harmony wrote:Do you have a comment about the OP?
Sure.
Illustrators often get things wrong.
The various paintings of "The Flight of the Holy Family into Egypt" routinely depict Mary and Joseph and the infant Jesus traveling from Palestine to Egypt via what appear to be the Swiss Alps -- or, sometimes, the fields of Flanders -- dressed as Ottoman Turks.
I have a copy of the C. S. Lewis novel Out of the Silent Planet featuring a cover that depicts men in spacesuits walking around on what looks like the surface of the moon. It's painfully obvious that the illustrator hadn't read the novel.
My wife and kids and I once watched the movie The Greatest Story Ever Told while living in Jerusalem. The scenery in the film was wildly inaccurate, which I already knew, but it was particularly funny since we could look right out our window and see much of the real landscape. My kids got a huge kick out of it.
And so on and so forth.
I regret inaccurate artists' conceptions, but I've seen so very, very many of them that they don't cause me much heartburn in most cases.