Marble funerary lekythos – Greek, Attic – Late Classical – The Metropolitan Museum of Art https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/248644
Bulletin of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 8(2): p. 29. Richter, Gisela M.
Bulletin of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 8(2): p. 29. Richter, Gisela M.
Inscription: (obverse legend): + CONSTANTIVS / . IN XPO [should be CHRISTO] . DEO . FIDELIS . IMPERAT / OR . ET . MODERATOR / ROMANORVM . ET. SEMPER . AVGVSTVS (Constantine, faithful in Christ [and] in God, emperor and master of the Romans and forever Augustus)(obverse exergue): z34 (234) (reverse legend): : + MIHI : ABSIT : GLORIARI :
New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1999. no. 204, p. 168.
This altarpiece depicts Saint Roch (ca. 1348–1376/79), known as a plague saint for his miracles in curing the sick. He became a popular figure in art following the Black Death in the fourteenth century and the Italian plague outbreak of 1477–79
sculture et altre cose notabili . . . . 1603, c. 20 [Biblioteca Comunale, Bologna, Ms B
From the former Lady Chapel of the Benedictine abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Paris; [possibly Jacques Seligmann, Paris and New York] ; Private Collection, Paris (until 1958) ; [ Brimo de Laroussilhe, Paris (1958–sold 1972)] ; [ Galerie für Glasmalerei, Zurich (1972–sold 1973)]
New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1975. p. 18.
In this painting, the Madonna and Child are flanked by Saint Francis to the left, shown in the gray habit of the Franciscan order and holding the cross within his stigmata-marked hand, and Saint Jerome to the right, attired in the red robes of a cardinal, signifying his service to Pope Damasus I (305–384 CE)
by 1834–d. 1849); his son, principe Maffeo Barberini Colonna di Sciarra, Rome (b.
invading Cimbrian Gauls at Vercellae, in Lombardy, an event that took place in 101 B.C
B. Tiepolo: la sua vita e le sue opere.
From the north nave of the former Carmelite church at Boppard-am-Rhein in Rheinland-Pfalz (Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis), near Koblenz, Germany.; Count Hermann Pückler, Muskau (from 1818) ; [ Frédéric Spitzer Austrian, Paris (from at least 1875–sold 1893)] ; his posthumous sale, Chevallier & Mannheim, Paris (April 17–June 16, 1893, no
Vitraux 7, p. 124, ill. in text.
From the high altar of the Cistercian abbey, Lichtenthal, near Baden-Baden, Baden-Württemberg; Dutch or German Private Collection ; [ Sotheby’s, London (July 28, 1939, no. 103) ] ; [ John Hunt, Ireland (1939–sold 1952)]
Oud Holland 52 (1935). p. 29. Huth, Hans.
Signed (lower left): PR; inscribed (verso, lower left) 17/35b.
: 33 1/2 × 72 in. (85.1 × 182.9 cm) a: 32 5/8 × 23 1/2 in. (82.9 × 59.7 cm) b:
Said to be from Idalium, Cyprus (A Descriptive Atlas of the Cesnola Collection…, 1903, vol. 3, pt. 2, pl. LXXVIII, 1) Between 1865 and 1872, excavated in Idalium, Cyprus, by Luigi Palma di Cesnola; afterwards, collection of L
History, Chronology, Technic and Classification to the Sixteenth Century, Vol. 1. p.