A cornucopia, a caduceus and an anchor on the basement of the statue of Hygieia, the Greek goddess of health, at the entrance of the “Parterre”. If a cornucopia is the undisputed symbol of food and abundance, the caduceus is often used erroneously as a symbol of medicine instead of the correct rod of Asclepius, with only a single snake.The wings of a caduceus behind the coat of arms of Livorno.The caduceus is a herald's staff, a symbolic object representing the god Hermes (or the Roman Mercury), and by extension trades and occupations associated with the god.The staff of Hermes is also a long-established historical symbol of commerce.
See also: Bowl of Hygieia - Parterre
External links: Confusion with the rod of Asclepius - Caduceus as a symbol of medicine (Wikipedia)
Thank you for teaching me something I did not know before. Please have a good Thursday.
ReplyDeletedaily athens
They make me think of medical symbols!
ReplyDeleteLove the staff of Hermes.
ReplyDeleteHow on earth did you know all that? The first photo has an interesting melange of symbols. I always like the chance to see the architectural details. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! Always good to learn.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the lesson about the caduceus. Looks like a lot of medical associations and pharmaceutical companies here have their symbol wrong then.
ReplyDeleteWonderful collection you found.
Very interesting. thanks for the info. I like the 3rd pic--the herald staff spread out. MB
ReplyDeleteWhat a great informative post! I like the design above the door :-D
ReplyDeleteSo many amazing examples.
ReplyDeleteI think it is shocking how the mistake about the caduceus and medicine was made by one US army man a long time ago and was perpetuated till this very day.
I'm always learning something interesting and about history with you, thanks so much!
ReplyDeleteNow I will visit the links to read more about!
hugs
Léia
I didn't know all these. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThey just don't adorn new buildings like they used to.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know about the history behind all these symbols. Very interesting post today!
ReplyDeleteI love these beautiful details and all the interesting info.
ReplyDeleteV
Okay so now I know that a caducée isn't what I think it is.
ReplyDeleteExcellent learning post for me! Beautiful detail in these photos. Wonderful post.
ReplyDeleteGood post, VP. I do think I was not clear about the difference between the caduceus and rod of Asclepius. You've shown us an interesting sampling of the symbols.
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