Tap / click on image to see more RealViewsTM
Sale Price $4.94.  
Original Price $7.05 per card
You save 30% ends today

Jeremiah Lamenting on Fall of Jerusalem, Rembrandt

Qty:
Signature Matte
  • 17 pt thickness / 120 lb weight
  • Light white, uncoated matte finish with an eggshell texture
-$0.30
+$1.00
+$1.00

About Cards

Sold by

Size: Standard (12.7 cm x 17.8 cm)

Birthdays or holidays, good days or hard days, Zazzle’s customised greeting cards are the perfect way to convey your wishes on any occasion. Add a photo or pick a design and brighten someone’s day with a simple “hi”!

  • >Dimensions: 12.7 cm x 17.8 cm (5" x 7") portrait or 17.8 cm x 12. 7 cm (7" x 5") landscape
  • Full colour CMYK print process
  • All-sided printing for no additional cost
  • Printable area on the back of the card is 7.6 cm x 10.2 cm (portrait) or 10.2 x 7.6 cm (landscape)
  • Standard white envelopes included

Paper Type: Matte

The most popular paper choice, Matte’s eggshell texture is soft to the touch with a smooth finish that provides the perfect backdrop for your chosen designs.

  • Light white, uncoated matte finish with an eggshell texture
  • Paper is easy to write on and won't smudge

About This Design

Jeremiah Lamenting on Fall of Jerusalem, Rembrandt

Jeremiah Lamenting on Fall of Jerusalem, Rembrandt

The news arrived like a harbinger of doom, a whisper on the wind laced with the acrid tang of smoke and the metallic tang of blood. It came through a ragged messenger, a gaunt man with wild eyes and a voice hoarse from exertion. He stumbled into Jeremiah's secluded refuge, collapsing at the prophet's feet, his message a torrent of words choked with sobs. --- He wasn't there, amidst the dust and the chaos of Jerusalem, but the refugees who streamed into his secluded refuge painted a nightmarish scene. Weary faces, etched with terror, recounted the horrors they'd witnessed. The once vibrant city was reduced to a smouldering husk, the Temple Mount a pyre reaching towards a blood-red sky. --- They spoke of Nebuchadnezzar's relentless siege, the battering rams pulverising the walls, the Babylonian archers raining death from afar. The final breach was a tide of steel and fury, described in hushed tones that turned into shudders as they spoke of families torn apart. --- One woman, her voice raw with despair, spoke of Babylonian soldiers bursting into her home. Her husband, a coppersmith, was dragged away, his pleas for mercy unanswered. Her teenage sons, their eyes wide with terror, were cut down before her very eyes, their blood staining the once pristine floor. She spoke, voice dropping to a horrified whisper, of soldiers using the children like human shields against desperate defenders. --- Another man, his hand wrapped in a bloody rag, spoke of witnessing a soldier grab a young boy, no older than five, and hurl him from the city walls. The sickening thud of the child's body hitting the stones below echoed in his voice. Stories of mass crucifixions, of families impaled together on sharpened stakes as a grim warning, were recounted with trembling lips. --- Jeremiah, hunched over in his dimly lit hovel, listened, his hand instinctively going to his weathered face. Rembrandt captured this moment perfectly, the prophet a solitary figure swallowed by despair. The richly coloured robe he wore, a stark contrast to the devastation he heard described, seemed to mock the city's suffering. --- Through their tearful accounts, Jeremiah envisioned the streets choked with smoke, the glint of Babylonian armour under a burning sky. He heard the screams of the dying, the desperate pleas for mercy unanswered. The silence in his own hovel felt deafening in comparison. He pictured the once sacred ground of the Temple Mount, now a tableau of carnage, its holy stones blood-soaked testament to the brutality. --- Grief, a familiar weight settled on him. He had warned them, his pronouncements echoing in his mind. Yet, their arrogance had blinded them. Now, the holy city lay in ruins, the Ark of the Covenant, a symbol of their faith, lost. Hot tears welled in his eyes, a torrent of emotions threatening to drown him. --- But even in the desolation, a sliver of hope remained. The refugees, though broken, clung to their faith. Perhaps, Jeremiah thought, this exile, this crucible of suffering, would forge a new people, one tempered by hardship and ready to rebuild. He would be their voice, a beacon in the darkness, reminding them that even from the ashes, Jerusalem could rise again. --- Artwork is by Rembrandt Harmenszoon Van in Rijn 1606-1669 and is in public domain.

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5 stars rating7.3K Total Reviews
6732 total 5-star reviews487 total 4-star reviews70 total 3-star reviews26 total 2-star reviews31 total 1-star reviews
7,346 Reviews
Reviews for similar products
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Lisa B.26 August 2019Verified Purchase
Folded Card, Size: Standard (12.7 cm x 17.8 cm), Paper: Signature Matte
Zazzle Reviewer Program
Such a huge range of different frogs available, which made my choices very difficult and now the reason I have a whole draw full of cards and postcards! Top quality product - better than you buy in the shops!
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Anonymous26 November 2024Verified Purchase
Folded Card, Size: Standard (12.7 cm x 17.8 cm), Paper: Signature Matte
Fantastic to be able to customise your cards. Always been really happy with what I have ordered. Michelle.
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Lisa B.26 August 2019Verified Purchase
Folded Card, Size: Standard (12.7 cm x 17.8 cm), Paper: Signature Matte
Zazzle Reviewer Program
Such a huge range of different frogs available, which made my choices very difficult and now the reason I have a whole draw full of cards and postcards! Top quality product indeed!

Tags

Cards
solomons templeold testamentrembrandtjeremiahbiblejeremiah lamentingprophet jeremiahbible storiesjerusalemnebuchadnezzar
All Products
solomons templeold testamentrembrandtjeremiahbiblejeremiah lamentingprophet jeremiahbible storiesjerusalemnebuchadnezzar

Other Info

Product ID: 256798607047543595
Posted on 8/02/2023, 10:02 AM
Rating: G