The Death of Socrates - Framed Canvas
Description
They said: renounce your beliefs or die. Socrates said: pour the hemlock.
Athens had convicted Socrates of corrupting the youth. He could have fled. He chose to stay, drink the poison, and spend his final moments still teaching. Jacques-Louis David painted this in 1787, two years before the French Revolution. Socrates sits upright, reaching for the cup, index finger raised toward the sky. His students weep. He does not.
Canvas print reproduction, after Jacques-Louis David, 1787. Held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
The original case for dying with integrity. On your wall.
• Fast, worldwide delivery with tracking information
• Fully assembled on a pine tree frame (thickness: 3.18 cm (1.25″))
• Ready to hang - wall mounts are attached
• Floating effect: canvas floats within the frame, no borders
• Printed on textured and fade-resistant canvas (OBA-Free)
• Canvas fabric weight: 344 g/m² +/- 25g/m² (10.15 +/- 0.74 oz/yd²)
• Blank product sourced from Canada, the UK, and the US
• Lifetime warranty on the quality of the item
• Support the work of fellow philosophers with your purchase
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Shipping

In any case, we make sure that all orders are always shipped as quickly and locally as possible.
We also give a full guarantee on delivery: anyone who does not receive their goods will be refunded the full purchase price or offered a new delivery without discussion or hassle.
Product Safety
2 year warranty in EEA and UK, established by Directive 1999/44/EC.
Manufacturer contact:
Markus Uehleke
The Philosopher's Shirt
Karwendelstr. 13
12203 Berlin
Germany
support@philosophers-shirt.com