Currently not on view

Relief from a Christian sarcophagus: "The Good Shepherd",

ca. 300 A.D.

Roman
Tetrarchic
y1952-169
Within an architectural structure consisting of a pediment and spirally fluted columns, a young shepherd stands with a sheep slung over his shoulders. The boy is dressed in a belted, long-sleeved tunic, laced boots, and puttees for protection against thorny underbrush. Flanking him are two sheep and two trees, in one of which roosts a bird. The slab probably was cut from the center of a sarcophagus of the strigilated type, in which three reliefs are separated by zones of wavy, fluted ornament. The image of the faithful herder carrying a lost animal has roots in Archaic Greek art, but its widespread adoption in late antiquity as an image of Christ as the Good Shepherd was based on Hellenistic and Roman prototypes in the bucolic tradition.

More Context

Handbook Entry

Information

Title
Relief from a Christian sarcophagus: "The Good Shepherd"
Dates

ca. 300 A.D.

Medium
Marble
Dimensions
36.3 x 30.5 x 6.4 cm (14 5/16 x 12 x 2 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, gift of the Friends of the Princeton University Art Museum
Object Number
y1952-169
Place Made

Europe, Italy

Period
Materials

Purchased by the Museum from Piero Tozzi, Rome, in 1952

Relief from a Sarcophagus with Christ as the Good Shepherd