Rudolf Meyer

Aeneas Rescues his Father from Burning Troy

1627
Pen and black ink, gray wash

SEE IT IN PERSON

Not currently on view

In the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York · as of July 2026

View at metmuseum.orgPlan a visit ↗

Discussion

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More by Rudolf Meyer

Four Putti representing the Four ElementsFour Putti representing the Four ElementsThe Denial of St. PeterThe Denial of St. Peter

More like this

Eneas Carrying Anchises, his Father, from the Burning of TroyAntonio Maria I Zanetti (Italian, 1680–1757) — Eneas CarryinThe deluge, figures being pulled from the waterPietro Testa — The deluge, figures being pulled from the watHercules and AntaeusUnknown Italian — Hercules and AntaeusAeneas and AnchisesLudolph Büsinck — Aeneas and AnchisesHercules and AntaeusEugène Delacroix — Hercules and AntaeusHercules and Antaeus (with a ledge Below)Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo — Hercules and Antaeus (with a ledPluto, from The DeitiesHendrick Goltzius — Pluto, from The DeitiesMarine Deity with Attendant Female FigureGiovanni Battista Tiepolo — Marine Deity with Attendant FemaTwo Beggars FightingJacques Bellange — Two Beggars FightingAeneas Carrying His Father, AnchisesLudolph Büsinck — Aeneas Carrying His Father, AnchisesHercules and Antaeus (with a Base Below)Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo — Hercules and Antaeus (with a BasPlate 126: Aeneas and Anchises (AEnea in perentem pietas), from Ovid's 'Metamorphoses'Antonio Tempesta — Plate 126: Aeneas and Anchises (AEnea in