Zeus as an eagle, abducting Ganymede 1500–1510 Giovanni Battista Palumba Italian Among Jupiter's many loves was the boy Ganymede, whom the god, in the guise of an eagle, carried off to Olympus to serve as his cupbearer. Palumba's woodcut follows Virgil's description (Aeneid –57) of a cloak embroidered with a depiction of the Trojan prince's abduction while hunting on Mount Ida. As Virgil writes, as the beautiful youth is born aloft in the eagle's talons, his guardians stretch their hands in vain to Heaven and the barking of his dogs rises to the Zeus as an eagle, abducting Ganymed
Zeus as an eagle, abducting Ganymede 1500–1510 Giovanni Battista Palumba Italian Among Jupiter's many loves was the boy Ganymede, whom the god, in the guise of an eagle, carried off to Olympus to serve as his cupbearer. Palumba's woodcut follows Virgil's description (Aeneid –57) of a cloak embroidered with a depiction of the Trojan prince's abduction while hunting on Mount Ida. As Virgil writes, as the beautiful youth is born aloft in the eagle's talons, his guardians stretch their hands in vain to Heaven and the barking of his dogs rises to the Zeus as an eagle, abducting Ganymede 360017
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Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
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