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Home - Collection - Curatorial Departments - Paintings - Selected Works - French Painting

Paintings : French Painting

Antoine Caron (Beauvais, 1521-Paris, 1599)
Massacre under the Triumvirate
1566
© Musée du Louvre/A. Dequier - M. Bard
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Technical information
Antoine Caron (Beauvais, 1521-Paris, 1599)
Massacre under the Triumvirate
1566
Oil on canvas
H. 1.16 m; W. 1.95 m
Gift of the Marquis de Jaucourt, 1939
R.F. 1939-28
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Author(s)
Vincent Pomarède
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Massacre under the Triumvirate

This painting alludes to the massacres that took place during the Wars of Religion: on April 6, 1561, the Constable of Montmorency was joined by Jacques d'Albon de Saint-André and the Duc de Guise in an anti-Protestant triumvirate. The Roman monuments, both ancient and contemporary, and the sculptures, the Apollo Belvedere and the Dioscuri, are clearly inspired by Antoine Lafréry's engravings.
Description

Appian's history given a contemporary twist


During the reign of Marcus Aurelius, the Hellenistic historian Appian wrote a 24-volume history of Rome, of which Books XIII-XVII are devoted to the Civil Wars and the massacres carried out by Mark Antony, Octavius, and Lepidus when they became triumvirs in 43 BC. Here Antoine Caron's choice of subject echoes the massacres perpetrated by Catholics and Protestants alike, with more specific reference to the slaughter of Protestants on April 6, 1561 by the "triumvirate" comprising the Constable of Montmorency, Jacques d'Albon de Saint-André, and the Duc de Guise.

A Rome of the imagination


The Massacre under the Triumvirate draws its vision of ancient Rome from the engraver Lafréry's Speculum romanae magnificentia: Caron himself had not been to Italy. On the right are Emperor Commodus as Hercules, discovered in 1507; the Arch of Constantine, built in 315 AD; Michelangelo's Capitoline Square; and the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius. On the left are the Apollo Belvedere; the triumphal arch of Septimus Severus, dating from 203 AD; and Trajan's Column. The centre is occupied by the Colosseum, opened by Domitian in 80 AD; and the Pantheon. In the far background stand the triumphal arch of Titus on the right, and the Castel Sant'Angelo and Ponte Sant'Angelo on the left.

A gift from the Marquis de Jaucourt


The Massacre under the Triumvirate was given to the Louvre in 1939 by the Marquis de Jaucourt. Originally a single work, it was divided, at an unknown date, into three separate panels.

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