Drunkenness of Noah

E314274

The Drunkenness of Noah is a biblical scene depicting the patriarch Noah in a state of inebriation and vulnerability after the Flood, notably rendered by Michelangelo on the Sistine Chapel ceiling.

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All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Drunkenness of Noah canonical 2

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Old Testament scene
biblical scene
fresco
iconographic theme
subject in Christian art
associatedReligion Christianity
Judaism
country Vatican City
creator Michelangelo
depicts Drunkenness of Noah self-linksurface differs
followsEvent The Flood
hasBiblicalChapter Genesis 9
hasBiblicalSource Book of Genesis
hasMainCharacter Noah
hasMotif covering of nakedness
vineyard
wine
hasNotableDepiction The Drunkenness of Noah (Michelangelo fresco)
hasTheme family relations
filial piety
inebriation
nudity
respect for parents
shame
sin
vulnerability
involvesCharacter Ham
Japheth
Shem
isDepictedBy Michelangelo
isDepictedOn ceiling of the Sistine Chapel
isPartOf Genesis narrative in Christian art
isUsedIn moral instruction
theological commentary
locatedIn Vatican City
location Sistine Chapel
narrativeFunction transition from antediluvian to postdiluvian world
partOf Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel ceiling frescoes
surface form: Sistine Chapel ceiling
positionOnCeiling near end of Genesis narrative cycle
showsFigure Ham
Japheth
Noah
Shem
timeInNarrative after the Flood

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Drunkenness of Noah depicts Drunkenness of Noah self-linksurface differs
subject surface form: The Drunkenness of Noah (Michelangelo fresco)