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Meanwhile, Theopista, manages to free from the ship’s captain and, having landed in the same place where Eustace’s troops are stationed, takes refuge near the camp. There, by chance, she overhears two young soldiers who, telling each other about having escaped as children from the onslaught of ferocious beasts, discover that they are brothers. She goes to the general to ask him to go back home and recognises him as her husband. From Eustace’s dramatic account of his children, whom he has seen being attacked by lions and whom he believes to be dead, the woman realises that the two young soldiers are their sons.
The scene, the fourth in the third register, depicts the moment of the encounter between Eustace and Theopista in the camp. In the foreground, husband and wife are caught in the act of conversation. Two soldiers are depicted next to Eustace, while in the tents of the encampment are visible in the background. On the right, it is possible to make out a portion of the entrance of a building, which has been partly lost due to further changes to the tablets after dismemberment, as can be seen from a comparison with the 1890 photographic documentation.
In July 2022, the work, together with the three tablets representing Eustace separated from his wife, Trajan appoints Eustace commander of the army, Eustace in battle, was recognised as authentic by officials of the Ministry of Culture and are purchased by the Directorate-General of Museums. After a stop by the Italian Consulate in Cologne, the paintings were transported to Rome by the Roman Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage and then delivered to the Museo Nazionale d’Abruzzo by the Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage from L’Aquila.
These painted panels were originally part of the wooden doors of a tabernacle that held a statue of Saint Eustace, the patron saint of the parish of Campo di Giove (L’Aquila). Each door was made of two vertical boards with hinges. On the inside, sixteen scenes painted in tempera illustrated key moments in the life of Saint Eustace, from his conversion to his martyrdom, based on the Golden Legend by Jacobus de Voragine. In 1902, the doors were stolen from the church. Later, the panels were cut into individual scenes and sold on the antiques market. Of these, eight belong to the MuNDA, five are part of a private collection, and three are still missing. The sculpture is kept at the Diocese of Sulmona-Valva.
Documents
Soprintendenza Archeologia, Belle Arti e Paesaggio per le province di L’Aquila e Teramo, Archivio Storico, b. Campo di Giove, f. Chiesa di Sant’Eustachio.
Archivio Centrale dello Stato, Ministero della Pubblica Istruzione, Direzione Generale Archeologia e Belle Arti, v. III, s. II, b. 250, f. 12.
Fondazione Federico Zeri, Fondo Zeri, s. Pittura italiana, b. 123. Pittura italiana sec. XIV. Umbria, Abruzzi, f. 6. Anonimi abruzzesi sec. IVX (inv. foto inv. 31156, 31158; 31162; 31161; 31163; 31164; 31159, 31166, 31167, 31168, 31169, 31170, 31165).
Fondazione Federico Zeri, Fondo Fototeca Everett Fahy, s. Arte italiana, b. Abruzzi-Avignon, f. 4 – Master of Castelvecchio Subequo C.
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