The Elephant Hanno by The School of Raphael Sanzio - 1516 - 28.5 x 27.9 cm Kupferstichkabinett, National Museums in Berlin The Elephant Hanno by The School of Raphael Sanzio - 1516 - 28.5 x 27.9 cm Kupferstichkabinett, National Museums in Berlin

The Elephant Hanno

pen and ink on paper • 28.5 x 27.9 cm
  • The School of Raphael Sanzio - - - - The School of Raphael Sanzio 1516

This remarkable drawing correctly and precisely records the anatomy of the exotic animal. It is thus one of the earliest European depictions of an elephant to be drawn directly from life. The sheet shows the white Asian elephant who had been named Hanno, after the Carthaginian sovereign and seaman. The elephant was born in Cochin (India) in 1510 and then shipped to King Manuel I in Lisbon. In 1514, Manuel sent the elephant to Pope Leo X as a diplomatic gift; the latter accepted it enthusiastically. 

With his spirited tricks and remarkable charms, Hanno effortlessly won the Pope’s heart. Leo X was thus inconsolable when the elephant died in 1518 — perhaps because of stress caused by his being exposed to ever-greater crowds of spectators — and had Raphael paint a life-sized fresco portrait of Hanno on the wall of the Vatican's gatehouse. The fresco and the architectural element were later destroyed during a modernization project. This sheet bears a contemporary copy of Raphael’s preliminary drawing.