Dubai Telegraph - Made in China? The remarkable tale of Venice's iconic winged lion

EUR -
AED 4.278799
AFN 77.332466
ALL 96.575617
AMD 445.1876
ANG 2.085576
AOA 1068.388216
ARS 1684.735918
AUD 1.75613
AWG 2.09862
AZN 1.984015
BAM 1.955298
BBD 2.351906
BDT 142.873314
BGN 1.955951
BHD 0.439244
BIF 3450.13256
BMD 1.165091
BND 1.512264
BOB 8.068928
BRL 6.18139
BSD 1.167705
BTN 104.895516
BWP 15.51395
BYN 3.380546
BYR 22835.780461
BZD 2.348507
CAD 1.624445
CDF 2598.152383
CHF 0.935795
CLF 0.027249
CLP 1068.972737
CNY 8.239114
CNH 8.235468
COP 4423.838268
CRC 572.550529
CUC 1.165091
CUP 30.874907
CVE 110.236695
CZK 24.215228
DJF 207.947498
DKK 7.468599
DOP 74.200629
DZD 151.573688
EGP 55.422094
ERN 17.476363
ETB 182.080866
FJD 2.631882
FKP 0.872491
GBP 0.87341
GEL 3.139877
GGP 0.872491
GHS 13.301585
GIP 0.872491
GMD 85.051785
GNF 10146.786517
GTQ 8.944742
GYD 244.307269
HKD 9.07004
HNL 30.745973
HRK 7.537941
HTG 152.955977
HUF 381.927241
IDR 19422.821609
ILS 3.76036
IMP 0.872491
INR 104.791181
IQD 1529.71378
IRR 49079.451231
ISK 149.003201
JEP 0.872491
JMD 187.141145
JOD 0.82607
JPY 180.711448
KES 150.704566
KGS 101.886647
KHR 4676.939601
KMF 491.66861
KPW 1048.573823
KRW 1715.887947
KWD 0.35759
KYD 0.973154
KZT 590.220982
LAK 25331.604319
LBP 104570.198293
LKR 360.448994
LRD 206.107962
LSL 19.822595
LTL 3.44021
LVL 0.704752
LYD 6.347397
MAD 10.774234
MDL 19.862985
MGA 5193.64414
MKD 61.624177
MMK 2446.620372
MNT 4131.997126
MOP 9.362236
MRU 46.266921
MUR 53.675364
MVR 17.954132
MWK 2024.871384
MXN 21.185039
MYR 4.789718
MZN 74.447687
NAD 19.822595
NGN 1690.547045
NIO 42.970442
NOK 11.774198
NPR 167.831186
NZD 2.017279
OMR 0.448002
PAB 1.1678
PEN 3.926892
PGK 4.952877
PHP 68.813177
PKR 329.883811
PLN 4.230421
PYG 8097.955442
QAR 4.268104
RON 5.093784
RSD 117.405001
RUB 89.428762
RWF 1699.056442
SAR 4.372624
SBD 9.581501
SCR 15.83572
SDG 700.739077
SEK 10.962357
SGD 1.508886
SHP 0.87412
SLE 26.796781
SLL 24431.370198
SOS 666.226074
SRD 45.023191
STD 24115.028075
STN 24.494657
SVC 10.21742
SYP 12883.858981
SZL 19.816827
THB 37.09708
TJS 10.731491
TMT 4.077818
TND 3.427635
TOP 2.805259
TRY 49.532165
TTD 7.917001
TWD 36.455959
TZS 2842.8212
UAH 49.235746
UGX 4139.936989
USD 1.165091
UYU 45.74845
UZS 13910.428222
VES 289.625154
VND 30711.794538
VUV 142.222766
WST 3.250779
XAF 655.7858
XAG 0.020016
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.148716
XCG 2.104569
XDR 0.815587
XOF 655.791427
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.75676
ZAR 19.715959
ZMK 10487.212054
ZMW 26.828226
ZWL 375.158775
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    78.35

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    23.48

    +0.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    14.67

    +3.14%

  • RIO

    -0.5500

    73.73

    -0.75%

  • NGG

    -0.5800

    75.91

    -0.76%

  • GSK

    -0.4000

    48.57

    -0.82%

  • RELX

    0.3500

    40.54

    +0.86%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    12.64

    +0.4%

  • BTI

    0.5300

    58.04

    +0.91%

  • AZN

    -0.8200

    90.03

    -0.91%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    16.23

    -0.74%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    37.23

    -0.03%

  • BCC

    -2.3000

    74.26

    -3.1%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.75

    +0.36%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.32

    -0.13%

  • BCE

    0.0400

    23.22

    +0.17%

Made in China? The remarkable tale of Venice's iconic winged lion
Made in China? The remarkable tale of Venice's iconic winged lion / Photo: ANDREAS SOLARO - AFP/File

Made in China? The remarkable tale of Venice's iconic winged lion

A winged lion sculpture that symbolises the Italian city of Venice was made in China and went on a remarkable journey that possibly involved explorer Marco Polo's father and the court of Mongol emperor Kublai Khan, researchers suggested Thursday.

Text size:

Every year millions of people pass under the Lion of Venice, an ancient bronze sculpture which looks out on the Venetian Lagoon from the top of a column on the main square Piazza San Marco.

However much about this icon of the Venetian Republic remains shrouded in mystery.

It bears clear signs of having had a life before being installed near Saint Mark's Basilica and Doge's Palace.

Over the centuries its ears have been shortened, its wings have been changed -- the sculpture even once had horns that were shorn off at some point.

"We don't know when the sculpture arrived in Venice, where it was reworked, who did it, or when it was erected on the column where it is still visible today," Massimo Vidale, an archaeologist at the University of Padua and co-author of a new study, said in a statement.

The only historical document that mentions the sculpture dates back to 1293, when it was already damaged and in need of repair.

The violet granite of the sculpture's column -- which could have been looted from the sacking of the ancient city Constantinople, modern-day Istanbul -- likely arrived in Venice shortly before 1261, the study said.

Hoping to shed light on the winged lion's mysterious past, a team of Italian researchers analysed lead isotopes in samples taken during a 1990 restoration.

The sculpture's copper ore was mined in the Yangtze River basin in China, the analysis revealed.

That is dramatically farther east than previous theories about where the sculpture came from, which include a 12th-century Venetian foundry, or somewhere in Anatolia or Syria during the Hellenistic period.

- A 'somewhat brazen idea' -

And it may not actually be a lion at all.

It more closely resembles tomb guardian sculptures called "zhenmushou" from China's Tang Dynasty (618–907 AD), the researchers said.

"These hybrid creatures share leonine muzzles, flaming manes, horns and raised wings attached to the shoulders, pointed upraised ears and, sometimes, partially humanised facial features," according to the study in the journal Antiquity.

Although made from different material, the zhenmushou sculptures that are still around look very similar to the Lion of Venice -- particularly its "bulbous nose", the study added.

So how did this tomb guardian make it all the way to Venice?

Perhaps in the luggage of Niccolo and Maffeo Polo, the father and uncle of the famed Venetian explorer Marco Polo, the researchers theorised.

Around 1265, the travelling merchants visited the court of the Mongol emperor Kublai Khan in Khanbalik -- modern-day Beijing.

They could have stumbled on the sculpture there, the researchers said.

Just years earlier the Republic of Venice had adopted the lion as its symbol, and "the Polos may have had the somewhat brazen idea of readapting the sculpture into a plausible (when viewed from afar) Winged Lion," the study said.

They could have then sent the sculpture to Venice along the trade route known as the Silk Road.

That was not the end of its travels. After French general Napoleon Bonaparte defeated the Venetian Republic in 1797, he moved the winged lion to Paris.

Broken into pieces, it did not return to Venice until 1815.

J.Alaqanone--DT