Location within collection
Palazzo Altemps, Inv. 8574
Description
The sarcophagus was discovered in 1621 and named after its first owner, Ludovico Ludovisi. A monumental sarcophagus, carved from one single block of Proconnesian marble, it is one of the finest examples of third-century relief work; these high reliefs were characterised by the way in which many elements of the composition are cut completely free of the background, and by the technique of deep drilling. The main relief is found on the front of the sarcophagus, on which a large battle scene is taking place between Roman soldiers and ‘Barbarians’. The lid of the sarcophagus, which is today in Mainz, Germany, is decorated with the bust of a female figure and a central plaque which although today is anepigraphic, likely once contained the painted epitaph of the deceased.