Gerard van Groeningen|Gerard de Jode|Anonymous, Netherlandish, 16th century

The Imprisoned Servant, from The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant, bound in Thesaurus Sacrarum historiarum Veteris et Novi Testamenti

1585
Engraving
39 × 5.3 cm (15.4 × 2.1 in)

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 like this

The Servant Sending his Fellow Servant to Prison, from The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant, bound in Thesaurus Sacrarum historiarum Veteris et Novi TestamentiGerard de Jode|Anonymous, Netherlandish, 16th century|GerardThe King Cancelling his Servant's Debt, from the Parable of the Unmerciful Servant, bound in Thesaurus Sacrarum historiarum Veteris et Novi TestamentiGerard de Jode|Anonymous, Netherlandish, 16th century|GerardThe King Summoning the Servant, from The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant, bound in Thesaurus Sacrarum historiarum Veteris et Novi TestamentiGerard de Jode|Anonymous, Netherlandish, 16th century|GerardVisiting the Prisoners (Visiter les prisonniers)Abraham Bosse|Jean I Leblond — Visiting the Prisoners (VisitVisiting PrisonersAbraham Bosse|Jean I Leblond — Visiting PrisonersAvarice is the Root of all Evil, from Litis Abusus (The Abuses of the Law)Hendrick Goltzius — Avarice is the Root of all Evil, from LiImperiled Litigation, from Litis Abusus (The Abuses of the Law)Hendrick Goltzius — Imperiled Litigation, from Litis Abusus The Mysteries of the Passion:  Christ before PilateJacques Callot (French, 1592–1635) — The Mysteries of the PaClothing Beggars (Vêtir les nus)Abraham Bosse — Clothing Beggars (Vêtir les nus)The Expense of Litigation, from Litis Abusus (The Abuses of the Law)Hendrick Goltzius — The Expense of Litigation, from Litis AbClothing Beggars, from "Acts of Mercy"Abraham Bosse|Jean I Leblond — Clothing Beggars, from "Acts The Sleepless Night of the Litigant, from Litis Abusus (The Abuses of the Law)Hendrick Goltzius — The Sleepless Night of the Litigant, fro