#Reginald Arthur - The Death of Cleopatra. 1892
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
The crafty Demon with infernal reveries had tempted him
#vampire aesthetic#vampire#vampires#vampirecore#blood#horror#dark art#demon#mythological art#art compilation#cw blood#William-Adolphe Bouguereau - Dante and Virgil in Hell. 1850#Reginald Arthur - The Death of Cleopatra. 1892#Odd Nerdrum - Untitled#Bernardino Mei - Ghismonda with the Heart of Guiscardo ca. 1650#Master with the Parrot - The Death of Lucretia. ca. 1525-50#Solomon Joseph Solomon - Samson. 1887#Franz von Stuck - Wounded Amazon. 1903#Franz von Stuck - The Kiss of the Sphinx. 1895#Ferdinand Max Bredt - The Sirens#Konstantin Makovsky - Tamara and the Demon. 1889#Unknown artist#Bernardino Mei - Praxedes Preserving the Blood of the Martyrs. 17th cen.
24 notes
·
View notes
Text
“The Death of Cleopatra”, by Reginald Arthur (1892) 🏛️
#classicalart#art#oilpainting#arthistory#oiloncanvas#classicart#realismart#dailypainting#paintings#classicpainting#historyofart#historyart#classicalpainting#paint#painter#museum#paintingdetails#artdaily#artoftheday#paintingaccount#europeanart#paintingoftheday#artdetail#painting#feed#artgalleries#artlovers#drowning#fairy#coupleart
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
The death of Cleopatra Oil on Canvas, 1892, Reginald Arthur (1871–1934).
16 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Death of Queen Cleopatra, August 10th, 30 BC
After visiting her husband, Mark Antony's tomb for the final time, she ordered her bath to be prepared, and having been washed and scented, her hair being carefully plaited around her head, she lay down upon a couch and partook of a sumptous meal.
After this she wrote a short letter to Octavian, asking that she might be buried in the same tomb with Antony; and, this being despatched, she ordered everybody to leave the mausoleum with the exception of Charmion and Iras, as though she did not wish to be disturbed in her afternoon's siesta. The doors were then closed, and the sentries mounted guard on the outside in the usual manner.
When Octavian read the letter which Cleopatra's messenger had brought him, he realised at once what had happened, and hastened to the mausoleum. Changing his mind, however, he sent some of his officers in his place, who, on their arrival, found the sentries apprehensive of nothing. Bursting open the door they ran up the stairs to the upper chamber, and immediately their worst fears were realised. Cleopatra, already dead, lay stretched upon her bed of gold, arrayed in her Grecian robes of state, and decked with all her regal jewels, the royal diadem of the Ptolemies encircling her brow. Upon the floor at her feet Iris was just breathing her last; and Charmion, scarce able to stand, was tottering at the bedside, trying to adjust the Queen's crown. One of the Roman officers exclaimed angrily: "Charmion, was this well done of your lady?" Charmion, supporting herself beside the royal couch, turned her ashen face towards the speaker. " Very well done," she gasped, " and as befitted the descendant of so many Kings "; and with these words she fell dead beside the Queen.
The Roman officers, having despatched messengers to inform Octavian of the tragedy, seem to have instituted an immediate inquiry as to the means by which the deaths had taken place. At first the sentries could offer no information, but at length the fact was elicited that a peasant carrying a basket of figs had been allowed to enter the mausoleum, as it was understood that the fruit was for the Queen's meal. The soldiers declared that they had lifted the leaves with which the fruit was covered and had remarked on the fineness of the figs, whereupon the peasant had laughed and had invited them to take some, which they had refused to do. It was perhaps known that Cleopatra had expressed a preference for death by the bite of an asp, and it was therefore thought that perhaps one of these small snakes had been brought to her concealed under the figs. A search was made for the snake, and one of the soldiers stated that he thought he saw a snake-track leading from the mausoleum over the sand towards the sea. An attendant who had admitted the peasant seems now to have reported that when Cleopatra saw the figs she exclaimed, "So here it is ! " a piece of evidence whichgave some colour to the theory. Others suggested that the asp had been kept at hand for some days in a vase. and that the Queen had, at the end, teased it until she had made it strike at her. An examination of the body showed nothing except two very slight marks upon the arm, which might possibly have been caused by the bite of a snake. On the other hand, it was suggested that the Queen might have carried some form of poison in a hollow hair-comb or other similar article ; and thistheory must have received some support from the fact that there were the three deaths to account for.
Presently Octavian seems to have arrived, and he at once sent for snake-doctors, Psylli, to suck the poison from the wound; but they came too late to save her. Octavian now gave orders that the Queen should be buried with full honours beside Antony, where she had wished to lie.
Whether she got her last wish or not we may never know.
Image: The Death of cleopatra (1892), Reginald Arthur.
#mark antony#cleopatra#cleopatra vii#marcus antonius#roman empire#roman history#roman republic#ancient rome#rome#antony and cleopatra#marc antony#ptolemaic egypt#augustus#egyptian history#egypt
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
the death of cleopatra, 1892 , by reginald arthur
21 notes
·
View notes
Photo
"The Death of Cleopatra," painted in 1892 by Reginald Arthur
1 note
·
View note
Text
Aspis venomous
Antonius slithered away
Bite... we'll reunite
Art Credit: Reginald Arthur, The Death of Cleopatra, 1892
2 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Reginald Arthur - The Death of Cleopatra,1892.
1 note
·
View note
Photo
The Death of Cleopatra - Reginald Arthur, 1892 [800 × 527]
1 note
·
View note
Photo
Cleopatra’s death, Reginald Arthur (1892?)
6 notes
·
View notes