Great Cameo of France

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The Great Cameo of France (French - Grand Camée de France) is a five-layered sardonyx cameo of c.23 BC. It is 31cm by 26.5cm. It is first attested in the first inventory of the treasure of Sainte Chapelle before 1279. It entered the Cabinet des médailles on the order of Louis XVI on 1st May 1791 (inventory number Babelon 264).

[edit] Iconography

It is the largest ancient cameo which has survived. It is engraved of twenty-four layers, divided up into three levels. The general meaning and propagandistic intent of the work are clear - to assert the continuity and dynastic legitimacy of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. In the upper level are its dead members - Augustus, surrounded by Drusus II and Germanicus flying on Pegasus. In the middle level are the living ones - the emperor Tiberius in the centre, accompanied by his mother Livia and with Nero Drusus (Tiberius's designated heir) standing by him on one side and Drusus III and Caligula on the other. In the lowest level are captive barbarians.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Babelon, Ernest. Catalogue des Camées antiques et modernes de la Bibliothèque Nationale. Paris : E. Leroux, 1897, n° 264.
  • Bibliothèque nationale de France. Trésors de la Bibliothèque nationale de France, I : Mémoires et merveilles. Paris : BNF, 1996, n° 25.
  • Giard, Jean-Baptiste. Le grand camée de France, Paris, 1998

[edit] Exhibitions

  • Exp. 1789, Le Patrimoine libéré : 200 trésors entrés à la Bibliothèque nationale de 1789 à 1799. Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, 1989, n° 83.