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20 results filtered with: Socrates
  • Sixteen portraits of classical poets and thinkers. Drawing, c. 1789.
  • Eight likenesses of Socrates. Two drawings, c. 1789.
  • The wounded Alcibiades. Oil painting formerly attributed to Jean Charles Nicaise Perrin.
  • Sixteen portraits of classical poets and thinkers. Drawing, c. 1789.
  • Socrates. Line engraving by P. Pontius, 1638, after Sir P. P. Rubens.
  • The symposium described in the Symposion of Plato: the drunken Alcibiades enters on the left. Etching by P. Testa, 1648.
  • Xanthippe rides on the back of Socrates with a whip in her hand. Mezzotint by J. Smith after HG.
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau greeted by Socrates, Montaigne and Plutarch on his arrival at the Elysian Fields. Engraving by C.F. Macret after J.M. Moreau, 1782.
  • Philosophers: twenty portraits of ancient thinkers. Engraving by J.W. Cook, 1825.
  • Eight likenesses of Socrates. Two drawings, c. 1789.
  • Stoicism: above, the suicide of Seneca; middle, Zeno and Chrysippus; below, the suicides of Socrates and Cato. Engraving by W. Hole, ca. 1614.
  • Socrates. Line engraving.
  • The wounded Alcibiades. Oil painting formerly attributed to Jean Charles Nicaise Perrin.
  • The wounded Alcibiades. Oil painting formerly attributed to Jean Charles Nicaise Perrin.
  • Socrates. Line engraving by D. Cunego, 1783, after A. R. Mengs after Raphael.
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau greeted by Socrates, Montaigne and Plutarch on his arrival at the Elysian Fields. Engraving by C.F. Macret after J.M. Moreau, 1782.
  • The wounded Alcibiades. Oil painting formerly attributed to Jean Charles Nicaise Perrin.
  • Sixteen portraits of classical poets and thinkers. Drawing, c. 1789.
  • Socrates, preparing to kill himself, urges his grieving friends and students to moderate their grief. Engraving by J.F.P. Peyron, 1790.
  • Socrates. Line engraving.