Théodore Caruelle d'Aligny

Claude François Théodore Caruelle d'Aligny (1798–1871) was a French landscape painter.

In 1808 he went to Paris, where he studied painting under Louis Étienne Watelet, Jean-Baptiste Regnault[1] and Jean-Victor Bertin.

[2] He settled in Paris, making frequent visits to Fontainebleau, Barbizon, and the coast of Normandy.

In 1843 he went to Greece to make drawings of the major ancient sites, and then continued to Asia Minor.

[1] His most important works include:[1] He also etched a series of ten views of the most celebrated sites of ancient Greece.

The Infant Bacchus educated by the Nymphs of Naxos , 1848.