description makes it difficult to decipher. The layout of this first mu-
seum exhibition would have guided visitors toward interpreting the
figurine as a votive for childbearing rather than healing. The catalogue
records that it was displayed in case 2 alongside two statuettes of “moth-
ers seated each with a child on her lap”; like the votive uteri displayed
nearby, these statuettes were taken by Wallis and Savile “to indicate
the worship of Diana Lucina” (Diana as guardian of women in child-
birth). 39 Again, we see how the display context of the votive influenced
Fractured Narratives 39
its meaning. Whereas in antiquity the juxtaposition with opened animal
bodies foregrounded the sacrificial element of the votive, in the exhibit
the juxtaposition with nursing mothers constructed the representation
as a specifically female interior.
The figurine may have moved around the museum several times in
subsequent decades. In a 1986 letter, the museum’s curator, A. G. Mac-
Cormick, wrote:
Lord Savile’s collection was displayed from 1890. I suspect . . . that
most of the collection remained in Gallery L until 1933 when all but
a selection were stored in packing cases. The individual items were
wrapped in newspapers of that date. More may have been stored dur-
ing the 1939–45 war but I have no info on that point. When I came
in 1964 some Nemi material was on display, and it was redisplayed
in 1968–70 but it was only after 1974 that it became possible for me
to unpack all the boxed objects. In 1983 the special exhibition was
opened, displaying some of the finds stored since 1933 as well as
objects which may have continuously been displayed since 1890, with
the possible exception of wartime. 40
MacCormick’s letter gives the impression of continuous interaction with
the Nemi finds over the first half of the twentieth century, during which
time they were handled by various museum staff, wrapped in newspa-
per, put in cases, taken out again, and moved around different spaces
in the museum. The precise whereabouts of our polyvisceral figurine
during this period are difficult to reconstruct, although we know that
she was displayed in the “special exhibition” of 1983, a temporary show
called “Mysteries of Diana” that took place while the museum was being
restructured. According to reviews, this exhibition took rather a tradi-
tional approach, “placing reliance upon a straightforward exposition of
the finds themselves, helped by main and subsidiary labels, and by pho-
tographs, and without the use of any audio-visual equipment or elabo-
rate reconstructions, apart from a model of the temple as it was in its
heyday.”41 The finds were divided into cases according to artifact type,
with marble sculptures displayed together, then marble architectural in-
scriptions, coins, and architectural terra-cotta sculptures. Our figurine
was placed in one of the back corners of the square room along with
the other votive terra-cottas in a wood-framed glass case against a back-
ground of dark red felt.
40 Ex Voto
In one sense, the “Mysteries” exhibition conserved the ancient con-
text of the figurine by displaying it alongside objects that might plausibly
have been grouped together in the Nemi sanctuary. But in other ways it
drastically changed the relationship between the votive and the viewer
by placing the figurine behind glass and transforming it into an object of
detached contemplation. The arrangement of the exhibition also put the
figurine into new relationships that reconfigured its meaning for specta-
tors. For example, the Nemi finds were arranged peripherally around a
display about Lord Savile (invoked in the form of a portrait bust), cement-
ing the relationship between the objects and the aristocrat who found
them. Sam Alberti has pointed out that “the most famous (or wealthy)
individual may . . . remain indelibly connected with a collection. As with
whole museums, so particular objects retain a relationship with persons
involved in their trajectory, principally those of the highest status.”42 These
words ring true in the case of our votive figurine, for although the object
biography sketched in this chapter suggests how different people (maker,
dedicant, other visitors to the sanctuary, priests, and modern curators and
viewers) interacted with this votive over the centuries, Lord Savile looms
larger than any of these other participants in its retrospective life story.
The polyvisceral votive figurine from Nemi is still in the collection
of the Nottingham Museum, although it is no longer on display. The
disability legislation of the 1990s led to the closure of the Savile gallery,
and its contents were transferred into the museum storerooms on the
nearby Castle Road. The figurine is now comfortably ensconced within
a purpose-made polystyrene mold, inside a plastic box labeled with the
museum inventory number and a brief description (“woman with sche-
matic intestines”). Her life, however, is far from quiet. She has regularly
been seen and handled by students and academics, while digital technol-
ogy has enabled the dissemination of her image to a global public. To
give one example, the figurine appears in an innovative “online sanctu-
ary” created in a collaboration between Nottingham Museum and Not-
tingham University, which offers visitors the chance to “reinterpret the
votive worship of ancient Rome” by dedicating a virtual votive to friends,
family, or loved ones. This site reclassifies the Nemi material yet again,
this time using categories that anticipate the social needs of the website’s
visitors. Eighty objects from Nemi are divided into five headings that
reflect the organization of a contemporary greeting card shop: “Good
Luck,” “Condolences,” “Well Being,” “Congratulations,” and “Celebra-
tion.” Visitors are instructed to choose a votive and dedicate it in the vir-
Fractured Narratives 41
tual temple for someone they wish well; that person can then be notified
by email to come onto the site and view the votive along with a personal
message from the well-wisher.
The Speculum Dianae website might be seen by some as the ultimate
form of secularization; votive objects such as our figurine are repro-
duced with the click of a computer mouse, while the goddess Diana her-
self is replaced by an interchangeable mortal recipient. Paradoxically,
though, this latest stage in the figurine’s biography brings us closer than
any other to the votive offering and its original dedicant. This is not
(only) because the website text openly encourages us to step into the
dedicant’s shoes and to repeat, in a virtual environment, the actions that
they would have performed in the Nemi sanctuary. The identification is
more profound than this, because the process of selecting a single offer-
ing brings these ancient objects into a dialogue with our own individual
life experience. The polyvisceral figurine appears with other body parts
in the category “Well Being,” with a brief description that incorporates
the text of Savile’s nineteenth-century label (fig. 7).
What would happen if our votive were sent as a dedication for a twenty-
first-century sufferer from “some internal malady”? Anthropologist Tim
Fig. 7. Screenshot from the “Speculum Dianae” website, accessed July
6, 2015, www.speculum-dianae.nottingham.ac.uk. Reproduced with the
kind permission of Katharina Lorenz.
42 Ex Voto
Ingold has argued that “the more that objects are removed from the
contexts of life-activity in which they are produced and used–the more
they appear as static objects of disinterested contemplation.”43 In this
case, however, we might imagine that an ailing recipient of this “healing”
votive would regard the open, fragmented body with empathy or with a
sense of recognition or perhaps anxiety; in this way, they would surely
experience a close, even visceral, engagement with the object and its
ancient user.
Conclusion
This chapter has taken its inspiration from recent scholarly work on ob-
ject biographies and life cycles and has explored what these methods
might bring to our understanding of votive offerings. It has tracked the
career of a single Etrusco-Italic votive through time and across space,
observing (or sometimes imagining) how this object’s function, mean-
ing, and value changed at key moments between its production in clay
in the Roman Republican period and its reproduction in high-resolution
photography in the twenty-first century. This fragmented clay body has
opened a window onto aspects of the worlds through which it has passed:
for instance, we have glimpsed how the votive might relate to ancient per-
ceptions of the relationship between human and animal bodies as well
as to the overlap in Greco-Roman thought between concepts of healing
and sacrifice. The modern trajectory of the votive has provided insights
into changing ideas about the aesthetic, economic, and historical value
of votives, as well as drawing attention to the different ways in which later
cultures have responded to the religious material culture of the past.
One more general issue that has been highlighted concerns the close
interrelationship between votive objects and their wider context. As we
have seen, the meaning of a votive is partly dependent on its changing
physical location as well as on the broader social and cultural background
against which it is contemplated. I have argued, for example, that the
geographical location of this votive within the sanctuary at Nemi allowed
it to function as a visual mnemonic of the sanctuary’s violent foundation
narratives; meanwhile, the temporary positioning of the votive on the
sanctuary’s altar would have brought the sacrificial aspect of this image
to the forefront. The shifting assemblage of other objects placed in the
vicinity of the votive would also have enabled different interpretations.
Fractured Narratives 43
As we have seen, the pairing of the figurine with a sculpted scene of vio-
lent death suggests a very different reading from its pairing with a votive
terra-cotta model of a uterus. The viewers of the votive would also have
participated in the creation of its meaning, bringing their own unique
set of memories and beliefs to the encounter with the object and its set-
ting. This three-way relationship among votive, environment, and viewer
results in a rich multivalency that resists our attempts to tie these objects
down to a single, “original” meaning or function. The questions of why
and by whom a particular votive was offered become the starting point
rather than the final goal of analysis; meanwhile, the confident labels
attached to these objects (“votive offering for some internal malady or
childbirth”) become evidence of a step in an ongoing story rather than
that story’s entire content.
Finally, however, this chapter has also demonstrated how difficult it is
to reconstruct the story of any votive offering in its entirety. Our exemplar
votive from Nemi has periodically disappeared from the historical record,
forcing us to recognize the gaps in our knowledge and to think creatively
about the unattested stages of the votive’s journey. Even in the later pe-
riods, for which we have more “hard” evidence about the votive’s where-
abouts, a small number of privileged voices are heard at the expense of
the many others who must have come into contact with the object and
constructed their own possibly discrepant interpretations. In this sense,
the task of reconstructing a votive’s biography may become easier in future
years as more votives are uploaded onto the internet and re-presented in
creative digital resources, so that they accrue ever-longer “data shadows”
that can then be retrieved and analyzed by subsequent users. These yet-to-
be-written votive biographies may help us comprehend the exact nature
of our distance from the ancient sanctuary while also making us think
critically about how we should preserve and present these votives in the
latest (but not the last) stage of their fractured narratives.
notes
I would like to thank Janet Huskinson, Susie West, and Ann Inscker for reading
and commenting on earlier versions of this chapter. I am also grateful to Katha-
rina Lorenz and Nancy de Grummond for help with sourcing images.
1. For votive offerings in antiquity, see W. H. D. Rouse, Greek Votive Offerings: An
Essay in the History of Greek Religion (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
44 Ex Voto
1902); F. T. Van Straten, “Gifts for the Gods,” in Faith, Hope, and Worship:
Aspects of Religious Mentality in the Ancient World, ed. H. S. Versnel (Leiden:
Brill, 1981), 65–151; G. Bartoloni, G. Colonna, and C. Grottanelli, eds.,
Anathema: Regime delle offerte e vita dei santuari nel mediterraneo antico (Rome:
Università degli studi di Roma “La Sapienza,” 1989–1990); “The Object of
Dedication,” ed. R. Osborne, special issue, World Archaeology 36, no. 1 (2004);
and the section on “Dedications” in the 2004 Thesaurus cultus et rituum anti-
quorum (Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum (2004), 1:269–450, with further
references; hereafter cited as ThesCRA. For the terminology of Greek votive
offerings, see M. L. Lazzarini “Le formule delle dediche votive nella Grecia
arcaica,” Monumenti antichi 19 (1976): 45–354; R. Parker “Introduction, Lit-
erary and Epigraphical Sources,” in ThesCRA 1:269–281. Note that the Latin
word donarium indicates the material fulfillment of an earlier vow (votum).
2. For other applications of the object biography method, see R. Grimes, “The
Life-History of a Mask,” Drama Review 36, no. 3 (1992): 61–77 (on ritual
and biographical masks); A. E. Cooley, ed. The Afterlife of Inscriptions: Reusing,
Rediscovering, Reinventing and Revitalizing Ancient Inscriptions (London: Bul-
letin of the Institute of Classical Studies, 2000) (on Roman inscriptions);
C. Holtorf, “Notes on the Life History of a Pot Sherd,” Journal of Material
Culture 7 (2002), 49–71; A. Jones, Archaeological Theory and Scientific Practice
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), chap. 5 (on Neolithic
ceramics); E. de Waal, The Hare with Amber Eyes: A Hidden Inheritance (New
York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2010) (on Japanese netsuke); J. Huskinson,
“Habent sua fata: Writing Life Histories of Roman Sarcophagi,” in Life, Death
and Representation: Some New Work on Roman Sarcophagi, ed. J. Elsner and J.
Huskinson (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2010), 55–82.
3. Mus. inv. no. N131. See T. F. C. Blagg, Mysteries of Diana: The Antiquities from
Nemi in Nottingham Museums (Nottingham: Nottingham Castle Museum,
1983), 53; M. Moltesen, ed., I Dianas hellige lund: Fund fra en helligdom i Nemi
(Copenhagen: Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, 1997), 205.
4. For the sanctuary of Nemi, see T. F. C. Blagg, “Cult Practice and Its Social
Context in the Religious Sanctuaries of Latium and Southern Etruria: The
Sanctuary of Diana at Nemi,” in C. Malone and S. Stoddart, eds., Papers in
Italian Archaeology 246, no. 4 (1985): 33–50, and “The Cult and Sanctuary
of Diana Nemorensis,” in Pagan Gods and Shrines of the Roman Empire, ed. M.
Henig and A. King (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986), 211–219; J. R.
Brandt, A-M. L. Touati, and J. Zahle, eds., Nemi—Status Quo: Recent Research
at Nemi and the Sanctuary of Diana (Rome: “L’Erma” di Bretschneider, 1997);
Moltesen, I Dianas hellige lund; C. M. C. Green, Roman Religion and the Cult of
Diana at Aricia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007). The site was
in use from at least the sixth century BCE, when it may simply have consisted
of an altar and cult statue, until the imperial period, by which time it had a
large temple set within a monumental precinct on an artificial terrace above
the lake.
5. On votive body parts in antiquity, see Van Straten, “Gifts for the Gods”; B.
Forsén, Griechische Gliederweihungen: Eine Untersuchung zu ihrer Typologie und
Fractured Narratives 45
ihrer religions- und sozialgeschichtlichen Bedeutung (Helsinki: Finnish School at
Athens, 1996); “Models of Body Parts,” in ThesCRA 1:311–312 (with bibliogra-
phy); G. Baggieri, ed., L’antica anatomia nell’arte dei donaria (Rome: Ministero
per i beni e le attività culturali, 1999); J. M. Turfa, “Anatomical votives,” in
ThesCRA 1:359–368 (with bibliography); A. Petsalis-Diomidis, “The Body in
Space: Visual Dynamics in Graeco-Roman Healing Pilgrimage,” in Pilgrim-
age in the Greco-Roman World: Seeing the Gods, ed. J. Elsner and I. Rutherford
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), 183–218; C. E. Schultz, Women’s Reli-
gious Activity in the Roman Republic (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina
Press, 2006) 95–120; J. Hughes, “Fragmentation as Metaphor in the Ancient
Healing Sanctuary,” Social History of Medicine 21, no. 2 (2008): 217–236.
6. On polyvisceral models and other internal organ votives, see P. Rouquette,
“Les ex-voto medicaux d’organes internes dans l’antiquité Romaine,” Bul-
letin de la Société Française d’Histoire de la Médecine 10 (1911): 504–519; F. Reg-
nault, “Les ex-voto polysplanchniques de l’antiquité,” Bulletin de la Société
Française d’Histoire de la Médecine 20, nos. 3–4 (1926): 135–150; M. Tabanelli,
“Conoscenze anatomiche ed ex voto poliviscerali etruschi e romani di Tes-
sennano presso Vulci,” Rivista di Storia della Medicina 2 (1960): 295–313, and
Gli ex-voto poliviscerali etruschi e romani (Florence: Leo S. Olschki, 1962); P.
Decouflé, La notion d’ex-voto anatomique chez les Etrusco-Romains: Analyse et
synthèse (Brussels: Latomus, 1964); J. M. Turfa, “Anatomical Votives and the
Italian Medical Tradition,” in Murlo and the Etruscans, ed. R. D. De Puma
and J. P. Small (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1994), 224–240; M.
Recke, “Science as Art: Etruscan Anatomical Votives,” in The Etruscan World,
ed. J. M. Turfa (London: Thames and Hudson, 2013), 1068–1085.
7. Holtorf warns that “no life before the moment of discovery can be assumed:
any assertions about the origins and, if you will, earlier ‘lives’ of a thing are
the outcome of various processes in its present life.” Holtorf, “Notes on a
Life History of a Pot Sherd,” 8. One might also argue that the later stages of
an object’s life are the outcome of earlier ones (the interesting design of the
offering fuels the desire of collectors; its mode of disposal facilitates its easy
excavation by archaeologists, and so on).
8. The style of anatomical votives from central Italy is very conservative. Most
examples were made in molds, which means that any date we can surmise
is the date of the mold, not the object that was pressed from it. Figurines
such as the Nemi votive (without the intestines) also sometimes served as
prototypes for new molds.
9. Blagg suggests Rome as the location; Blagg, Cult Practice and Its Social Con-
text, 39.
10. See H. von Staden, “The Discovery of the Body: Human Dissection and Its
Cultural Contexts in Ancient Greece,” Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 65,
no. 3 (1992): 223–241.
11. Turfa, “Anatomical Votives and the Italian Medical Tradition,” 224–240.
12. The literary, epigraphic, and iconographic sources for ancient (Greek,
Etruscan, and Roman) sacrifice are collected in the first volume of ThesCRA,
sec. 2a, along with a modern bibliography on the topic.
46 Ex Voto
13. ThesCRA 1:181–182.
14. See, for example, M. Tabanelli, Gli ex-voto poliviscerali etruschi e romani (Flor-
ence: Olschki, 1962), 47.
15. J. M. Turfa, “Anatomical Votive Terracottas from Etruscan and Italic Sanc-
tuaries,” in J. Swaddling, ed., Italian Iron Age Artefacts in the British Museum,
208 n. 1, figs. 1a–b (London: British Museum, 1986); G. Baggieri, L’antica
anatomia nell’arte dei donaria, 98, 720.
16. The general consensus is that anatomical votives represent a part of the
body that suffers or that has been healed, although recent discussions
acknowledge that votives probably had a much wider range of meanings.
See, for example, F. Glinister, “Reconsidering ‘Religious Romanization,’” in
Religion in Republican Italy, ed. C. E. Schultz and P. B. Harvey Jr. (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2006), 11–12; Schultz, Women’s Religious Activ-
ity, 102–109.
17. L. Morpurgo, “Nemus Aricinum,” in Monumenti antichi 13 (1903), 326, figs.
49–52. On the votive dedication of medical tools, see P. Baker, “Roman Med-
ical Instruments: Archaeological Interpretations of Their Possible ‘Non-
Functional’ Uses,” Social History of Medicine 17, no. 1 (1994): 3–21.
18. Ovid, Metamorphoses 15.479–546; Virgil, Aeneid 7.767–782.
19. On Etruscan sacrificial butchery, see ThesCRA 1:136–182, esp. 181–182.
Most of the Etruscan visual representations show the internal organs
detached from the context of the body, although a vase found at the site
of Cerveteri depicts a goat being stretched out by two men, its stomach
facing upward, while a third holds a knife ready to slice into its abdo-
men. This example, known as the Ricci vase, is discussed in detail in J-L.
Durand, “Bêtes grecques: Propositions pour une topologique des corps à
manger,” in La cuisine du sacrifice en pays grec, M. Detienne and J-P. Ver-
nant (Paris: Gallimard, 1979), 133–165; see also F. T. Van Straten, Hierà
Kalá: Images of Animal Sacrifice in Archaic and Classical Greece (Leiden: Brill,
1995), 117).
20. J. G. Frazer, The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion, abr. ed. (1922;
repr. London: Palgrave Macmillan (1949), 6. The Greek mythological sib-
lings Orestes and Iphigenia provide the link between the two cults, with
Orestes rescuing Iphigenia from her role as Artemis’s priestess at Tauris
(where she was expected to sacrifice humans), and fleeing with the cult
statue of Artemis to Nemi. For sources, see Green, Roman Religion and the
Cult of Diana at Aricia, 201–207.
21. Green, Roman Religion, 185–207.
22. F. Castagnoli, Lavinium II: Le tredici are (Rome: De Luca, 1975).
23. A. Comella, Il materiale votivo tardo di Gravisca (Rome: Bretschneider, 1978).
24. This practice of offering votives directly to the material embodiment of
the god has parallels in ancient as well as more recent votive practices. We
know, for instance, that at the sanctuary of Asklepios at Athens offerings
were placed directly into the hand of the cult statue. S. B. Aleshire, Asklepios
at Athens: Epigraphic and Prosopographic Essays on the Athenian Healing Cults
(Amsterdam: Geiben, 1991), 41–46.
Fractured Narratives 47
25. For a discussion of the dynamics of viewing votive dedications in antiquity,
see A. Petsalis-Diomidis, “Truly beyond Wonders”: Aelius Aristides and the Cult of
Asklepios (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2010), 271–275.
26. The practice would have had further implications in the context of the
healing sanctuary. As Alexia Petsalis-Diomidis has written (in relation to
Greek Asklepieia), “one of the effects of displaying old votive offerings
would have been the evocation of the sense of a plethora of past miraculous
cures in the very space where the viewer stood.” Petsalis-Diomidis, “Truly
beyond Wonders,” 272.
27. For examples, see Blagg, Mysteries of Diana, 49 (N1, N2, N3, N4).
28. R. P. Pullan, “Notes on Recent Excavations on the Supposed Site of Arte-
misium, near the Lake of Nemi, Made by Sir John Savile Lumley, G. C. B.,”
Archaeologia 50 (1887): 60. Pullan continues: “This fine piece of sculpture
was carried off to Russia soon after its discovery and unfortunately cannot
be traced.”
29. T. Hackens, “Favisae,” in Etudes étrusco-italiques (Louvain: Publications Uni-
versitaires, 1963), 71–99; F. Glinister, “Sacred Rubbish,” in Religion in Archaic
and Republican Italy: Evidence and Experience, ed. E. Bispham and C. Smith
(Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2000), 54, 69; Schultz, Women’s
Religious Activity, 97.
30. J. Savile Lumley, entry in Journal of the British and American Archaeological Soci-
ety of Rome 1, no. 2 (1885–1886): 60–74.
31. For a biography of Savile, see Blagg, Mysteries of Diana, 11–14. Recent work
on the reception of classical art in Britain includes D. Kurtz, The Reception of
Classical Art in Britain: An Oxford Story of Plaster Casts from the Antique (Oxford:
Archaeopress, 2000); V. Coltman, Fabricating the Antique: Neoclassicism in Brit-
ain 1760–1800 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006) and Classical
Sculpture and the Culture of Collecting in Britain since 1760 (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2009); S. Goldhill, Victorian Culture and Classical Antiquity:
Art, Opera, Fiction, and the Proclamation of Modernity (Princeton, NJ: Princ-
eton University Press, 2011); J. Hughes, “The Myth of Return: Restoration
as Reception in Eighteenth-Century Rome,” Classical Receptions Journal 3, no.
1 (2011): 1–28.
32. Pullan, “Notes on Recent Excavations,” 61–62.
33. Personal communication, March 31, 2011. The museum number of the
newly identified piece is NCM 1890–1355/257.
34. In 1902, for instance, W. H. D. Rouse, referring to votive body parts from
ancient Greece, exclaimed that “this custom shows how low the artistic tastes
of the Greeks had already fallen.” Rouse, Greek Votive Offerings, 210–211.
35. G. H. Wallis, Illustrated Catalogue of Classical Antiquities from the Site of the Temple
of Diana, Nemi, Italy, Discovered during the Excavations Undertaken by the Right
Hon. Lord Savile, G. C. B., F.S.A., Late H.M. Ambassador at Rome, and Given by
Him to the Art Museum of Nottingham, with an Account by Lord Savile of the Dis-
covery of the Temple and the Objects Found There (Nottingham, 1893), 16 n. 131.
The catalogue entry reads: “Votive offering, representing a draped figure
of a women with the chest cut open showing the viscera. This offering was
48 Ex Voto
probably made for a cure from some internal disease. Terra-Cotta. Italo-
Greek. Date from about B C E 300 to B C E 150.”
36. Ibid., 4.
37. See, for instance, L. Sambon, “Donaria of Medical Interest in the Oppen-
heimer Collection of Etruscan and Roman Antiquities,” British Medical
Journal 2 (1895): 146–150, 216–219; P. Rouquette, “Les ex-voto medicaux
d’organes internes dans l’antiquité Romaine.”
38. D. Freedberg, The Power of Images: Studies in the History and Theory of Response
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989), 157.
39. Wallis, Illustrated Catalogue, 4, 17.
40. Cited in F. Melis and F. R. Serra Ridgway, “‘Mysteries of Diana’: Sulla nuova
esposizione dei materiali nemorensi nel Castel Museum of Nottingham,”
Quaderni del Centro di Studio per l’Archeologia Etrusco-Italica 8 (1987): 219 n. 9.
41. S. Pearce, “Authority and Anarchy in a Museum Exhibition: Or, The Sacred
Wood Revisited,” Cultural Dynamics 7, no. 1 (1995): 128.
42. S. Alberti, “Objects and the Museum,” Isis 96, no. 4 (2005): 565.
43. T. Ingold, “Making Culture and Weaving the World,” in Matter, Materiality
and Modern Culture, ed. P. M. Graves-Brown (London: Routledge, 2000), 64.