Four Sistine Ethiopians? The 1481 Ethiopian Embassy and the Frescoes of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2011
abstract:
As proposed by several scholars, among the many contemporary on-lookers depicted on
the walls of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, foreign diplomats are also portrayed: e.g.,
the Portuguese ambassador and the Florentine emissaries. In the present paper it is suggested
that portraits of four of the six members of the momentous Ethiopian delegation -
which was headed by Antonio, chaplain of a?e ?sk?nd?r, and arrived at Rome in the first
half of November 1481 - may be identified in two scenes, i.e. the Temptation of Moses
by Sandro Botticelli and the Crossing of the Red Sea by Biagio d'Antonio Tucci. The
paper focuses on the relationship between the visual representation of these four men -
Antonio being most probably included - and two contemporary literary works: the
treatise by Paride de Grassi on the ambassadors to the Roman curia and the writing by
Andreas Trapezuntius on the Roman political situation at the end of 1481 respectively.
Such topics as the genuflexion of the Ethiopians and the content of Sixtus' IV discussions
with the Ethiopian embassy are dealt with. The importance of the suggested identifications
for the problematic chronology of the frescoes is also discussed, and so a few
other aspects of the two narrative scenes.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Ethiopia; Sistine Chapel; Renaissance; art; embassy
List of contributors:
Bonechi, Marco
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