http://www.plurk.com/p/1rz5m

http://www.metro.co.uk/news/article.html?in_article_id=230229&in_page_id=34

1,800 year-old relic of Elvis PresleyTuesday, July 22, 2008 [image: Roman
Elvis]
The King is back, long live the King

Those with suspicious minds may scoff – but this 1,800-year-old relic is the
spitting image of Elvis Presley.

Complete with quiff and strong jaw, the likeness to the singer in his Las
­Vegas years is uncanny.

 It has been verified by experts, who say it is a decoration found on the
corners of a Roman coffin.

'Fans seeing this face from the distant past will be forgiven for thinking
that their idol may well have lived a previous life in Rome,' said a
spokesman for Bonhams, which is auctioning the item in October.

This Elvis probably dates back to about 200 AD – about 1,750 years before
the birth of rock'n'roll.

But it could even date to 400 BC, experts claim.

The bust is an authentic acroter­ion – an ornament often found on the
corners of sarcophagi, stone burial chambers where the most important people
were laid to rest.

It is part of one of the world's most stunning private collections of
ancient art, which will go under the hammer in London.

The 150 lots, once owned by Australian collector Graham Geddes, ­include
Greek and Roman vases and r­eliefs showing battle scenes.

Many of these will go for up to £90,000 each although Elvis is unlikely to
make even a fraction of that, unless the resemblance sparks a bidding war
between fans.

The figure could fetch as much as £25,000 when it is sold.

'It is perhaps the strangest item in the sale, certainly to modern eyes.

'The likeness is so great that the collector himself calls the carving
Elvis,' added the spokesman for the auctioneer.

'Looking at this face with its quiff, jaw and nose, one is led to the
thought that the human face, for all is diversity and subtlety, has an
ability to repeat itself.'

It is not just auction house staff who are taken aback by the bust – others
are all shook up too.

'It bears an uncanny likeness. It's the quiff that does it,' said Greek and
­Roman art expert Georgiana Aitken.

'You do get some weird and wacky things at the corners of sarcophagi. The
quiff was not a hairstyle of the day as far as I know.'


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