1505-1515
This tapestry belongs to the Redemption of Man Series and depicts Augustus and the Tiburtine Sybil. The rest of the tapestry panel, which is found in 1956.241, features episodes from the childhood of Christ. This fragment preserves about one third of the original composition; the remaining portion of the original composition is also in the Fogg collection: see 1956.241. A corresponding tapestry (made from the same cartoons) from a different set survives as an integral whole in the Sala Capitular of Palencia Cathedral, and helps to reconstruct the relative placement of the Fogg's two fragments. This fragment would have appeared to the left of 1956.241, and there is a missing strip of weaving (about one foot wide) between them. The jeweled borders now visible on the two fragments mask their fragmentary state, and were probably added in the early twentieth century by the dealer Fernard Schutz when the tapestries were in his possession. The scene is based on Voragine's Golden Legend, which recounts that Emperor Augustus summoned the Tiburtine Sybil to ask whether someone greater than he was to be born in the world. In the sky, Augustus saw a light-filled vision of a Virgin holding a child in her lap, and the sybil replied, "this child is greater than you, and it is he that you must worship." Above the sybil scene appears the circumcision of Christ.
363.2 x 231.1 cm (143 x 91 in.)
Manuel I of Portugal (died 1521), gift; to Baraho Na Fragosa family, Evora Palace, early 16th century. Fernand Schutz, 19th century. [Demotte, Paris]. [French & Company, New York], sold; to Felix M. Warburg, by descent; to Mrs. Felix M. Warburg, gift; to Fogg Art Museum, 1941
Ink on silk
20th centuryAustrianLinen and wool
6th-7th centuryByzantineSilk damask
17th centuryItaliansilk and metal thread on blue silk satin ground, patterned with floating wefts, stamped (main textile)
18th-19th centuryPersianLinen
JapaneseSilk
19th centuryUzbekHandwoven maguey fiber
20th centuryAmericanWool and linen
3rd-4th century CEByzantine