Pax
deity Christian single tradition · 4
Stub entity — referenced by another entity from source #765 but not yet directly extracted from its own source.
↻ synthesized from 4 sources
When
- First attested
- 1500 CE
- Attested period
- 1 – 1603
- Historical notes
- Figurine from the era of Elizabeth I (1558-1603) exemplifying Christian iconography integrated with alchemical and astrological symbolism.
Relationships
- syncretized with
- The Appiades
- allied with
- Vanity, Layer Quaternity
Mentioned by
Sources
wikipedia (4)
Source passages
“its four figurines housed in its two columns, Pax and Gloria, Vanitas and Labor, are relatively rare examples of Northern Mannerist sculpture extant in Britain”
#20181 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5
“The four figurines housed in the monument's pilasters, Pax and Gloria, Vanitas and Labor, (Peace, Glory, Vanity, Labor) are relatively rare examples of Northern Mannerist sculpture extant in Britain.”
#20198 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001
“The Pax Romana had an effect on the adoption and acceptance of Christianity’s peaceful teachings and less so was Pax the signifier of peace – she was being replaced by Jesus Christ.”
#46366 · extracted by openai/gpt-oss-120b:free