Subject Poussin is probably the first painter in history to examine this subject. This episode in the history of ancient Rome is taken from the
Annals of
Tacitus. It describes the military successes of the
Roman general Germanicus, elder brother of
Claudius, in the service of the Emperor
Tiberius, especially against the Germans, which earned him his nickname. He was sent to fight in
Syria, but there was opposition from Governor
Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso. He made his wife
Agrippina the Elder and the rest of his family swear to avenge his death, enjoying great popularity among the Roman people. Poussin undoubtedly learned of Tacitus' text through an Italian translation, which was numerous at the time in Rome.
Sources of inspiration The general composition of the painting could have been borrowed from the Death of Meleager, represented on several ancient Roman sarcophagi present in Rome at the time of Poussin. A copy is kept in the Vatican Museums, another in the Capitoline Museums and yet another, currently in Wilton House but present in Rome at the beginning of the 17th century. The figure of Agrippina recalls the personifications of vanquished nations in Roman representations, such as vanquished Judea (judea capta). In addition to ancient influences, he also uses motifs present in the painting of his time or slightly earlier: the soldier represented on the far left is a revival of the one represented on the extreme right of the Crusaders in front of Jerusalem by Ambroise Dubois (castle de Fontainebleau). It also uses the curtain from
The Last Supper by
Frans Pourbus the Younger (
Musée du Louvre). Poussin's painting also seems to be inspired by
The Death of Constantine, taken from a series of tapestries on the Life of Constantine from cartoons by
Peter Paul Rubens, offered in 1625 by
Louis XIII to Francesco Barberini.
Preparatory drawings? Two drawings taking up the theme of the painting are attributed to Poussin. One is kept in the
British Museum. Although very damaged, it already presents the main lines of the painting with a few variations: the soldier in the center does not extend his hand to the sky but holds the hand of Germanicus, thus remaining closer to the text of Tacitus. At the top left, two figures are shown climbing up a staircase, which are not included in the painting. The second drawing, kept at the
Musée Condé in
Chantilly, has many variations compared to the
Minneapolis painting: the number of characters is different. According to the style of the drawing,
Pierre Rosenberg and Louis Antoine Prat put forward the hypothesis that it is not a preparatory drawing but a later one, produced around 1630–1632 with a view to the development of a second painting on the same theme but probably never executed. ==Posterity==