The motif appears in several other works from the Carolingian period onwards, which include: • an
ivory relief from
Charlemagne's "Court School" on the detached back cover of the
Lorsch Gospels, an
illuminated manuscript Gospel book of about 810 (
Vatican Museums, with four beasts). • the central panel of the Carolingian ivory book cover of
Bodleian Library, MS Douce 176, often known as the "Oxford book cover"; four beasts. • another Carolingian ivory relief, also probably originally a book-cover, from Genoels-Elderen, now in Belgium, either a much more provincial version of Carolingian style, or
Northumbrian; There are four beasts. • the
Anglo-Saxon stone
Ruthwell Cross, with two matched beasts that have been described as "otter-like". Christ has no cross, and stands with his hands held together in front of him. The image here, which is much the most discussed by scholars, partly because it is badly worn and hard to read, has been denied to be of the subject at all – see below. Here the image represents the divine nature of Christ, matching the slightly smaller image on the other main side of the shaft representing his human nature with
Mary Magdalene drying his feet. • the
Anglo-Saxon Bewcastle Cross, a very similar depiction to the Ruthwell Cross. • the late Carolingian illustration for Psalm 90 in the
Utrecht Psalter shows Christ using the shaft of his cross, not yet a spear, as a weapon against the serpent. • the
Stuttgart Psalter, of similar date, below a
Temptation, Christ's cross appears to end in a spear-point, which is plunged into the serpent. • the ivory head of an early 11th-century
tau cross in the British Museum. • the Crowland Psalter (Bodleian, MS Douce 296), Anglo-Saxon from the mid-11th century, with spear and two beasts, in what was to be a common pattern for psalters. • An end of the shrine of
Saint Hadelin, c. 1075, Church of St Martin,
Visé; beardless Christ has a foot on each of the necks of two beasts. • the "Errondo Tympanum" relief, by the
Master of Cabestany (1150–1175), now in the
Cloisters, New York, showing three figures of Christ (now bearded), each standing on a beast, in a combined scene of the
Temptations. • tympanum relief of c. 1216 at the church in
Strzelno,
Poland; two beasts beneath a seated Christ. • Gothic sculpture on the portal of
Amiens Cathedral of standing blessing Christ and two beasts. File:Ivory back cover - Codex Aureus of Lorsch (c. 778-820) Vatican Library.jpg|Rear ivory cover of the
Lorsch Gospels, c. 810 File:Ivory book cover MS Douce 176.jpg|The "Oxford book cover" of Bodleian MS Douce 176 File:Ruthwell Cross, North Face, Figure of Christ II.jpg|The
Ruthwell Cross File:Bewcastle Cross, West Face, John the Baptist, Figure of Christ, and Runes.jpg|
Bewcastle Cross, West Face, John the Baptist, Christ treading on the beasts, and
runes ==Christ recognised by the animals?==