Connected Sites
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"The Horses of St Mark". Dating "from classical antiquity and .. attributed to the 4th century BC Greek sculptor Lysippos" (Wiki). Long displayed in the Hippodrome at Constantinople with the Quadriga to which they were attached, the horses were looted by Venetian forces at the sacking of that city during the 4th Crusade in 1204 and placed on the loggia above the porch of St Mark's Basilica. They were then looted again by Napoleon in 1797 for use on the Arc de Triomph but were returned to St Mark's loggia in 1815 where they remaineduntil the 1980s when they were moved inside and replaced by replicas. See
See en.wikipedia.org
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One above the main arch of the General staff Building in Palace Sq (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Staff_Building_(Saint_Petersburg)) and another above the facade of the Alexandrinsky Theatre
See en.wikipedia.org
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Atop each wing of the "Altare della Patria", the monument to Victor Emmanuele II
See en.wikipedia.org
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2 on the Grand Palais "A monumental bronze quadriga by Georges Récipon tops each wing of the main façade. The one on the Champs-Élysées side depicts Immortality prevailing over Time, the one on the Seine side Harmony triumphing over Discord." Wiki - see
See en.wikipedia.org