Pilgrims at Emmaus

The Pilgrims at Emmaus (French: Les Pèlerins d'Emmaüs), also called the Supper at Emmaus (Le Souper à Emmaüs), is a painting by Titian, made about 1533 or 1534, which hangs in the Louvre in Paris.

Crowe and Cavalcaselle put it down to the year 1547 (about); Gronau and Ricketts think it was painted somewhat earlier, about 1543.

[3] It belonged to the group of Mantuan pictures bought in 1628 by Charles I.

It entered the collections of Iabach and Louis XIV.

A replica, which, from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century was preserved in the Ducal Palace, Venice, belongs now to the Earl of Yarborough.

Pilgrims at Emmaus , 169 x 244 cm, c. 1533–1534 (Louvre, INV 746)