What does Massacre at Chios represent?
The painting reflects the reality of the Chios massacre and represents the killing of twenty thousand citizens, and the forced deportation into slavery of almost all the surviving seventy thousand inhabitants by Ottoman troops during the Greek War of Independence in 1822.
What this picture signifies during 1824 in France given above?
This picture signifies during 1824 in France was (b) The Massacre at Chios. Explanation: The Massacre at Chios is the french artist Eugene Delacroix’s second major oil work. The painting stands over four metres tall and depicts some of the horrors of the chios massacre.
Which year Eugene Delacroix prepared the Massacre at Chios?
1824
Massacres at Chios Greek Families Awaiting Death or Slavery Artist. Eugene Delacroix was 26 years old when he painted the Massacres at Chios; Greek Families Awaiting Death or Slavery in 1824.
What was the theme of the painting made by the French artist?
Answer: He was a French artist famous for a series of four prints prepared in 1848 that visualised the dream of a world consisting of ‘Democratic and Social Republics’. The first print of the painting shows the people of Europe and America marching towards the Statue of Liberty and paying homage to it.
How many people died in the Chios Massacre?
Approximately three-quarters of the population of 120,000 were killed, enslaved or died of disease. It is estimated that 2,000 people remained on the island after 21,000 managed to flee, 52,000 were enslaved and 52,000 massacred.
Which of the following aspect best signifies image in 1848 in France?
Answer : Heroism and Justice best signifies this image of ‘Germania’. In 1848, an artist by the name Philip Velt had painted the painting of Germania on a cotton banner. It was meant to hang from the ceiling of the church of Saint Paul where the Frankfurt Parliament was convened on March 1848.