
Collection Online as of December 2, 2023
Part of a set. See all set records
Greek marble
Overall: 210 cm (82 11/16 in.)
Gift of the John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust 1928.856
103 Roman
From the Greek word for “flesh-eating,” <em>sarcophagus </em>is now used generically for “coffin.”
The tragic figure Orestes appears three times on the front of this sarcophagus, always wielding a short sword. In the center he stands over the body of his mother Clytemnestra, and at center left over the body of her lover Aegisthus. Orestes has killed them both to avenge their murder of his father Agamemnon, upon his return from years of fighting at Troy. At the far left, three Furies (avenging spirits) rest upon Agamemnon's tomb, while at the far right, Orestes atones for the murders at the Delphian shrine of Apollo, marked by a tripod and rock. On the lid, four reclining women symbolize the seasons, arranged in right-to-left order: Winter, Spring, Summer, Autumn, as indicated by their dress and the contents of their baskets.