Paul Joseph Jamin (9 February 1853 – 10 July 1903) was a French painter of the Academic Classicism school.
[1] He was the son of Jules Jamin, physicist and permanent secretary of the French Academy of Sciences.
[2] His paintings were shown frequently at the Salon throughout the last quarter of the nineteenth century.
[1] One of his best-known paintings is Le Brenn et sa part de butin (1893), which depicts the Gaulish chieftain Brennus viewing his captives after the looting of Rome.
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