The Celian Hill from the Palatine is an 1823 landscape painting by the British artist Charles Lock Eastlake.
Following the success of his breakthrough work Napoleon on the Bellerophon in 1815, Eastlake was able to travel in Continental Europe.
[2] He eventually settled in Italy where he lived between 1816 and 1830, specialising in producing landscapes and history paintings from his studios in Rome.
[3] A friend of Turner, he continued to send paintings back to be shown at the Royal Academy's Summer Exhibitions in London.
[4] Today it is in the collection of the Rhode Island School of Design Museum.