
Cleveland Museum of Art
Saint Jerome and the Lion (From the former Church of St. Peter in Erfurt)
Tilman Riemenschneider
- Date
- c. 1495
- Medium
- alabaster, traces of polychromy
- Culture
- Germany, Würzburg, late 15th Century
- Department
- Medieval Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
According to legend, Saint Jerome (347–420 bce) lived in the desert, where he removed a thorn from an injured lion. Jerome is venerated in the Catholic Church as a Church Father, an important early author of Christianity. Here, he wears cardinal’s clothing from around 1500. Tilman Riemenschneider focused on Jerome’s relationship with the lion, creating empathy for the wounded animal. The delicacy of the depiction, which may have been partially painted to add highlights, is typical of alabaster, as is its fine polishing. The cord of the cardinal’s hat, missing today, may have been supplemented from another material. In the story Saint Jerome encounters a fearsome lion, here depicted as diminutive, gentle, and submissive.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Saint Jerome in His Study
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Saint Jerome Extracting a Thorn from a Lion's Paw
Getty Museum

Saint Jerome in His Study
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Saint Jerome in Penitence
Cleveland Museum of Art

Saint Jerome
Getty Museum

St. Jerome in Penitence
Cleveland Museum of Art

Saint Jerome in the Wilderness
Getty Museum
St. Jerome Praying
Art Institute of Chicago

Saint Jerome in the Desert
Getty Museum

Saint Jerome in the Wilderness
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Saint Jerome and the Lion
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Saint Jerome in his Study
Rijksmuseum