Image Missing: Hearst Museum object titled Statue (reproduction), accession number 21-41, described as Cast of the Berlin Amazon. Royal Museum, Berlin. The only change he made was bronzing the statue, which he cast from his own mould, Rome. New: the pillar, and both forearms and hands. Also, the nose, right foot and ankle, left foot. Klugmann’s attribution of this Amazon figure to Polykleitos of Argos has met with wide acceptance. There are many antique copies of it. See Furtwaengler, Masterpieces, and Mahler, Polykleitos. This highly competent scholar denies the work to any V Century author. He attributes it to Phradmon, and to the Fourth Century. A small bronze copy, antique, of the same work without its cippus is in the Museo Archaeologico of Florence. Other copies, and a trace of the right hand on the head of this one, justify the restorer’s model of the right arm and hand. The replica in Landsdowne House, London, has a variant restoration of the left hand. The pillar also is a correct restoration after the model of the Landsdowne House copy. This sort of elbow rest is foreign to Fifth century sculpture. Mahler explains the resemblance of this Amazon’s face to the Polykleitos Spearman by Phradmon’s imitation of Polykleitos. The piece is in at least four separate parts currently.