Otho, Emperor of Rome. Line engraving by A. Sadeler, 16--, after Titian.

  • Titian, approximately 1488-1576.
Date:
[between 1600 and 1699?]
Reference:
730738i
  • Pictures

About this work

Description

Otho, half-length portrait, wearing armour, facing to right, holding staff with both hands

Publication/Creation

[Venice?] : Marcus Sadeler excud, [between 1600 and 1699?]

Physical description

1 print : line engraving ; sheet 34.5 x 26.6 cm

Lettering

M. Sylvius Otho. VIII. Ad regnum ingressus fuit hic ut apertus Othoni Per miseram facta proditione necem: Hic idem fuit extremus regni exitus. Auli Vi sibi cum gladijs adueniente super. Suspector magni et quoniam fuit iste Neronis, Nomine quem voluit saepe referre Nero, Rettulit atque fuga: ac manibus tum denique mortem Persimilem sibi et hic coscijt ipse suis. Aegidius Sadeler S.C.M. sculp. Titianus inventor. Marcus Sadeler excudit. Lettering in four elegiac couplets below the portrait

Creator/production credits

"Titian's series of portraits of the Caesars was painted for the Duke of Mantua, Federico II Gonzaga, between 1536 and 1540. Sold to Charles I of Great Britain in 1628, and acquired for Philip IV of Spain in 1651, they were lost in the fire at the Alcazar, Madrid, in 1734. Their immense popularity spawned many painted, drawn and engraved copies throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. … Engravings made around 1620 by Aegidius Sadeler (c. 1570-1629) also helped to popularise the Caesars across Europe , but it is possible that they were taken not from Titian's originals but from a further set of copies" (Coulter, op. cit., p. 563)

References note

Frances Coulter, 'Drawing Titian's "Caesars": a rediscovered album by Bernardino Campi', The Burlington magazine, July 2019, 161: 562-571

Reference

Wellcome Collection 730738i

Notes

One print in a set of twelve pairs of prints of Roman emperors and empresses

Languages

Where to find it

  • Otho and Albia Terentia

    LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores

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