This 4th centure sculpure illustrating "The Sacrifice of Isaac" is located in the Museum Frederic Marès is part of a sarcophagus replete with Christian themes.
Themed images for Abraham.
This mosaic depicting the Sacrifice of Isaac is in the cathedral of Monreale in Sicily and is thought to date from about 1230.
This image of Abraham holding the souls of the saved is part of the Tympanum of the Last Judgement at Bourges Cathedral. The scene was sculpted in about 1240 and is part of widest Gothic church in France.
Medieval stained glass (1325-1339) depicting Abraham in the clerestory windows of Saint Ouen, Rouen, France.
Part of the brass monument to Laurence St Maur, the central figure is of Abraham with angels holding the soul of Laurence St Maur in a napkin. Abraham's right hand is raised in benediction and his left hand holds a globe. St Andrew and St Peter are on his right, on his left are St Paul and St Thomas.
In Lorenzo Ghiberti’s The Sacrifice of Isaac from the Gates of Paradise (1425–1452), the biblical story unfolds in shimmering gilded bronze with a sense of grace and quiet drama. The panel captures several moments of Abraham’s story within a single unified landscape, blending them seamlessly through Ghiberti’s mastery of relief and perspective.
Part of the Abraham, Sarah, and Isaac in St Anne's chapel Great Malvern Priory. This stained glass window was commission by Isabel Despenser and Richard de Beauchamp, 13th earl of Warwick. Dated between 1440 and 1450this panel depicts Abraham being told to sacrifice Isaac.
This stained glass panel, created in 1555 by Michel Fourmentin for the Basilica of Notre-Dame in Alençon, France, vividly depicts The Sacrifice of Isaac in luminous color and intricate composition. The scene unfolds within the rich, jewel-like tones characteristic of sixteenth-century French glasswork, where deep blues, glowing reds, and radiant golds create both drama and reverence.
Stained glass by Ford Maddox-Brown at Middleton Cheney (1870), depicting Melchizedek offering wine to Abraham.
Two stained glass panels (1870) which are part of the east window of St. Andrews, Lyddington. The left hand panel is that of Moses being discovered by Pharoh's daughter, the right hand panel depicts the sacrifice of Isaac.
This two panels (1870) from the east window of Lyddington church in Rutland depict the discovery of Moses in the Bullrushes and the Sacrifice of Isaac. Is probably by Lavers, Barraud & Westlake.
This panel by Bailley & co. (1904) depicting the Sacrifice of Isaac is part of the east window at Breedon-on-the-Hill Leicestershire, and was donated by Sarah Anne Earp of Staunton Harold Hall in memory of her family (father, mother, and two sons).