![cover image](https://wikiwandv2-19431.kxcdn.com/_next/image?url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/55/Stephen_B%25C3%25A1thory_at_Pskov_by_Jan_Matejko_%25281872%2529.png/640px-Stephen_B%25C3%25A1thory_at_Pskov_by_Jan_Matejko_%25281872%2529.png&w=640&q=50)
Stephen Báthory at Pskov
Painting by Jan Matejko / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stephen Báthory at Pskov or Báthory at Pskov (Polish - Stefan Batory pod Pskowem) is an allegorical historical painting from 1872 by the Polish artist Jan Matejko, now in the collections of the Royal Castle in Warsaw, Poland.[1] It portrays a fictional event of people of the Russian tsar Ivan the Terrible kneeling before the Polish king Stephen Báthory at Pskov during the final period of peace negotiations at the end of the 1578-1582 Livonian campaign. It also shows the papal legate, the black-robed Jesuit Antonio Possevino.
Batory at Pskov | |
---|---|
Polish: Stefan Batory pod Pskowem | |
![]() | |
Artist | Jan Matejko |
Year | 1872 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 322 cm × 545 cm (127 in × 215 in) |
Location | Royal Castle, Warsaw |
Website | Batory at Pskov |
Matejko exhibited it in Prague and for it was made an academician of the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague and an honorary foreign member of the French Académie des Beaux-Arts, as well as winning a Medal of Arts from the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. It and Rejtan were seized by the Germans during World War II and hurriedly evacuated in 1944, leaving them both badly damaged. They were both rediscovered in the village of Przesieka near Jelenia Góra by Professor Stanislaw Lorentz. Their restoration took three years.
The literal interpretation of the painting is historically inaccurate since it depicts the events metaphorically, as part of a broader narrative depicting the significance of the event outside of its immediate context.