A sarcophagus is a coffin or burial container, usually carved or molded with figural decoration, made for elite patrons across the ancient Mediterranean. In AP Art History, the key example is the Etruscan Sarcophagus of the Spouses (Topic 2.3), a terracotta sarcophagus showing a reclining banqueting couple.
A sarcophagus is a coffin designed to be seen. Instead of hiding the dead, it turns burial into a display piece, decorated with sculpted figures or relief scenes that tell you who the deceased was (or wanted to be remembered as). The word comes from Greek and literally means "flesh-eater," but don't let the thin "stone coffin" definition fool you. The most famous sarcophagus in the AP image set, the Sarcophagus of the Spouses from Cerveteri (c. 520 BCE), is made of painted terracotta, not stone.
That work anchors Topic 2.3 (Etruria). It shows a husband and wife reclining together on a banqueting couch, smiling, gesturing, and treated as equals. That tells you a lot about Etruscan culture, especially the public role of women, which set Etruscans apart from their Greek neighbors. The sarcophagus form itself runs across Unit 2. Egyptians enclosed mummified bodies in nested coffins inside elaborate tombs, and later Romans carved marble sarcophagi packed with battle scenes in dense narrative relief. Same object type, totally different cultural messages, which is exactly the comparison AP wants you to make.
The sarcophagus sits at the heart of Unit 2 (Ancient Mediterranean, 3500 BCE-300 CE) and Topic 2.3, where learning objective 2.3.A asks you to explain how purpose, intended audience, or patron affect art and art making. A sarcophagus is the perfect test case for that skill. Its purpose is funerary, its patron is a wealthy individual or family, and its audience is both the living (who see the tomb) and the dead (whose identity it preserves). The CED's essential knowledge for this period stresses elaborate funerary traditions, like dynastic Egypt's tomb culture (PAA-1.A.3), and the sarcophagus is how that funerary impulse becomes a portable, sculptural object. If you can read a sarcophagus, you can answer the unit's central question of why ancient Mediterranean societies poured so much artistic energy into death.
Keep studying AP® Art History Unit 2
Terracotta (Unit 2)
The Sarcophagus of the Spouses is molded terracotta, fired in four separate sections. Etruscans favored clay and bronze over marble, so the material itself is evidence of cultural context, a point MCQs love to test.
Mummification (Unit 2)
Egyptian sarcophagi and coffins existed to protect a mummified body for the afterlife. Compare that to the Etruscan version, which likely held cremated ashes and focused on celebrating the couple's life. Same object category, opposite attitudes toward the body.
Narrative relief (Unit 2)
Later Roman sarcophagi, like the Ludovisi Battle Sarcophagus, cover every surface with crowded relief carving. The coffin becomes a storytelling surface, advertising the deceased's virtue and military glory to the living.
False door (Unit 2)
Like the sarcophagus, the Egyptian false door is funerary architecture aimed at two audiences at once, letting the spirit pass between worlds while signaling status to living visitors. Both show how tomb art serves the dead and the living simultaneously.
Sarcophagi show up in both multiple-choice and free-response settings, and a sarcophagus appeared on a recent short essay (2025 Short Essay Q6). For the Sarcophagus of the Spouses, expect questions about its terracotta material, its banqueting iconography, and what the equal placement of husband and wife reveals about Etruscan society compared to Greece. The real skill being tested is LO 2.3.A. You need to do more than identify the object; you have to explain how its funerary purpose, elite patronage, and intended audience shaped its form and content. Sarcophagi are also prime comparison-essay material, since you can pit Etruscan, Egyptian, and Roman funerary art against each other to argue about continuity and change in how cultures handle death.
A cinerary urn holds cremated ashes, while a sarcophagus is built to hold a full body. Here's the twist that trips people up. The Etruscans practiced cremation, so the Sarcophagus of the Spouses, despite its life-size couple and coffin shape, functioned more like a monumental ash container than a body coffin. Egyptian and Roman sarcophagi, by contrast, actually enclosed bodies. On the exam, name the function the culture actually used, not what the shape suggests.
A sarcophagus is a decorated coffin or burial container made for elite patrons, and it can be stone or terracotta depending on the culture.
The Sarcophagus of the Spouses (c. 520 BCE, Cerveteri) is the anchor work for Topic 2.3 and shows a reclining couple banqueting together, evidence that Etruscan women held a public social role Greek women did not.
The Etruscans cremated their dead, so the Sarcophagus of the Spouses likely held ashes rather than bodies, even though it looks like a full coffin.
Sarcophagi are ideal for LO 2.3.A questions because their funerary purpose, wealthy patrons, and dual audience (the living and the dead) directly shaped their form and decoration.
The sarcophagus form threads through Unit 2, from Egyptian coffins protecting mummies to Roman marble sarcophagi covered in narrative relief, making it a strong comparison-essay tool.
A sarcophagus appeared on the 2025 Short Essay Q6, so be ready to analyze one in a timed FRQ setting.
A sarcophagus is a coffin or burial container, usually decorated with sculpted figures or relief scenes, made for wealthy patrons in ancient Mediterranean cultures. The required example is the Etruscan Sarcophagus of the Spouses (c. 520 BCE) from Topic 2.3.
No. The word is often defined as a stone coffin, but the Sarcophagus of the Spouses is painted terracotta, fired in four sections. Material choice is a culturally specific detail the exam tests, since Etruscans favored clay and bronze while Romans carved marble.
Almost certainly not. The Etruscans practiced cremation, so it likely held the couple's ashes, functioning like a monumental cinerary urn despite its life-size figures and coffin form.
An Egyptian coffin or mummy case was shaped to enclose and protect a preserved body for the afterlife, tied directly to mummification. Etruscan and Roman sarcophagi put more emphasis on the exterior display, celebrating the deceased's life, status, or virtues for a living audience.
It is the centerpiece of Topic 2.3 and a go-to example for LO 2.3.A, explaining how purpose, audience, and patron shape art. The equal, affectionate pairing of husband and wife is the classic evidence point for Etruscan women's elevated social status compared to Greece.
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