The Parian marble statue of a Fighting Gaul, found on Delos, Cyclades, is a typical Late Hellenic sculpture from around 100 BCE, probably by Agasias, and now on display in the Hellenistic Period of the Sculpture Collection of the National Archaeological Museum of Athens, Greece. The warrior, wounded in the thigh, has fallen to the ground on his right knee but still attempts to defend himself with his left arm. On the ground, next to him, rests a Galatian helmet. It is probably related to the Dying Gaul in the Capitoline Museum, Gaul Killing Himself and his Wife in Palazzo Altemps in Rome, and the Wounded Gaul in the Louvre. (In all cases, Gaul refers to the Gaulish / Galatian people from Anatolia, present-day Turkey, rather than the Gauls of France.) Height 0,93 m (3 ft).