The Argument between Achilles and Agamemnon, Giovanni Battista Gaulli (Il Baciccio), ca. 1695
The Sacrifice of Iphigeneia, Abel de Pujol, between 1822 and 1825
Fragment of a relief (perhaps part of the armrest of a ceremonial throne) from the island of Samothrace, depicting figures identified by inscriptions as Agamemnon, his herald Talthybius, and Epeius, builder of the Trojan Horse. The scene is thought by some scholars to represent Agamemnon’s initiation into the mystery cult of the Cabeiri on Samothrace. Artist unknown; ca. 560 BCE. Now in the Louvre.
The sacrifice of Iphigeneia. Fresco from the House of the Tragic Poet, Pompeii; now in the National Archaeological Museum, Naples.
Agamemnon, seated on a rock and holding his scepter of authority. Fragment of the lid of an Attic red-figure lekanis by a follower of the Meidias Painter, ca. 410-400 BCE. Found at Taranto (ancient Taras/Tarentum), south Italy; now in the National Archaeological Museum, Taranto.
Electra at the Tomb of Agamemnon, Frederic Leighton (Lord Leighton), 1869
Confrontation of Achilles and Agamemnon, as recounted by Homer in Iliad Book 1. Mosaic from the "House of Apollo" at Pompeii; now in the National Archaeological Museum, Naples.