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- Germania, together with Sclavinia , Gallia, and Roma, paying homage to Otto III, 990. Richard Krautheimer defines the lands personified here as the following: "Gallia, which was Rhenish Germany and the Netherlands; Germania, or the lands between the Rhine and the Elbe; Slavia, those east of the Elbe; all three led by Roma, his capital." (en)
- Germania sitting on a shield, with a broken spear, Domitian's aureus, 89 (en)
- Germania in the guise of Minerva, denarius of Hadrian, 134 (en)
- Germania, by Friedrich August von Kaulbach, 1914. A prime example of the more warlike and nationalistic trend beginning in the nineteenth century. (en)
- Germania , sitting on the imperial throne, in Maximilian's Triumphal Procession. She now took precedence and was carried in front of Roma. (en)
- Defeated Germania at the foot of a tropaeum, sesterce of Marcus Aurelius, 172 (en)
- Die Wiedererstehung des Deutschen Reiches 1871 by Wislicenus. Germania appears in the form of Queen Luise, about to crown her son. The figures below are Father Rhein and Legend. (en)
- The 1014 coronation of Henry II and Kunigunde. The bottom picture shows Roma , Gallia , Germania . (en)
- Germania auf der Wacht am Rhein by Lorenz Clasen. Germania here is a warrior defending her land, not aggressive but watchful. (en)
- Italia und Germania by Friedrich Overbeck. An iconic work, described by Pfister as "intercultural romance", that shows Germania as adoring Italia, attracted by her culture and arts. According to Albert Boime, "Germania is an extension of the nationalist romanticism that initially inspired the fraternity in Vienna, now fused with Italia as the perfect union of political and cultural ideals". (en)
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