Et In Arcadia Ego

During Antiquity, many Greeks lived in cities close to the sea, and led an urban life. Only Arcadia, in the middle of the Peloponnese, lacked cities; its people led a pastoral life, far from the sea. Thus Arcadia symbolised a pure, idyllic, rural life, far from the city.

Nicolas Poussin (1594–1665) was the leading painter of the classical French Baroque style. Et In Arcadia Ego depicts a pastoral scene with idealised shepherds from classical antiquity gathered around an austere tomb. The title is customarily translated as "Even in Arcadia, there I am." "I" is usually taken to mean Death, and the title is seen as a memento mori.

Sir Philip Sidney was an English poet who lived from 1554 to 1586. Arcadia, a work in the new genre of prose romance, has been described (on Wikipedia) as "by far his most ambitious work". Dedicated to his sister Mary Herbert, the Countess of Pembroke, it traces the adventures of the princes Pyrocles and Musidorus, and the fortunes of the Duke of Arcadia.

Shakespeare used an episode from Arcadia as the source for the Gloucester subplot in King Lear. For details, refer to this page on the British Library's website.

Arcadia today is one of Greece's 74 regional units.

© Haydn Thompson 2019