From 2001 loaned by the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam (nr. A3113) Purchased with the support of the 'Vereniging Rembrandt'
Christ is captured. Judas has laid his hands on Christ's neck. Peter, right, stands with sword raised, hounding Malchus, the servant of the high priest Caiaphas. Malchus was trying to pull his knife.
Origin: Before 1930 in possession of Art Dealer Loebl, who on 2 August 1930 sold to art dealer Reinier Willem Petrus de Vries In Amsterdam. In October 1930 came it, with the help of the friends of the Rembrandt Association, as being a real Jheronymus Bosch in possession of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, which lent it from 2001 to the Noordbrabants Museum in's-Hertogenbosch.
In 1932, there were publications about the 'authenticity' and confirmed Friedländer that his expertise in the purchase was not requested by the Rijksmuseum.
Notes: See also the Triptych in Valencia and the eponymous painting in San Diego and Princeton. Also signaled a similar instance in 1924 at Art Dealer Fiviez in Brussels.