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The Battle of Alexander at Issus

The Battle of Alexander at Issus (German: Alexanderschlacht) is a 1529 oil painting by the German artist Albrecht Altdorfer (c. 1480–1538), a pioneer of landscape art and a founding member of the Danube school. The painting portrays the 333 BC Battle of Issus, in which Alexander the Great secured a decisive victory over Darius III of Persia and gained crucial leverage in his campaign against the Persian Empire. The painting is widely regarded as Altdorfer's masterpiece, and is one of the most famous examples of the type of Renaissance landscape painting known as the world landscape, which here reaches an unprecedented grandeur.

The Battle of Alexander at Issus
ArtistAlbrecht Altdorfer
Year1529
Mediumoil painting on panel
Dimensions158.4 cm × 120.3 cm (62.4 in × 47.4 in)
LocationAlte Pinakothek, Munich, Germany

Duke William IV of Bavaria commissioned The Battle of Alexander at Issus in 1528 as part of a set of historical pieces that was to hang in his Munich residence. Modern commentators suggest that the painting, through its abundant use of anachronism, was intended to liken Alexander's heroic victory at Issus to the contemporary European conflict with the Ottoman Empire. In particular, the defeat of Suleiman the Magnificent at the siege of Vienna may have been an inspiration for Altdorfer. A religious undercurrent is detectable, especially in the extraordinary sky; this was probably inspired by the prophecies of Daniel and contemporary concern within the Church about an impending apocalypse. The Battle of Alexander at Issus and four others that were part of William's initial set are in the Alte Pinakothek art museum in Munich.

Subject matter

 
Detail of Alexander the Great from the Alexander Mosaic c. 100 BC

Alexander III of Macedon (356–323 BC), best known as Alexander the Great, was an Ancient King of Macedon who reigned from 336 BC until his death. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest military tacticians and strategists in history,[1] and is presumed undefeated in battle.[2][3] Renowned for his military leadership and charisma, he always led his armies personally and took to the front ranks of battle.[4][5] By conquering the Persian Empire and unifying Greece, Egypt and Babylon, he forged the largest empire of the ancient world[6] and effected the spread of Hellenism throughout Europe and Northern Africa.[7]

Alexander embarked on his expedition to conquer the Persian Empire in the spring of 334 BC,[8] having pacified the warring Greek states and consolidated his military might.[9] During the first months of the Macedonian passage into Persian Asia Minor, Darius III – king of Persia – largely ignored the presence of Alexander's 40,000 men. The Battle of the Granicus, fought in May,[8] was Persia's first major effort to confront the invaders, but resulted in an easy victory for Alexander. Over the next year, Alexander took most of western and coastal Asia Minor by forcing the capitulation of the satrapies in his path.[10] He continued inland, travelling northeast through Phrygia before turning southeast toward Cilicia. After passing the Cilician Gates in October, Alexander was delayed by fever in Tarsus.[11] Darius meanwhile mustered an army of up to 100,000 (some ancient sources posit exaggerated figures of over 600,000)[12] and personally directed it over the eastern slopes of the Amanus Mountains. In early November, as Alexander proceeded about the Gulf of Issus from Mallus via Issus, the two armies inadvertently passed one another on opposite sides of the mountains.[13] This was decidedly to Darius' advantage: now at the rear of Alexander, he was able to prevent retreat and block the supply lines Alexander had established at Issus.[14] It was not until Alexander had encamped at Myriandrus, a seaport on the southeastern shores of the Gulf of İskenderun, that he learned of the Persian position. He immediately retraced his route to the Pinarus River, just south of Issus, to find Darius' force assembled along the northern bank.[13] The Battle of Issus ensued.

 
The initial dispositions at the Battle of Issus. The Pinarus River separates the belligerents, and Issus is 7 miles (11 km) to the north. Cavalry is concentrated on the shores of the Gulf of İskenderun (or Gulf of Issus) on both sides. Alexander devotes himself to a right approach with his Companion cavalry, having unseated the Persian foothill defence.

Darius' initial response was defensive: he immediately stockaded the river bank with stakes to impede the enemy's crossing. A core vanguard of traitorous Greek mercenaries and Persian royal guard was established; as was usual for Persian kings, Darius positioned himself in the centre of this vanguard, in order that he might effectively dispatch commands to any part of his large army.[15] A group of Persian light infantry was soon sent to the foothills, as it was suspected that Alexander would make an approach from the right, away from the coast. A mass of cavalry commanded by Nabarsanes occupied the Persian right.[16]

Alexander made a cautious and slow advance, intending to base his strategy on the structure of the Persian force. He led a flank of his Companion cavalry on the right, while the Thessalian cavalry were dispatched to the left, as a counter to Nabarsanes' mounted unit.[17] Aware of the importance of the foothills to his right, Alexander sent a band of light infantry, archers, and cavalry to displace the defence Darius had stationed there. The enterprise was successful – those Persians not killed were forced to seek refuge higher in the mountains.[17][18]

When within missile range of the enemy, Alexander gave the order to charge.[17][19] He spearheaded the assault of his heavily armed Companion cavalry, who quickly made deep cuts into the Persian left flank. The Macedonian left wing, commanded by Parmenion,[18] was meanwhile driven back by Nabarsanes' large cavalry. The Macedonians' central phalanx crossed the river and clashed with the renegade Greek mercenaries who fronted Darius' vanguard. As the Companion cavalry pushed further into the Persian left, the danger arose that Darius would exploit the gap that had formed between Alexander and the rest of his army. When he was satisfied that the left wing was crippled and no longer a threat, Alexander remedied the situation by moving the Companions to assault the Persian centre in the flank. Unable to handle the added pressure, the Persian vanguard was forced to withdraw from the river bank, allowing the Macedonian phalanx to continue their advance and lifting the pressure on Parmenion's left wing.[19]

Upon realising that the onslaught of Alexander's Companion cavalry was unstoppable, Darius and his army fled. Many were killed in the rush, trampled by those who fled with them or collapsed with their horses.[20] Some escaped to regions as remote as Egypt, and others reunited with Darius in the north.[21] The onset of darkness ended the chase after approximately 20 km (12 mi); Alexander then recalled his army and set about burying the dead. Darius' family were left behind in the Persian camp; it is reported that Alexander treated them well and reassured them of Darius' safety.[21][22] Darius' royal chariot was found discarded in a ditch, as were his bow and shield.[21]

Ancient sources present disparate casualty figures for the Battle of Issus. Plutarch and Diodorus Siculus approximate 100,000 Persian deaths, in contrast with the 450 Macedonian deaths reported by Quintus Curtius Rufus.[23] In any case, it is probable that more Persians were killed as they fled than in battle;[24] Ptolemy I, who served with Alexander during the battle, recounts how the Macedonians crossed a ravine on the bodies of their enemies during the pursuit.[23][25]

The Macedonian conquest of Persia continued until 330 BC, when Darius was killed and Alexander took his title as king.[26] Alexander died in 323 BC, having recently returned from campaigning in the Indian subcontinent. The cause of death remains a subject of debate.[27][28]

Background

Previous work

 
Saint George and the Dragon (1510)

Albrecht Altdorfer is regarded as one of the founders of Western landscape art.[29] He was a painter, etcher, architect, and engraver, and the leader of the Danube school of German art. As evidenced by such paintings as Saint George and the Dragon (1510) and Allegory (1531), much of Altdorfer's work is characterised by an attachment to sprawling landscapes that dwarf the figures within them;[30] The Battle of Alexander at Issus epitomises this facet of his style. With reference to St George and the Dragon in particular, art historian Mark W. Roskill comments that "The accessory material of landscape [in Altdorfer's work] is played with and ornamentally elaborated so that it reverberates with the sense of a sequestered and inhospitable environment".[31] Inspired by his travels around the Austrian Alps and the Danube River,[32] Altdorfer painted a number of landscapes that contain no figures at all, including Landscape with a Footbridge (c. 1516) and Danube Landscape near Regensburg (c. 1522–25). These were the first "pure" landscapes since antiquity.[33] Most of Altdorfer's landscapes were made with a vertical format, in contrast with the modern conception of the genre. The horizontal landscape was an innovation of Altdorfer's Flemish contemporary Joachim Patinir and his followers.[34]

 
A miniature from Triumphal Procession (1512–1516)

Altdorfer also produced a great deal of religious artwork, in reflection of his devout Catholicism. His most frequent subjects were the Virgin Mary and the life and crucifixion of Christ. As in The Battle of Alexander at Issus, these paintings often feature settings of great majesty and use the sky to convey symbolic meaning. This meaning is not uniform throughout Altdorfer's corpus – for example, the visage of the setting sun connotes loss and tragedy in Agony in the Garden, but serves as "the emblem of power and glory" in The Battle of Alexander at Issus.[35]

Larry Silver of The Art Bulletin explains that The Battle of Alexander at Issus is both similar to and in direct contrast with Altdorfer's previous work: "Instead of the peaceful landscape of retreat for Christian events or holy figures, this panel offers just the opposite: a battleground for one of ancient history's principal epoch-making encounters ... Yet despite its global or cosmic dimensions, the Battle of Issus still looks like Altdorfer's earlier, contemplative liminal landscapes of retreat, complete with craggy peaks, bodies of water, and distant castles."[36]

Although the Battle of Alexander is atypical of Altdorfer in its size and in that it depicts war, his Triumphal Procession – a 1512–16 illuminated manuscript commissioned by Maximilian I of the Holy Roman Empire – has been described as a conceptual antecedent.[37] The Procession was produced in parallel with the Triumph of Maximilian, a series of 137 woodcuts collaboratively executed by Altdorfer, Hans Springinklee, Albrecht Dürer, Leonhard Beck and Hans Schäufelein.[38]

Influences and commission

 
Matthias Grünewald's The Virgin and Child with the Heavenly Host (c. 1515)

Altdorfer's most significant contemporary influence was Matthias Grünewald (c. 1470–1528). Art historian Horst W. Janson remarked that their paintings "show the same 'unruly' imagination".[39] Elements of The Battle of Alexander at Issus – particularly the sky – have been compared to Grünewald's Heavenly Host above the Virgin and Child, which forms part of his masterpiece, the Isenheim Altarpiece. Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472–1553), also associated with the Danube school, was another important influence for Altdorfer. According to Roskill, works by Cranach from about 1500 "give a prominent role to landscape settings, using them as mood-enhancing backgrounds for portraits, and for images of hermits and visionary saints", and seem to play a "preparatory role" for the onset of pure landscape.[40] Altdorfer owed much of his style, particularly in his religious artwork, to Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528);[41] Larry Silver writes that Altdorfer's "use of convincing German landscapes in combination with celestial phenomena for his religious narrative" is "firmly tied" to a tradition "modeled by Albrecht Dürer."[42]

William IV, Duke of Bavaria commissioned The Battle of Alexander at Issus in 1528.[43] Altdorfer was approximately 50 at the time, and was living in the Free Imperial City of Regensburg.[44] As a result of over a decade of involvement with the Regensburg city council, Altdorfer was offered the position of Burgomaster on 18 September 1528. He declined; the council annals reported his reasoning as such: "He much desires to execute a special work in Bavaria for my Serene Highness and gracious Lord, Duke [William]."[44] William probably wanted the painting for his newly built summer Lusthaus ("pleasure house") in the grounds of his palace in Munich, approximately 60 miles (97 km) south of Regensburg.[43][44][45] There, it was to hang alongside seven other paintings with a similar format and subject matter, including Ludwig Refinger's The Matyrdom of Marcus Curtius, Melchior Feselen's The Siege of Alesia by Caesar, and the painting of Battle of Cannae by Hans Burgkmair (1473–1531).[46][47] Another eight, each portraying a famous woman from history, were later added to the set, probably at the behest of the Duke's wife, Jacobaea of Baden.[47] Altdorfer's Susanna and the Elders (1526) was among these.[48]

Earlier depictions

 
The Alexander Mosaic, as seen in the Naples National Archaeological Museum

Earlier depictions of the Battle of Issus are few. Battle of Issus, a fresco by Philoxenus of Eretria, is probably the first such. It was painted sometime around 310 BC for Cassander (c. 350–297 BC), who was one of Alexander the Great's successors.[49] Alexander and Darius – each within a lance's length of the other – are pictured among a wild fray of mounted and downed soldiers. While Alexander maintains an aura of unshaken confidence, fear is etched in Darius' face, and his charioteer has already turned to rein his horses and escape.[49] Roman author and natural philosopher Pliny the Elder claimed that Philoxenus' portrayal of the battle was "inferior to none".[49] Some modern critics posit that Battle of Issus might not have been the work of Philoxenus, but of Helena of Egypt. One of the few named women painters who might have worked in Ancient Greece,[50][51] she was reputed to have produced a painting of the battle of Issus which hung in the Temple of Peace during the time of Vespasian.[52]

The Alexander Mosaic, a floor mosaic dating from c. 100 BC, is believed to be a "reasonably faithful" copy of Battle of Issus,[49] though an alternative view holds it might instead be a copy of a work painted by Apelles of Kos,[53] who produced several portraits of Alexander the Great.[54] It measures 5.82 m × 3.13 m (19 ft 1 in × 10 ft 3 in), and consists of approximately 1.5 million tesserae (coloured tiles), each about 3 mm (0.12 in) square. The mosaicist is unknown. Since the mosaic was not rediscovered until 1831, during excavations of Pompeii's House of the Faun,[55] Altdorfer could never have seen it. It was later moved to the Naples National Archaeological Museum in Naples, Italy, where it currently resides.

Painting

Description

 
Detail of Darius III of Persia in flight

The Battle of Alexander at Issus is painted on a limewood panel measuring 158.4 cm × 120.3 cm (62.4 in × 47.4 in),[56] and portrays the moment of Alexander the Great's victory. The vertical format was dictated by the space available in the room for which the painting was commissioned – each in William's set of eight was made to be the same size. At an unknown date, the panel was cut down on all sides, particularly at the top, so the sky was originally larger and the moon further from the corner of the scene.[57] The scene is approached from an impossible viewpoint – at first only feet from the fray, the perspective gradually ascends to encompass the seas and continents in the background and eventually the curvature of the Earth itself.[58][59]

Thousands of horse and foot soldiers immersed in a sea of spears and lances populate the foreground. The two armies are distinguished by their dress, anachronistic though it is: whereas Alexander's men clad themselves and their horses in full suits of heavy armour, many of Darius' wear turbans and ride naked mounts.[60] The bodies of the many fallen soldiers lie underfoot. A front of Macedonian warriors in the centre pushes against the crumbling enemy force, who flee the battlefield on the far left. The Persian king joins his army on his chariot of three horses, and is narrowly pursued by Alexander and his uniformly attired Companion cavalry.[47] The tract of soldiers continues down the gently sloped battlefield to the campsite and cityscape by the water, gravitating toward the mountainous rise at the scene's centre.

Beyond is the Mediterranean Sea and the island of Cyprus.[61] Here, a transition in hue is made, from the browns that prevail in the lower half of the painting to the aquas that saturate the upper half. The Nile River meanders in the far distance, emptying its seven arms into the Mediterranean at the Nile Delta.[61] South of Cyprus is the Sinai Peninsula, which forms a land bridge between Africa and Southwest Asia. The Red Sea lies beyond,[61] eventually merging – as the mountain ranges to its left and right do – with the curved horizon.

 
Detail of the sun and the Nile River

A fierce sky caught in the dichotomy between the setting sun and the crescent moon dominates more than a third of the painting.[57] The rain-heavy clouds swirling ominously around each celestial entity are separated by a gulf of calmness, intensifying the contrast and infusing the heavens with an unearthly glow.[62] Light from the sky spills onto the landscape: while the western continent and the Nile are bathed in the sun's light, the east and the Tower of Babel are cloaked in shadow.

The painting's subject is explained in the tablet suspended from the heavens. The wording, probably supplied by William's court historian Johannes Aventinus,[63] was originally in German but was later replaced by a Latin inscription. It translates:

Alexander the Great defeating the last Darius, after 100,000 infantry and more than 10,000 cavalrymen had been killed amongst the ranks of the Persians. Whilst King Darius was able to flee with no more than 1,000 horsemen, his mother, wife, and children were taken prisoner.

No date is provided for the battle alongside these casualty figures. The lower left-hand corner features Altdorfer's monogram – an 'A' within an 'A' – and the lower edge of the tablet is inscribed with "ALBRECHT ALTORFER ZU REGENSPVRG FECIT" ("Albrecht Altdorfer from Regensburg made [this]"). Tiny inscriptions on their chariot and harness identify Darius and Alexander, respectively.[64] Each army bears a banner that reports both its total strength and its future casualties.[43][60]

Analysis and interpretation

 
Detail of soldiers from both armies. Reinhart Koselleck comments that the Persians resemble the 16th-century Turks "from their feet to their turbans."
 
Detail of women on the battlefield

Anachronism is a major component of The Battle of Alexander at Issus. By dressing Alexander's men in 16th-century steel armour and Darius' men in Turkish battle dress, Altdorfer draws deliberate parallels between the Macedonian campaign and the contemporary European–Ottoman conflict.[44][59][64] In 1529 – the year of the painting's commissioning – the Ottoman forces under Suleiman the Magnificent laid siege to the Austrian city of Vienna,[64] then also the capital of the Holy Roman Empire and called 'the golden apple' by the Sultans. Although far inferior in number, the Austrian, German, Czech, and Spanish soldiers marshalled to defend Vienna were able to force the enemy into a retreat and stall the Ottoman advance on central Europe. It is probable the painting's underlying allegory was inspired by the siege of Vienna, given its similarities to Alexander's victory at Issus. Some critics go further, suggesting that the inclusion of anachronism may have been an element of Altdorfer's commission.[47][59]

In his Futures Past: On the Semantics of Historical Time, historian Reinhart Koselleck discusses Altdorfer's representation of time in a more philosophical light. After differentiating between the superficial anachronism found in the casualty figures on the army banners and the deeper anachronism ingrained in the painting's contemporary context, he posits that the latter type is less a superimposition of one historical event over another and more an acknowledgement of the recursive nature of history. With reference to Koselleck, Kathleen Davis argues: "... for [Altdorfer], 4th-century Persians look like 16th-century Turks not because he does not know the difference, but because the difference does not matter ... The Alexanderschlacht, in other words, exemplifies a premodern, untemporalized sense of time and a lack of historical consciousness ... Altdorfer's historical overlays evince an eschatological vision of history, evidence that the 16th century (and by degrees also the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries) remained locked in a static, constant temporality that proleptically saturates the future as always a repetition of the same ... In such a system there can be no event as such: anticipation and arrival are together sucked into the black hole of sacred history, which is not temporalized because its time is essentially undifferentiated ..."[65]

 
Detail of the fictitious mountain in the painting's centre
 
Detail of the oversized island of Cyprus and what is probably the city of Tarsus

Featured alongside the anachronism in The Battle of Alexander at Issus is a genuine lack of historicity. Altdorfer demonstrates minimal hesitance in neglecting the painting's historical integrity for the sake of its heroic style, in spite of the pains he took to research the battle. That the Persian army was up to twice the size of the Macedonian army is not clear, and the relative positioning of the soldiers as reported by ancient sources has been disregarded. According to art critic Rose-Marie Hagen, "The artist was faithful to the historical truth only when it suited him, when historical facts were compatible with the demands of his composition."[60] Hagen also notes the placement of women on the battlefield, attributing it to Altdorfer's "passion for invention",[60] since the wife of Darius, his mother and his daughters were waiting for Darius back at the camp, not in the thick of battle.[66] True to form, however, Altdorfer made the aristocratic ladies "look like German courtly ladies, dressed for a hunting party" in their feathered toques:[60]

Altdorfer's primary point of reference in his research was probably Hartmann Schedel's Nuremberg Chronicle (Schedelsche Weltchronik), an illustrated world history published in Nuremberg in 1493. Schedel was a physician, humanist, historian and cartographer, and his Chronicle was one of the first books produced on the printing press. With a heavy reliance on the Bible, it recounts the seven ages of human history,[67] from Creation to the birth of Christ and ending with the Apocalypse.[68] Altdorfer's statistics for the battle of Issus mirror those of Schedel. Furthermore, the errors in Schedel's maps of the Mediterranean and Northern Africa are also present in The Battle of Alexander at Issus: the island of Cyprus is noticeably oversized, and both the mountain rise in the painting's centre and the range adjacent to the Nile do not exist.[61] Since the Chronicle describes Alexander's victory over the Persians in terms of its proximity to Tarsus and omits mention of Issus, it is likely that the cityscape by the sea is intended to be the former city rather than the latter. Issus in the 16th century was minor and relatively unknown, whereas Tarsus was renowned for its having been a major centre of learning and philosophy in Roman times. Tarsus was also said to be the birthplace of the Apostle Paul, which may explain the presence of the church towers in Altdorfer's portrayal.[61] Another source may have been the writings of Quintus Curtius Rufus, a 1st-century Roman historian who presents inflated figures for the number of killed and taken prisoner and the sizes of the armies.[60]

The sky bears overt metaphorical significance and is the centrepiece of the painting's symbolism. Alexander, identified by the Egyptians and others as a god of the sun, finds his victory in the sun's rays; and the Persians are routed into the darkness beneath the crescent moon, a symbol of the Near East.[69] Considered in terms of the painting's contemporary context, the sun's triumph over the moon represents Christendom's victory over the Islamism of the Ottomans.[35] Eschatological meaning, probably inspired by prophecies in the Book of Daniel, is imbued in the heavenly setting. In particular, Daniel 7 predicts the rise and fall of four kingdoms before the Second Coming; these were thought to be Babylon, Persia, Greece, and Rome at the time of the painting's creation. Altdorfer saw the Battle of Issus as a principal indicator of the transition of power from Persia to Greece, and thus as an event of cosmic significance.[35][57] The battle also marked a progression toward the end of the world – an important theological concern in the 16th century, given that the last traces of Rome were diminishing with the papacy. As a member of the Regensburg council and a practising Catholic, Altdorfer frequently interacted with the Church and was surely aware of this trend of eschatological thought. Schedel, too, had calculated that the final age of the seven he identified was nigh.[67] It may therefore be inferred that the sky's expression of the momentous event at Issus was intended to be of contemporary relevance as well.[57]

Legacy

 
Susannah and the Elders (1526), the only other painting by Altdorfer in the Alte Pinakothek

The Battle of Alexander at Issus remained part of the royal collection of the Dukes of Bavaria for centuries. By the late 18th century, it was regularly featured in public galleries at the Schleissheim Palace. The painting was one of 72 taken to Paris in 1800 by the invading armies of Napoleon I (1769–1821),[70] who was a noted admirer of Alexander the Great.[60][71] The Louvre held it until 1804, when Napoleon declared himself Emperor of France and took it for his own use. When the Prussians captured the Château de Saint-Cloud in 1814 as part of the War of the Sixth Coalition, they supposedly found the painting hanging in Napoleon's bathroom.[72]

The Battle of Alexander at Issus and 26 others taken in the 1800 invasion were subsequently restored to the King of Bavaria in 1815.[70] Five of the paintings in William IV's original set of eight – including The Battle of Alexander at Issus – later passed from the royal collection to the Alte Pinakothek art museum in Munich, Germany, where they remain; the other three are in the National Museum of Fine Arts in Stockholm, having been looted by the Swedish army in the Thirty Years War of 1618–1648.[73] Susannah and the Elders is the only other work by Altdorfer in the Alte Pinakothek.

 
Horatius Cocles Stopping King Porsenna's Army outside Rome, by Ludwig Refinger. From the same historical cycle that The Battle of Alexander at Issus originally belonged to.

Contextually, the painting forms part of the Northern Renaissance, a resurgence of classical humanism and culture in northern Europe during the 15th and 16th centuries. The Renaissance induced a new kind of social individualism which Altdorfer expressed through the heroic emphasis on Alexander and Darius, and which is reflected in the specifics of the painting's commission and by the subjects of its companion pieces: "During the Renaissance people no longer saw themselves solely as members of a social group, as the citizens of a town, or as sinners before God in whose eyes all were equal. They had become aware of the unique qualities that distinguished one person from another. Unlike the Middle Ages, the Renaissance celebrated the individual. Altdorfer may have painted row after row of apparently identical warriors, but the spectators themselves would identify with Alexander and Darius, figures who had names, whose significance was indicated by the cord which hung down from the tablet above them."[47]

Altdorfer was not only a pioneer of landscape, but also a practitioner of early incarnations of the Romanticism and expressionism which impacted the arts so greatly in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Kenneth Clark writes of Altdorfer and contemporaries Grünewald and Bosch, "They are what we now call 'expressionist' artists, a term which is not as worthless as it sounds, because, in fact, the symbols of expressionism are remarkably consistent, and we find in the work of these early 16th-century landscape painters not only the same spirit but the same shapes and iconographical motives which recur in the work of such recent expressionists as van Gogh, Max Ernst, Graham Sutherland and Walt Disney."[74] According to art critic Pia F. Cuneo, "Altdorfer's construction of landscape on a cosmic scale" in the Battle of Alexander at Issus, and his "spiritual and aesthetic affinities with Romanticism and Modern art (in particular, German Expressionism)", "have been especially singled out for praise".[75]

The Battle of Alexander at Issus is typically considered to be Altdorfer's masterpiece. Cuneo states that the painting is usually "considered in splendid isolation from its fifteen other companion pieces, based on the assumption that it either metonymically stands in for the entire cycle, or that its perceived aesthetic predominance merits exclusive focus."[75] German writer Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel (1772–1829) was one of many who saw the painting in the Louvre and marvelled, calling it a "small painted Iliad".[72] Reinhart Koselleck comments that Altdorfer's depiction of the thousands of soldiers was executed with "a mastery previously unknown",[65] and Kathleen Davis describes the painting as "epochal in every sense".[65]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Corvisier; Childs, p. 21
  2. ^ Heckel; Yardley, p. 299
  3. ^ Polelle, p. 75
  4. ^ Bryant, p. 280
  5. ^ Neilburg, p. 10
  6. ^ Sacks; Murray; Bunson, p. 14
  7. ^ Russell, pp. 211–12
  8. ^ a b Smith, p. 970
  9. ^ Bosworth, pp. 28–35
  10. ^ Hamilton, p. 63
  11. ^ Warry, p. 31
  12. ^ Romm; Mensch, p. 48
  13. ^ a b Buckley, p. 503
  14. ^ Romm; Mensch, pp. 48–49
  15. ^ Warry, p. 33
  16. ^ Savill, p. 33
  17. ^ a b c Savill, p. 34
  18. ^ a b Warry, p. 34
  19. ^ a b Warry, p. 35
  20. ^ Warry, p. 36
  21. ^ a b c Savill, p. 35
  22. ^ Warry, pp. 37–38
  23. ^ a b De Sélincourt, p. 121
  24. ^ Warry, p. 37
  25. ^ Romm; Mensch, p. 54
  26. ^ Sacks; Murray; Bunson, p. 17
  27. ^ Heckel, p. 84
  28. ^ "Alexander the Great and West Nile Virus Encephalitis (Replies)". CDC. 2004.
  29. ^ Keane, p. 165
  30. ^ Clark, p. 38
  31. ^ Roskill, p. 65
  32. ^ Earls, p. 81
  33. ^ Wood, p. 9
  34. ^ Wood, p. 47
  35. ^ a b c Silver, pp. 204–205
  36. ^ Silver, p. 204
  37. ^ Wood, pp. 23, 199–202
  38. ^ Cuneo, p. 99
  39. ^ Janson, p. 393
  40. ^ Roskill, pp. 64–65
  41. ^ Wood, pp. 70–73
  42. ^ Silver, p. 209
  43. ^ a b c Davis, p. 91
  44. ^ a b c d Hagen; Hagen, p. 128
  45. ^ Alte Pinakotek, p. 28
  46. ^ Ansell, p. 4
  47. ^ a b c d e Hagen; Hagen, p. 131
  48. ^ Clanton, p. 142
  49. ^ a b c d Kleiner 2009, p. 142
  50. ^ Stokstad; Oppenheimer; Addiss, p. 134
  51. ^ Summers, p. 41
  52. ^ Ptolemy Hephaestion New History (codex 190) Bibliotheca Photius
  53. ^ Kinzl, p. 476
  54. ^ Campbell, p. 51
  55. ^ McKay, p. 144
  56. ^ . Alte Pinakothek. Archived from the original on 4 June 2010. Retrieved 10 November 2009.
  57. ^ a b c d Hagen; Hagen, p. 133
  58. ^ Wood, p. 201
  59. ^ a b c Kleiner 2008, p. 510
  60. ^ a b c d e f g Hagen; Hagen, p. 130
  61. ^ a b c d e Hagen; Hagen, p. 132
  62. ^ Clark, p. 41
  63. ^ Wood, pp. 21–22
  64. ^ a b c Janson; Janson, p. 544
  65. ^ a b c Davis, pp. 91–92
  66. ^ Quintus Curtius Rufus, III.12.24
  67. ^ a b Oman, p. 116
  68. ^ Hanawalt; Kobialka, p. 224
  69. ^ Kleiner 2009, p. 511
  70. ^ a b Alte Pinakothek, pp. 24–29
  71. ^ Clark, p. 40
  72. ^ a b Wood, p. 22
  73. ^ Svanberg, pp. 70–86
  74. ^ Clark, p. 36
  75. ^ a b Cuneo, p. 186

References

  • Alte Pinakothek. Summary Catalogue. Edition Lipp, 1986. ISBN 3-87490-701-5.
  • Ansell, Florence J. (2008). The Art of the Munich Galleries. Read Books. ISBN 978-1-4437-5543-6.
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battle, alexander, issus, german, alexanderschlacht, 1529, painting, german, artist, albrecht, altdorfer, 1480, 1538, pioneer, landscape, founding, member, danube, school, painting, portrays, battle, issus, which, alexander, great, secured, decisive, victory, . The Battle of Alexander at Issus German Alexanderschlacht is a 1529 oil painting by the German artist Albrecht Altdorfer c 1480 1538 a pioneer of landscape art and a founding member of the Danube school The painting portrays the 333 BC Battle of Issus in which Alexander the Great secured a decisive victory over Darius III of Persia and gained crucial leverage in his campaign against the Persian Empire The painting is widely regarded as Altdorfer s masterpiece and is one of the most famous examples of the type of Renaissance landscape painting known as the world landscape which here reaches an unprecedented grandeur The Battle of Alexander at IssusArtistAlbrecht AltdorferYear1529Mediumoil painting on panelDimensions158 4 cm 120 3 cm 62 4 in 47 4 in LocationAlte Pinakothek Munich GermanyDuke William IV of Bavaria commissioned The Battle of Alexander at Issus in 1528 as part of a set of historical pieces that was to hang in his Munich residence Modern commentators suggest that the painting through its abundant use of anachronism was intended to liken Alexander s heroic victory at Issus to the contemporary European conflict with the Ottoman Empire In particular the defeat of Suleiman the Magnificent at the siege of Vienna may have been an inspiration for Altdorfer A religious undercurrent is detectable especially in the extraordinary sky this was probably inspired by the prophecies of Daniel and contemporary concern within the Church about an impending apocalypse The Battle of Alexander at Issus and four others that were part of William s initial set are in the Alte Pinakothek art museum in Munich Contents 1 Subject matter 2 Background 2 1 Previous work 2 2 Influences and commission 2 3 Earlier depictions 3 Painting 3 1 Description 3 2 Analysis and interpretation 4 Legacy 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksSubject matter EditMain article Battle of Issus Detail of Alexander the Great from the Alexander Mosaic c 100 BC Alexander III of Macedon 356 323 BC best known as Alexander the Great was an Ancient King of Macedon who reigned from 336 BC until his death He is widely regarded as one of the greatest military tacticians and strategists in history 1 and is presumed undefeated in battle 2 3 Renowned for his military leadership and charisma he always led his armies personally and took to the front ranks of battle 4 5 By conquering the Persian Empire and unifying Greece Egypt and Babylon he forged the largest empire of the ancient world 6 and effected the spread of Hellenism throughout Europe and Northern Africa 7 Alexander embarked on his expedition to conquer the Persian Empire in the spring of 334 BC 8 having pacified the warring Greek states and consolidated his military might 9 During the first months of the Macedonian passage into Persian Asia Minor Darius III king of Persia largely ignored the presence of Alexander s 40 000 men The Battle of the Granicus fought in May 8 was Persia s first major effort to confront the invaders but resulted in an easy victory for Alexander Over the next year Alexander took most of western and coastal Asia Minor by forcing the capitulation of the satrapies in his path 10 He continued inland travelling northeast through Phrygia before turning southeast toward Cilicia After passing the Cilician Gates in October Alexander was delayed by fever in Tarsus 11 Darius meanwhile mustered an army of up to 100 000 some ancient sources posit exaggerated figures of over 600 000 12 and personally directed it over the eastern slopes of the Amanus Mountains In early November as Alexander proceeded about the Gulf of Issus from Mallus via Issus the two armies inadvertently passed one another on opposite sides of the mountains 13 This was decidedly to Darius advantage now at the rear of Alexander he was able to prevent retreat and block the supply lines Alexander had established at Issus 14 It was not until Alexander had encamped at Myriandrus a seaport on the southeastern shores of the Gulf of Iskenderun that he learned of the Persian position He immediately retraced his route to the Pinarus River just south of Issus to find Darius force assembled along the northern bank 13 The Battle of Issus ensued The initial dispositions at the Battle of Issus The Pinarus River separates the belligerents and Issus is 7 miles 11 km to the north Cavalry is concentrated on the shores of the Gulf of Iskenderun or Gulf of Issus on both sides Alexander devotes himself to a right approach with his Companion cavalry having unseated the Persian foothill defence Darius initial response was defensive he immediately stockaded the river bank with stakes to impede the enemy s crossing A core vanguard of traitorous Greek mercenaries and Persian royal guard was established as was usual for Persian kings Darius positioned himself in the centre of this vanguard in order that he might effectively dispatch commands to any part of his large army 15 A group of Persian light infantry was soon sent to the foothills as it was suspected that Alexander would make an approach from the right away from the coast A mass of cavalry commanded by Nabarsanes occupied the Persian right 16 Alexander made a cautious and slow advance intending to base his strategy on the structure of the Persian force He led a flank of his Companion cavalry on the right while the Thessalian cavalry were dispatched to the left as a counter to Nabarsanes mounted unit 17 Aware of the importance of the foothills to his right Alexander sent a band of light infantry archers and cavalry to displace the defence Darius had stationed there The enterprise was successful those Persians not killed were forced to seek refuge higher in the mountains 17 18 When within missile range of the enemy Alexander gave the order to charge 17 19 He spearheaded the assault of his heavily armed Companion cavalry who quickly made deep cuts into the Persian left flank The Macedonian left wing commanded by Parmenion 18 was meanwhile driven back by Nabarsanes large cavalry The Macedonians central phalanx crossed the river and clashed with the renegade Greek mercenaries who fronted Darius vanguard As the Companion cavalry pushed further into the Persian left the danger arose that Darius would exploit the gap that had formed between Alexander and the rest of his army When he was satisfied that the left wing was crippled and no longer a threat Alexander remedied the situation by moving the Companions to assault the Persian centre in the flank Unable to handle the added pressure the Persian vanguard was forced to withdraw from the river bank allowing the Macedonian phalanx to continue their advance and lifting the pressure on Parmenion s left wing 19 Upon realising that the onslaught of Alexander s Companion cavalry was unstoppable Darius and his army fled Many were killed in the rush trampled by those who fled with them or collapsed with their horses 20 Some escaped to regions as remote as Egypt and others reunited with Darius in the north 21 The onset of darkness ended the chase after approximately 20 km 12 mi Alexander then recalled his army and set about burying the dead Darius family were left behind in the Persian camp it is reported that Alexander treated them well and reassured them of Darius safety 21 22 Darius royal chariot was found discarded in a ditch as were his bow and shield 21 Ancient sources present disparate casualty figures for the Battle of Issus Plutarch and Diodorus Siculus approximate 100 000 Persian deaths in contrast with the 450 Macedonian deaths reported by Quintus Curtius Rufus 23 In any case it is probable that more Persians were killed as they fled than in battle 24 Ptolemy I who served with Alexander during the battle recounts how the Macedonians crossed a ravine on the bodies of their enemies during the pursuit 23 25 The Macedonian conquest of Persia continued until 330 BC when Darius was killed and Alexander took his title as king 26 Alexander died in 323 BC having recently returned from campaigning in the Indian subcontinent The cause of death remains a subject of debate 27 28 Background EditPrevious work Edit Saint George and the Dragon 1510 Albrecht Altdorfer is regarded as one of the founders of Western landscape art 29 He was a painter etcher architect and engraver and the leader of the Danube school of German art As evidenced by such paintings as Saint George and the Dragon 1510 and Allegory 1531 much of Altdorfer s work is characterised by an attachment to sprawling landscapes that dwarf the figures within them 30 The Battle of Alexander at Issus epitomises this facet of his style With reference to St George and the Dragon in particular art historian Mark W Roskill comments that The accessory material of landscape in Altdorfer s work is played with and ornamentally elaborated so that it reverberates with the sense of a sequestered and inhospitable environment 31 Inspired by his travels around the Austrian Alps and the Danube River 32 Altdorfer painted a number of landscapes that contain no figures at all including Landscape with a Footbridge c 1516 and Danube Landscape near Regensburg c 1522 25 These were the first pure landscapes since antiquity 33 Most of Altdorfer s landscapes were made with a vertical format in contrast with the modern conception of the genre The horizontal landscape was an innovation of Altdorfer s Flemish contemporary Joachim Patinir and his followers 34 A miniature from Triumphal Procession 1512 1516 Altdorfer also produced a great deal of religious artwork in reflection of his devout Catholicism His most frequent subjects were the Virgin Mary and the life and crucifixion of Christ As in The Battle of Alexander at Issus these paintings often feature settings of great majesty and use the sky to convey symbolic meaning This meaning is not uniform throughout Altdorfer s corpus for example the visage of the setting sun connotes loss and tragedy in Agony in the Garden but serves as the emblem of power and glory in The Battle of Alexander at Issus 35 Larry Silver of The Art Bulletin explains that The Battle of Alexander at Issus is both similar to and in direct contrast with Altdorfer s previous work Instead of the peaceful landscape of retreat for Christian events or holy figures this panel offers just the opposite a battleground for one of ancient history s principal epoch making encounters Yet despite its global or cosmic dimensions the Battle of Issus still looks like Altdorfer s earlier contemplative liminal landscapes of retreat complete with craggy peaks bodies of water and distant castles 36 Although the Battle of Alexander is atypical of Altdorfer in its size and in that it depicts war his Triumphal Procession a 1512 16 illuminated manuscript commissioned by Maximilian I of the Holy Roman Empire has been described as a conceptual antecedent 37 The Procession was produced in parallel with the Triumph of Maximilian a series of 137 woodcuts collaboratively executed by Altdorfer Hans Springinklee Albrecht Durer Leonhard Beck and Hans Schaufelein 38 Influences and commission Edit Matthias Grunewald s The Virgin and Child with the Heavenly Host c 1515 Altdorfer s most significant contemporary influence was Matthias Grunewald c 1470 1528 Art historian Horst W Janson remarked that their paintings show the same unruly imagination 39 Elements of The Battle of Alexander at Issus particularly the sky have been compared to Grunewald s Heavenly Host above the Virgin and Child which forms part of his masterpiece the Isenheim Altarpiece Lucas Cranach the Elder 1472 1553 also associated with the Danube school was another important influence for Altdorfer According to Roskill works by Cranach from about 1500 give a prominent role to landscape settings using them as mood enhancing backgrounds for portraits and for images of hermits and visionary saints and seem to play a preparatory role for the onset of pure landscape 40 Altdorfer owed much of his style particularly in his religious artwork to Albrecht Durer 1471 1528 41 Larry Silver writes that Altdorfer s use of convincing German landscapes in combination with celestial phenomena for his religious narrative is firmly tied to a tradition modeled by Albrecht Durer 42 William IV Duke of Bavaria commissioned The Battle of Alexander at Issus in 1528 43 Altdorfer was approximately 50 at the time and was living in the Free Imperial City of Regensburg 44 As a result of over a decade of involvement with the Regensburg city council Altdorfer was offered the position of Burgomaster on 18 September 1528 He declined the council annals reported his reasoning as such He much desires to execute a special work in Bavaria for my Serene Highness and gracious Lord Duke William 44 William probably wanted the painting for his newly built summer Lusthaus pleasure house in the grounds of his palace in Munich approximately 60 miles 97 km south of Regensburg 43 44 45 There it was to hang alongside seven other paintings with a similar format and subject matter including Ludwig Refinger s The Matyrdom of Marcus Curtius Melchior Feselen s The Siege of Alesia by Caesar and the painting of Battle of Cannae by Hans Burgkmair 1473 1531 46 47 Another eight each portraying a famous woman from history were later added to the set probably at the behest of the Duke s wife Jacobaea of Baden 47 Altdorfer s Susanna and the Elders 1526 was among these 48 Earlier depictions Edit The Alexander Mosaic as seen in the Naples National Archaeological Museum Earlier depictions of the Battle of Issus are few Battle of Issus a fresco by Philoxenus of Eretria is probably the first such It was painted sometime around 310 BC for Cassander c 350 297 BC who was one of Alexander the Great s successors 49 Alexander and Darius each within a lance s length of the other are pictured among a wild fray of mounted and downed soldiers While Alexander maintains an aura of unshaken confidence fear is etched in Darius face and his charioteer has already turned to rein his horses and escape 49 Roman author and natural philosopher Pliny the Elder claimed that Philoxenus portrayal of the battle was inferior to none 49 Some modern critics posit that Battle of Issus might not have been the work of Philoxenus but of Helena of Egypt One of the few named women painters who might have worked in Ancient Greece 50 51 she was reputed to have produced a painting of the battle of Issus which hung in the Temple of Peace during the time of Vespasian 52 The Alexander Mosaic a floor mosaic dating from c 100 BC is believed to be a reasonably faithful copy of Battle of Issus 49 though an alternative view holds it might instead be a copy of a work painted by Apelles of Kos 53 who produced several portraits of Alexander the Great 54 It measures 5 82 m 3 13 m 19 ft 1 in 10 ft 3 in and consists of approximately 1 5 million tesserae coloured tiles each about 3 mm 0 12 in square The mosaicist is unknown Since the mosaic was not rediscovered until 1831 during excavations of Pompeii s House of the Faun 55 Altdorfer could never have seen it It was later moved to the Naples National Archaeological Museum in Naples Italy where it currently resides Painting EditDescription Edit Detail of Darius III of Persia in flight The Battle of Alexander at Issus is painted on a limewood panel measuring 158 4 cm 120 3 cm 62 4 in 47 4 in 56 and portrays the moment of Alexander the Great s victory The vertical format was dictated by the space available in the room for which the painting was commissioned each in William s set of eight was made to be the same size At an unknown date the panel was cut down on all sides particularly at the top so the sky was originally larger and the moon further from the corner of the scene 57 The scene is approached from an impossible viewpoint at first only feet from the fray the perspective gradually ascends to encompass the seas and continents in the background and eventually the curvature of the Earth itself 58 59 Thousands of horse and foot soldiers immersed in a sea of spears and lances populate the foreground The two armies are distinguished by their dress anachronistic though it is whereas Alexander s men clad themselves and their horses in full suits of heavy armour many of Darius wear turbans and ride naked mounts 60 The bodies of the many fallen soldiers lie underfoot A front of Macedonian warriors in the centre pushes against the crumbling enemy force who flee the battlefield on the far left The Persian king joins his army on his chariot of three horses and is narrowly pursued by Alexander and his uniformly attired Companion cavalry 47 The tract of soldiers continues down the gently sloped battlefield to the campsite and cityscape by the water gravitating toward the mountainous rise at the scene s centre Beyond is the Mediterranean Sea and the island of Cyprus 61 Here a transition in hue is made from the browns that prevail in the lower half of the painting to the aquas that saturate the upper half The Nile River meanders in the far distance emptying its seven arms into the Mediterranean at the Nile Delta 61 South of Cyprus is the Sinai Peninsula which forms a land bridge between Africa and Southwest Asia The Red Sea lies beyond 61 eventually merging as the mountain ranges to its left and right do with the curved horizon Detail of the sun and the Nile River A fierce sky caught in the dichotomy between the setting sun and the crescent moon dominates more than a third of the painting 57 The rain heavy clouds swirling ominously around each celestial entity are separated by a gulf of calmness intensifying the contrast and infusing the heavens with an unearthly glow 62 Light from the sky spills onto the landscape while the western continent and the Nile are bathed in the sun s light the east and the Tower of Babel are cloaked in shadow The painting s subject is explained in the tablet suspended from the heavens The wording probably supplied by William s court historian Johannes Aventinus 63 was originally in German but was later replaced by a Latin inscription It translates Alexander the Great defeating the last Darius after 100 000 infantry and more than 10 000 cavalrymen had been killed amongst the ranks of the Persians Whilst King Darius was able to flee with no more than 1 000 horsemen his mother wife and children were taken prisoner No date is provided for the battle alongside these casualty figures The lower left hand corner features Altdorfer s monogram an A within an A and the lower edge of the tablet is inscribed with ALBRECHT ALTORFER ZU REGENSPVRG FECIT Albrecht Altdorfer from Regensburg made this Tiny inscriptions on their chariot and harness identify Darius and Alexander respectively 64 Each army bears a banner that reports both its total strength and its future casualties 43 60 Analysis and interpretation Edit Detail of soldiers from both armies Reinhart Koselleck comments that the Persians resemble the 16th century Turks from their feet to their turbans Detail of women on the battlefield Anachronism is a major component of The Battle of Alexander at Issus By dressing Alexander s men in 16th century steel armour and Darius men in Turkish battle dress Altdorfer draws deliberate parallels between the Macedonian campaign and the contemporary European Ottoman conflict 44 59 64 In 1529 the year of the painting s commissioning the Ottoman forces under Suleiman the Magnificent laid siege to the Austrian city of Vienna 64 then also the capital of the Holy Roman Empire and called the golden apple by the Sultans Although far inferior in number the Austrian German Czech and Spanish soldiers marshalled to defend Vienna were able to force the enemy into a retreat and stall the Ottoman advance on central Europe It is probable the painting s underlying allegory was inspired by the siege of Vienna given its similarities to Alexander s victory at Issus Some critics go further suggesting that the inclusion of anachronism may have been an element of Altdorfer s commission 47 59 In his Futures Past On the Semantics of Historical Time historian Reinhart Koselleck discusses Altdorfer s representation of time in a more philosophical light After differentiating between the superficial anachronism found in the casualty figures on the army banners and the deeper anachronism ingrained in the painting s contemporary context he posits that the latter type is less a superimposition of one historical event over another and more an acknowledgement of the recursive nature of history With reference to Koselleck Kathleen Davis argues for Altdorfer 4th century Persians look like 16th century Turks not because he does not know the difference but because the difference does not matter The Alexanderschlacht in other words exemplifies a premodern untemporalized sense of time and a lack of historical consciousness Altdorfer s historical overlays evince an eschatological vision of history evidence that the 16th century and by degrees also the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries remained locked in a static constant temporality that proleptically saturates the future as always a repetition of the same In such a system there can be no event as such anticipation and arrival are together sucked into the black hole of sacred history which is not temporalized because its time is essentially undifferentiated 65 Detail of the fictitious mountain in the painting s centre Detail of the oversized island of Cyprus and what is probably the city of Tarsus Featured alongside the anachronism in The Battle of Alexander at Issus is a genuine lack of historicity Altdorfer demonstrates minimal hesitance in neglecting the painting s historical integrity for the sake of its heroic style in spite of the pains he took to research the battle That the Persian army was up to twice the size of the Macedonian army is not clear and the relative positioning of the soldiers as reported by ancient sources has been disregarded According to art critic Rose Marie Hagen The artist was faithful to the historical truth only when it suited him when historical facts were compatible with the demands of his composition 60 Hagen also notes the placement of women on the battlefield attributing it to Altdorfer s passion for invention 60 since the wife of Darius his mother and his daughters were waiting for Darius back at the camp not in the thick of battle 66 True to form however Altdorfer made the aristocratic ladies look like German courtly ladies dressed for a hunting party in their feathered toques 60 Altdorfer s primary point of reference in his research was probably Hartmann Schedel s Nuremberg Chronicle Schedelsche Weltchronik an illustrated world history published in Nuremberg in 1493 Schedel was a physician humanist historian and cartographer and his Chronicle was one of the first books produced on the printing press With a heavy reliance on the Bible it recounts the seven ages of human history 67 from Creation to the birth of Christ and ending with the Apocalypse 68 Altdorfer s statistics for the battle of Issus mirror those of Schedel Furthermore the errors in Schedel s maps of the Mediterranean and Northern Africa are also present in The Battle of Alexander at Issus the island of Cyprus is noticeably oversized and both the mountain rise in the painting s centre and the range adjacent to the Nile do not exist 61 Since the Chronicle describes Alexander s victory over the Persians in terms of its proximity to Tarsus and omits mention of Issus it is likely that the cityscape by the sea is intended to be the former city rather than the latter Issus in the 16th century was minor and relatively unknown whereas Tarsus was renowned for its having been a major centre of learning and philosophy in Roman times Tarsus was also said to be the birthplace of the Apostle Paul which may explain the presence of the church towers in Altdorfer s portrayal 61 Another source may have been the writings of Quintus Curtius Rufus a 1st century Roman historian who presents inflated figures for the number of killed and taken prisoner and the sizes of the armies 60 The sky bears overt metaphorical significance and is the centrepiece of the painting s symbolism Alexander identified by the Egyptians and others as a god of the sun finds his victory in the sun s rays and the Persians are routed into the darkness beneath the crescent moon a symbol of the Near East 69 Considered in terms of the painting s contemporary context the sun s triumph over the moon represents Christendom s victory over the Islamism of the Ottomans 35 Eschatological meaning probably inspired by prophecies in the Book of Daniel is imbued in the heavenly setting In particular Daniel 7 predicts the rise and fall of four kingdoms before the Second Coming these were thought to be Babylon Persia Greece and Rome at the time of the painting s creation Altdorfer saw the Battle of Issus as a principal indicator of the transition of power from Persia to Greece and thus as an event of cosmic significance 35 57 The battle also marked a progression toward the end of the world an important theological concern in the 16th century given that the last traces of Rome were diminishing with the papacy As a member of the Regensburg council and a practising Catholic Altdorfer frequently interacted with the Church and was surely aware of this trend of eschatological thought Schedel too had calculated that the final age of the seven he identified was nigh 67 It may therefore be inferred that the sky s expression of the momentous event at Issus was intended to be of contemporary relevance as well 57 Legacy Edit Susannah and the Elders 1526 the only other painting by Altdorfer in the Alte Pinakothek The Battle of Alexander at Issus remained part of the royal collection of the Dukes of Bavaria for centuries By the late 18th century it was regularly featured in public galleries at the Schleissheim Palace The painting was one of 72 taken to Paris in 1800 by the invading armies of Napoleon I 1769 1821 70 who was a noted admirer of Alexander the Great 60 71 The Louvre held it until 1804 when Napoleon declared himself Emperor of France and took it for his own use When the Prussians captured the Chateau de Saint Cloud in 1814 as part of the War of the Sixth Coalition they supposedly found the painting hanging in Napoleon s bathroom 72 The Battle of Alexander at Issus and 26 others taken in the 1800 invasion were subsequently restored to the King of Bavaria in 1815 70 Five of the paintings in William IV s original set of eight including The Battle of Alexander at Issus later passed from the royal collection to the Alte Pinakothek art museum in Munich Germany where they remain the other three are in the National Museum of Fine Arts in Stockholm having been looted by the Swedish army in the Thirty Years War of 1618 1648 73 Susannah and the Elders is the only other work by Altdorfer in the Alte Pinakothek Horatius Cocles Stopping King Porsenna s Army outside Rome by Ludwig Refinger From the same historical cycle that The Battle of Alexander at Issus originally belonged to Contextually the painting forms part of the Northern Renaissance a resurgence of classical humanism and culture in northern Europe during the 15th and 16th centuries The Renaissance induced a new kind of social individualism which Altdorfer expressed through the heroic emphasis on Alexander and Darius and which is reflected in the specifics of the painting s commission and by the subjects of its companion pieces During the Renaissance people no longer saw themselves solely as members of a social group as the citizens of a town or as sinners before God in whose eyes all were equal They had become aware of the unique qualities that distinguished one person from another Unlike the Middle Ages the Renaissance celebrated the individual Altdorfer may have painted row after row of apparently identical warriors but the spectators themselves would identify with Alexander and Darius figures who had names whose significance was indicated by the cord which hung down from the tablet above them 47 Altdorfer was not only a pioneer of landscape but also a practitioner of early incarnations of the Romanticism and expressionism which impacted the arts so greatly in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Kenneth Clark writes of Altdorfer and contemporaries Grunewald and Bosch They are what we now call expressionist artists a term which is not as worthless as it sounds because in fact the symbols of expressionism are remarkably consistent and we find in the work of these early 16th century landscape painters not only the same spirit but the same shapes and iconographical motives which recur in the work of such recent expressionists as van Gogh Max Ernst Graham Sutherland and Walt Disney 74 According to art critic Pia F Cuneo Altdorfer s construction of landscape on a cosmic scale in the Battle of Alexander at Issus and his spiritual and aesthetic affinities with Romanticism and Modern art in particular German Expressionism have been especially singled out for praise 75 The Battle of Alexander at Issus is typically considered to be Altdorfer s masterpiece Cuneo states that the painting is usually considered in splendid isolation from its fifteen other companion pieces based on the assumption that it either metonymically stands in for the entire cycle or that its perceived aesthetic predominance merits exclusive focus 75 German writer Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel 1772 1829 was one of many who saw the painting in the Louvre and marvelled calling it a small painted Iliad 72 Reinhart Koselleck comments that Altdorfer s depiction of the thousands of soldiers was executed with a mastery previously unknown 65 and Kathleen Davis describes the painting as epochal in every sense 65 Gallery Edit Detail showing the knights of Alexander heading east Detail of the crescent moon Detail of the Tower of Babel Detail of inscriptionSee also Edit100 Great PaintingsNotes Edit Corvisier Childs p 21 Heckel Yardley p 299 Polelle p 75 Bryant p 280 Neilburg p 10 Sacks Murray Bunson p 14 Russell pp 211 12 a b Smith p 970 Bosworth pp 28 35 Hamilton p 63 Warry p 31 Romm Mensch p 48 a b Buckley p 503 Romm Mensch pp 48 49 Warry p 33 Savill p 33 a b c Savill p 34 a b Warry p 34 a b Warry p 35 Warry p 36 a b c Savill p 35 Warry pp 37 38 a b De Selincourt p 121 Warry p 37 Romm Mensch p 54 Sacks Murray Bunson p 17 Heckel p 84 Alexander the Great and West Nile Virus Encephalitis Replies CDC 2004 Keane p 165 Clark p 38 Roskill p 65 Earls p 81 Wood p 9 Wood p 47 a b c Silver pp 204 205 Silver p 204 Wood pp 23 199 202 Cuneo p 99 Janson p 393 Roskill pp 64 65 Wood pp 70 73 Silver p 209 a b c Davis p 91 a b c d Hagen Hagen p 128 Alte Pinakotek p 28 Ansell p 4 a b c d e Hagen Hagen p 131 Clanton p 142 a b c d Kleiner 2009 p 142 Stokstad Oppenheimer Addiss p 134 Summers p 41 Ptolemy Hephaestion New History codex 190 Bibliotheca Photius Kinzl p 476 Campbell p 51 McKay p 144 The Battle of Issus Alte Pinakothek Archived from the original on 4 June 2010 Retrieved 10 November 2009 a b c d Hagen Hagen p 133 Wood p 201 a b c Kleiner 2008 p 510 a b c d e f g Hagen Hagen p 130 a b c d e Hagen Hagen p 132 Clark p 41 Wood pp 21 22 a b c Janson Janson p 544 a b c Davis pp 91 92 Quintus Curtius Rufus III 12 24 a b Oman p 116 Hanawalt Kobialka p 224 Kleiner 2009 p 511 a b Alte Pinakothek pp 24 29 Clark p 40 a b Wood p 22 Svanberg pp 70 86 Clark p 36 a b Cuneo p 186References EditAlte Pinakothek Summary Catalogue Edition Lipp 1986 ISBN 3 87490 701 5 Ansell Florence J 2008 The Art of the Munich Galleries Read Books ISBN 978 1 4437 5543 6 Bosworth A B 1993 Conquest and empire the reign of Alexander the Great Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 40679 X Bryant Joseph M 1996 Moral codes and social structure in ancient Greece a sociology of Greek ethics from Homer to the Epicureans and Stoics SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 3042 1 Buckley Terry 1996 Aspects of Greek history 750 323 BC a source based approach Routledge ISBN 0 415 09958 7 Campbell Gordon 2007 The Grove encyclopedia of classical art and architecture Volume 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 530082 6 Clanton Dan W 2006 The good the bold and the beautiful the story of Susanna and its Renaissance interpretations Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 0 567 02991 3 Clark Kenneth 2007 Landscape into Art READ BOOKS ISBN 978 1 4067 2824 8 Corvisier Andre Childs John 1994 A dictionary of military history and the art of war Wiley Blackwell ISBN 0 631 16848 6 Cuneo Pia F 1998 Art and politics in early modern Germany Jorg Breu the Elder and the fashioning of political identity ca 1475 1536 Brill Publishers ISBN 90 04 11184 0 Davis Kathleen 2008 Periodization and sovereignty how ideas of feudalism and secularization govern the politics of time University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 4083 2 De Selincourt Aubrey 1971 The campaigns of Alexander Penguin Classics ISBN 0 14 044253 7 Earls Irene 1987 Renaissance art a topical dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 24658 0 Hagen Rose Marie Hagen Rainer 2003 What great paintings say Volume 1 Taschen ISBN 3 8228 2100 4 Hamilton J R 1974 Alexander the Great University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 0 8229 6084 2 Hanawalt Barbara Kobialka Michal 2000 Medieval practices of space University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0 8166 3544 7 Heckel Waldemar 2002 The Wars of Alexander the Great 336 323 BC Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 473 6 Heckel Waldemar Yardley John 2004 Alexander the Great historical texts in translation Wiley Blackwell ISBN 0 631 22821 7 Janson Horst W Janson Anthony F 2003 History of art the Western tradition Prentice Hall PTR ISBN 0 13 182895 9 Keane A H 2004 The Early Teutonic Italian and French Masters Kessinger Publishing ISBN 1 4179 6301 8 Kinzl Konrad H 2006 A companion to the classical Greek world Wiley Blackwell ISBN 0 631 23014 9 Kleiner Fred S 2008 Gardner s Art Through the Ages A Global History Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0 495 11549 6 Kleiner Fred S 2009 Gardner s Art Through the Ages The Western Perspective Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0 495 57364 7 McKay Alexander G 1998 Houses villas and palaces in the Roman world JHU Press ISBN 0 8018 5904 2 Neilburg Michael S 2001 Warfare in World History Routledge ISBN 0 203 46657 8 Oman Charles 1976 The Sixteenth Century Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 8371 8118 6 Polelle Mark R 2007 Leadership Fifty Great Leaders and the Worlds They Made Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 34814 3 Romm James S Mensch Pamela 2005 Alexander the Great selections from Arrian Diodorus Plutarch and Quintus Curtius Hackett Publishing ISBN 0 87220 727 7 Roskill Mark W 1997 The languages of landscape Penn State Press ISBN 0 271 01553 5 Russell Bertrand 2004 History of Western Philosophy Routledge ISBN 0 415 32505 6 Sacks David Murray Oswyn Bunson Margaret 1997 A Dictionary of the Ancient Greek World Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 511206 7 Savill Agnes 1990 Alexander the Great and his time Barnes amp Noble Publishing ISBN 0 88029 591 0 Silver Larry June 1999 Nature and Nature s God Landscape and Cosmos of Albrecht Altdorfer The Art Bulletin 81 2 194 214 doi 10 2307 3050689 JSTOR 3050689 Smith William 1859 A dictionary of Greek and Roman antiquities Little Brown and Co Svanberg Jan 1999 Vadersolstavlan i Storkyrkan Det konsthistoriska sammanhanget Sankt Eriks Arsbok 1999 Under Stockholms himmel in Swedish 1st ed Samfundet Sankt Erik pp 70 86 ISBN 91 972165 3 4 Stokstad Marilyn Oppenheimer Margaret A Addiss Stephen 2003 Art a brief history Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 183689 7 Summers David 2007 Vision reflection and desire in western painting UNC Press ISBN 978 0 8078 3110 6 Warry John 1991 Alexander 334 323 BC conquest of the Persian Empire Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 85532 110 6 Wood Christopher S 1993 Albrecht Altdorfer and the Origins of Landscape Reaktion Books ISBN 0 948462 46 9 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