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

sibling of
Gloria, Vanitas, Labor
syncretized with
The Appiades
allied with
Vanity, Layer Quaternity

Expand to full subgraph →

Sources

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