From the Resurrection to the Ascension, Christ's Post

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

From the Resurrection to the Ascension, Christ's Post FROM THE RESURRECTION TO THE ASCENSION: CHRIST’S POST-RESURRECTION APPEARANCES IN BYZANTINE ART (3rd – 12th c.) by POLYVIOS KONIS A thesis submitted to The University of Birmingham for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies Institute of Archaeology and Antiquity College of Arts and Law The University of Birmingham November 2008 University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository This unpublished thesis/dissertation is copyright of the author and/or third parties. The intellectual property rights of the author or third parties in respect of this work are as defined by The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 or as modified by any successor legislation. Any use made of information contained in this thesis/dissertation must be in accordance with that legislation and must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holder. Abstract This thesis examines the evolution and dissemination of the iconography of the post- Resurrection appearances of Christ. Special attention is given to the association between word and image, as well as the influence exerted on art by contemporary theology, liturgy and politics. The earliest use of these apparitions in art is associated with baptism while in literature they were successfully employed against heresies. The Virgin’s participation in the post-Resurrection narrative reveals the way in which homilies and hymns inspire art. Another important figure of these apparitions, which receives special attention, is the Magdalene, whose significance rivalled that of the Virgin’s. While the Marys at the Tomb and the Chairete were two of the most widely accepted apparitions, it was the Incredulity of Thomas that found its way in the so- called twelve-feast cycle and revealed the impact of liturgy upon the dissemination of an iconographic theme. The emergence of the Anastasis will rival their exclusive role as visual synonyms of Christ’s resurrection, but this thesis reveals that their relation was one of cooperation rather than rivalry, since the post-Resurrection scenes and the Anastasis complimented each other in terms of iconography and theology. Finally it becomes apparent that the pilgrimage in the Holy Land and the liturgy that was taking place there is responsible for many iconographic details which help us discern the dissemination of a particular iconography. To my parents for their love and support Acknowledgements I would like to express my gratitude to my supervisor Professor Leslie Brubaker, whose inspirational teaching, expertise, understanding and patience added considerably to my graduate experience. Her assistance in grant proposals, scholarship applications and of course this thesis has been immense. I would also like to thank Dr. Mary Cunningham, who voluntarily acted as my second supervisor, and who patiently read through earlier chapters of this thesis and offered numerous suggestions. A special thanks goes out to Professor Dimitrios Triantafyllopoulos of the University of Cyprus for his care and support during my undergraduate years and to the members of the Centre for Byzantine Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies of the University of Birmingham: Bryer, Ruth, Joe, Dimiter, Vicky and many others, whose help was never short. My thanks should be extended from here to the academics and stuff of the IAA for their assistance in numerous occasions. I would also like to thank his Most Reverend Neophytos, Metropolitan of Morphou, for his guidance and support from my teenage years up to this day, and the director of the Cultural Foundation of Archbishop Makarios III, George Christodoulou, for his care. To the list I should add Professor Gerhard Wolf director of the Kunsthistorisches Institut for allowing me to use the extensive library and premises of the Institute and Dottoressa Manuela de Giorgi for facilitating the afore-mentioned visit and my stay in Florence but mostly for her friendship and support. I would also like to thank the directors of the Research Centre of Anatolian Civilizations (RCAC), of the Koç University, Professor Scott Redford and Dr. Alessandra Ricci, and the committee who entrusted me with a Senior Fellowship. I would also like to mention those individuals and institutions who entrusted me with their money. The Costakis and Leto Severis foundation, and especially his chairman Demosthenes Severis and his acting secretary Phoivos Vovides for a generous scholarship; the Leventis Foundation for a three-year research grant; and Professor Dimitrios Triantafyllopoulos, also for a research grant. And what is someone without his friends. At this point I would like to thank my friends and colleagues here at Birmingham, Dr. George Christodoulides, Dr. Savvas Kyriakides, Gianna Andreou, Athanasia Staurou, Eirini Panou, Maria Paphitis and many others for their many advices, support and lovely company during the last five years; and also my friends Dr. Dimitris Kamouzis and his wife Aude el Hawa for facilitating my numerous stays in London but mostly for their friendship. In the fear of becoming too melodramatic, I would like to extend my thanks to my friends from the Master’s degree, Gulru Tanman, Antri Christou and Dr Hiroyuki Hashikawa, who made my first graduate experience, a special one. Individual thanks go out to my friends from Cyprus: Andreas and Baso Constantinou, Antreas Kyriakides, Yiannis Sakkas, Soteris Tsolakis, Skevi Katsiari, Savvas Georgiou, Eleni Ioannidou, Popi Theophanous, and many others who supported me throughout these years and were always there for me, during my short spells on the island. Here I should add my godmother Stella Kalogerou, whose faith in me never faded, and my sister Maria Koni-Papaioannou, who first taught me the value of classical education. The present volume is dedicated to my parents, Anthony Konis and Emily, née Paruti, for infusing me with their love of antiquity, and for supporting me throughout this long and arduous journey. Their love and patience has been an inspiration to me. v Table of Contents List of Illustrations ........................................................................................................ vi List of Abbreviations ................................................................................................... vii INTRODUCTION .........................................................................................................1 CHAPTER 1: The Earliest Evidencnce .......................................................................13 1.1 The post-Resurrection Appearances of Christ and the Baptismal Rite ..................14 1.2 The post-Resurrection Appearances of Christ and the Arts of Palestine ...............28 1.3 Roman and Palestinian iconographic cycles.. .......................................................41 CHAPTER 2: The Virgin and the Magdalene as Myrrh-bearers .................................91 2.1 The Virgin in the post-Resurrection Appearances of Christ in the period before Iconoclasm ..................................................................................................................92 2.2 The Magdalene in the post-Resurrection Appearances of Christ in the period before Iconoclasm ......................................................................................................121 CHAPTER 3: Anti-Heretical, Ecclesiastical and Liturgical Influences .................... 140 3.1 The post-Resurrection Appearances as Polemics against Heresies ..................... 141 3.2 The role of Theology and Ecclesiastical policy in the evolution and dissemination of the post-Resurrection Appearances ....................................................................... 159 3.2.1 Ecclesiastical policy: The case of Sant’ Apollinare Nuovo in Ravenna ........... 159 3.2.2 Baptismal Rite ................................................................................................... 164 3.2.3 Changes in the Liturgical Calendar................................................................... 171 3.2.4 Theological Literature. The Canonical and the Apocryphal Tradition ............. 175 CHAPTER 4: The Maries, the Anastasis and the rise of the Chairete ...................... 183 4.1 Iconoclasm and its aftermath ............................................................................... 184 4.2 The post-Resurrection appearances in the ninth century ..................................... 191 4.2.1 The West in the ninth century ........................................................................... 192 4.2.2 The East in the ninth century ............................................................................ 221 vi CHAPTER 5: The Virign and the Magdalene after Iconoclasm ............................... 259 5.1 Maria sola assidente ad ostia monumenti ........................................................... 260 5.2 Mary Magdalene the Myrrh-bearer, the Sinner and the Apostle ......................... 276 CHAPTER 6: Festal or Narrative Cycles? ................................................................ 294 6.1 The post-Resurrection Appearances in the Twelve Feast Cycle ......................... 295 6.1.1 The Incredulity of Thomas in the festal cycle .................................................. 298 6.1.2 Narrative or festal cycle: The case of the Chairete ........................................... 319 6.2 Cappadocia and beyond ......................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • The Post-Resurrection Appearances of Christ
    Konis, P. (2006) “The Post-Resurrection Appearances of Christ. The case of the Chairete or ‘All Hail’”. Rosetta 1: 31-40 http://www.rosetta.bham.ac.uk/Issue_01/Konis.htm Rosetta 1. http://www.rosetta.bham.ac.uk/Issue_01/Konis.htm The Post-Resurrection Appearances of Christ. The case of the Chairete or ‘All Hail’ Polyvios Konis PhD Byzantine Studies, University of Birmingham The post-resurrection appearances of Christ are a series of apparitions described in the four canonical Gospels and the first Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians.1 In the absence of any canonical description about Christ’s actual moment of resurrection, these apparitions became a visual and literal synonym and evidently confirmed the reality of Christ’s resurrection. The details in such descriptions are not necessarily consistent: the number of angels and women differ in each Gospel; the time of Christ’s appearance to them differs as well; and while Paul mentions Peter as the first to see Christ resurrected, the Marys (or Myrrh-bearers) are the individuals described by the Gospels as first at the tomb.2 The most popular apparitions were: the Incredulity of Thomas, an event exclusive in John;3 the Appearance to the Eleven, described by all four Gospels and sometimes fused with the Mission of the Apostles; the Marys at the Tomb described with variations again by the four Gospels; and the Chairete. The Chairete is a unique event described by Matthew. According to the Evangelist, two women, namely Mary Magdalene and the other Mary (the mother of Jacob and Joses) discovered Christ’s empty tomb and when they saw the resurrected Christ, he hailed them.
    [Show full text]
  • The Evidence of Late Antique Syriac Hagiography Di Brouria Bitton-Ashkelony
    From Sacred Travel to Monastic Career: The Evidence of Late Antique Syriac Hagiography di Brouria Bitton-Ashkelony In one of the dramatic moments in the conversion of Rabbula – a prominent figure in the Church of Edessa in the first half of the fifth century – Acacius bishop of Aleppo and Eusebius bishop of Edessa led him to the monastery of Marcian and Abraham, two local holy recluses belonging to the Syriac ecclesiastical landscape1. There Rabbula declared his desire to convert to Christianity and to shut himself away, like them. But before entering this new way of life he expressed one desire: To go to Jerusalem and see the holy place and be baptized in the Jordan where Christ was baptized as a model for us2. Rabbula then «entered Jerusalem, prayed in front of Golgotha…, entered the tomb of the Lord and the cave where he was born, and went up to the place of the Ascension… From there he went down to the Jordan; at once he petitioned the priests and recited before them the creed, and they anointed him and baptized him»3. As soon as he was baptized he went back to his city, where he assumed a social position, and appeared as the patron of the poor4. Later on he launched his episcopate career and served as the bishop of Edessa in 411-412 and again in 435- 436, emerging as an opponent of Nestorius and supporter of Cyril of Alexandria. This account narrated in the Life of Rabbula, composed around 440, close to the hero’s own time, offers an intriguing close-up of the social and intellectual elite’s conversion against the background of Edessa’s Hellenic culture at the end of the fourth century and beginning of the fifth5.
    [Show full text]
  • An Evaluation of Speaking in Tongues As Angelic Language from the Judaean and Early Christian Perspectives
    An Evaluation of Speaking in Tongues as Angelic Language from the Judaean and Early Christian Perspectives Eben de Jager Abstract In contemporary Pentecostal and Charismatic circles glossolalia is Keywords often referred to as the tongues of angels, with 1 Corinthians 13:1 Tongues of angels, angeloglossy, xenolalia, glossolalia, being quoted. Yet writings on the tongues of angels available in hebraeophone. the first century and the Judaean context from which Paul wrote do not support such a narrative. In addition, the Corinthian About the Author1 context and the writings of the Church Fathers also paint a picture Eben de Jager not aligned with the contemporary view. An analysis of 1 Masters Degree, UNISA. He is a member of Spirasa (The Spirituality Corinthians 13:1–3 shows it to be a weak support for establishing Association of South Africa). the concept of contemporary ‘angelic language’. Other influences may have given rise to the idea of glossolalia as the tongues of angels, but the Bible does not appear to support such a view. 1 The views expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the beliefs of the South African Theological Seminary. Conspectus—The Journal of the South African Theological Seminary ISSN 1996-8167 https://www.sats.edu.za/conspectus/ This article: https://www.sats.edu.za/de-jager-an-evaluation-of-speaking-in-tongues Conspectus, Volume 28, September 2019 35 1. Introduction There are many different views on the gift of tongues, or glossolalia, in Christian circles today. Cartledge (2000:136–138) lists twelve possibilities of what the linguistic nature of glossolalia might be, based on his study of various scholars’ work.
    [Show full text]
  • ABSTRACT the Apostolic Tradition in the Ecclesiastical Histories Of
    ABSTRACT The Apostolic Tradition in the Ecclesiastical Histories of Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret Scott A. Rushing, Ph.D. Mentor: Daniel H. Williams, Ph.D. This dissertation analyzes the transposition of the apostolic tradition in the fifth-century ecclesiastical histories of Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret. In the early patristic era, the apostolic tradition was defined as the transmission of the apostles’ teachings through the forms of Scripture, the rule of faith, and episcopal succession. Early Christians, e.g., Irenaeus, Tertullian, and Origen, believed that these channels preserved the original apostolic doctrines, and that the Church had faithfully handed them to successive generations. The Greek historians located the quintessence of the apostolic tradition through these traditional channels. However, the content of the tradition became transposed as a result of three historical movements during the fourth century: (1) Constantine inaugurated an era of Christian emperors, (2) the Council of Nicaea promulgated a creed in 325 A.D., and (3) monasticism emerged as a counter-cultural movement. Due to the confluence of these sweeping historical developments, the historians assumed the Nicene creed, the monastics, and Christian emperors into their taxonomy of the apostolic tradition. For reasons that crystallize long after Nicaea, the historians concluded that pro-Nicene theology epitomized the apostolic message. They accepted the introduction of new vocabulary, e.g. homoousios, as the standard of orthodoxy. In addition, the historians commended the pro- Nicene monastics and emperors as orthodox exemplars responsible for defending the apostolic tradition against the attacks of heretical enemies. The second chapter of this dissertation surveys the development of the apostolic tradition.
    [Show full text]
  • December 2016
    ANGLICAN JOURNAL Since 1875 vol. 142 no. 10 december 2016 Welby, Francis vow to strive for social justice André Forget STAFF WRITER While decisions by some Anglican churches to ordain women and allow same-sex marriage have been major hindrances to formal unity between IMAGE: THOOM/SHUTTERSTOCK Anglicans and Roman Catholics, a common declaration issued by Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby and Pope Francis October 5 reaffirmed their commitment to ecumenical work. “While…we ourselves do not see solutions to the obstacles before us, we are undeterred,” the declaration says. “We are confident that dialogue and engagement with one another will deepen our understanding and help us to discern the See related story, mind of Christ for his church.” p. 3. See Anglicans, p. 13 ILLUSTRATION: ALIDA MASSARI IMAGE: SASKIA ROWLEY The task force on the theology of money argues that the current Rejoice economic system is an example of “structural sin.” There’s something special about Advent concerts, which draw Christians and non-Christians alike. See story p. 7 ‘A vision of enough’ André Forget Traumatized as a child, Rwandan Anglican STAFF WRITER On October 18, an Anglican Church of works to heal genocide-scarred youth Canada task force released “On the Theol- Tali Folkins about what the next day would bring, had ogy of Money,” a report calling the faithful STAFF WRITER to be reminded by their parents that it was to embrace a “vision of ‘enough’” when it Emmanuel Gatera was only five when time for bed. IMAGE: SKYBOYSV/SHUTTERSTOCK comes to material wealth. trauma of a kind so familiar to his fellow About an hour later, a mob of more Many Christians in the 21st century Rwandans first began to afflict his young than a hundred people had gathered are torn between their faith, which teaches brain.
    [Show full text]
  • The Art of the Icon: a Theology of Beauty, Illustrated
    THE ART OF THE ICON A Theology of Beauty by Paul Evdokimov translated by Fr. Steven Bigham Oakwood Publications Pasadena, California Table of Contents SECTION I: BEAUTY I. The Biblical Vision of Beauty II. The Theology of Beauty in the Fathers III. From Æsthetic to Religious Experience IV. The Word and the Image V. The Ambiguity of Beauty VI. Culture, Art, and Their Charisms VII. Modern Art in the Light of the Icon SECTION II: THE SACRED I. The Biblical and Patristic Cosmology II. The Sacred III. Sacred Time IV. Sacred Space V. The Church Building SECTION III: THE THEOLOGY OF THE ICON I. Historical Preliminaries II. The Passage from Signs to Symbols III. The Icon and the Liturgy IV. The Theology of Presence V. The Theology of the Glory-Light VI. The Biblical Foundation of the Icon VII. Iconoclasm VIII. The Dogmatic Foundation of the Icon IX. The Canons and Creative Liberty X. The Divine Art XI. Apophaticism SECTION IV: A THEOLOGY OF VISION I. Andrei Rublev’s Icon of the Holy Trinity II. The Icon of Our Lady of Vladimir III. The Icon of the Nativity of Christ IV. The Icon of the Lord’s Baptism V. The Icon of the Lord’s Transfiguration VI. The Crucifixion Icon VII. The Icons of Christ’s Resurrection VIII. The Ascension Icon IX. The Pentecost Icon X. The Icon of Divine Wisdom Section I Beauty CHAPTER ONE The Biblical Vision of Beauty “Beauty is the splendor of truth.” So said Plato in an affirmation that the genius of the Greek language completed by coining a single term, kalokagathia.
    [Show full text]
  • The Book of Alternative Services of the Anglican Church of Canada with the Revised Common Lectionary
    Alternative Services The Book of Alternative Services of the Anglican Church of Canada with the Revised Common Lectionary Anglican Book Centre Toronto, Canada Copyright © 1985 by the General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada ABC Publishing, Anglican Book Centre General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada 80 Hayden Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4Y 3G2 [email protected] www.abcpublishing.com All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher. Acknowledgements and copyrights appear on pages 925-928, which constitute a continuation of the copyright page. In the Proper of the Church Year (p. 262ff) the citations from the Revised Common Lectionary (Consultation on Common Texts, 1992) replace those from the Common Lectionary (1983). Fifteenth Printing with Revisions. Manufactured in Canada. Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data Anglican Church of Canada. The book of alternative services of the Anglican Church of Canada. Authorized by the Thirtieth Session of the General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada, 1983. Prepared by the Doctrine and Worship Committee of the General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada. ISBN 978-0-919891-27-2 1. Anglican Church of Canada - Liturgy - Texts. I. Anglican Church of Canada. General Synod. II. Anglican Church of Canada. Doctrine and Worship Committee. III. Title. BX5616. A5 1985
    [Show full text]
  • The Apostolic Succession of the Right Rev. James Michael St. George
    The Apostolic Succession of The Right Rev. James Michael St. George © Copyright 2014-2015, The International Old Catholic Churches, Inc. 1 Table of Contents Certificates ....................................................................................................................................................4 ......................................................................................................................................................................5 Photos ...........................................................................................................................................................6 Lines of Succession........................................................................................................................................7 Succession from the Chaldean Catholic Church .......................................................................................7 Succession from the Syrian-Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch..............................................................10 The Coptic Orthodox Succession ............................................................................................................16 Succession from the Russian Orthodox Church......................................................................................20 Succession from the Melkite-Greek Patriarchate of Antioch and all East..............................................27 Duarte Costa Succession – Roman Catholic Succession .........................................................................34
    [Show full text]
  • CYCLOPEDIA of BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL and ECCLESIASTICAL LITERATURE God- Gyrovagi by James Strong & John Mcclintock
    THE AGES DIGITAL LIBRARY REFERENCE CYCLOPEDIA of BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL and ECCLESIASTICAL LITERATURE God- Gyrovagi by James Strong & John McClintock To the Students of the Words, Works and Ways of God: Welcome to the AGES Digital Library. We trust your experience with this and other volumes in the Library fulfills our motto and vision which is our commitment to you: MAKING THE WORDS OF THE WISE AVAILABLE TO ALL — INEXPENSIVELY. AGES Software Rio, WI USA Version 1.0 © 2000 2 God from the same Saxon root as good, thus beautifully expressing the divine benignity as the leading attribute of the most general term for the Deity, and corresponding almost invariably to two Hebrew words, both from a common root (lWa, au, to be strong). Hengstenberg, however, regards the simpler of these words (lae, El) as a primitive (Auth. of Pent. 1:251), while some consider the extended form (H/leEa, Elo'dh) as derived from a different root (the obsolete Hl;a;, found in Arabic = to worship). The corresponding Shemitic terms are: Arabic, Al or Allah (q.v.); Syriac, Ilo or Eloho; Samar. El or Chilah (= powerful; Castell, in Walton's Polyglot Bible, 6, s.v.); Phoenician El (hjl or ijl), as in En-el (&Enulov, lany[), Gag-el (Gagilus, lagg), Ejloei>m (Sanchon.). SEE ALMIGHTY. The only other Hebrew word generally employed in naming the Supreme Being is Jehovah, h/;hy], which some (so Havernick, Historische-critsche Einleitung ins alte Testament, Berlin, 1839) propose to point hw,h]yi, Jahveh, meaning "the Existing One," holding that Elohim is used merely to indicate the abundance and super-richness contained in the Divine Being.
    [Show full text]
  • MAY 8 Holy Apostle and Evangelist John the Theologian; Ven. Arsenius the Great
    MAY 8 Holy Apostle and Evangelist John the Theologian; Ven. Arsenius the Great "Lord I Call..." Tone 8 Lord, I call upon You, hear me! Hear me, O Lord! Lord, I call upon You, hear me! Receive the voice of my prayer, when I call upon You!// Hear me, O Lord! Let my prayer arise in Your sight as incense, and let the lifting up of my hands be an evening sacrifice!// Hear me, O Lord! v. (10) Bring my soul out of prison, that I may give thanks to Your name! v. (9) The righteous will surround me; for You will deal bountifully with me. Tone 8 (from the Pentecostarion) (Oh, most glorious wonder) After following in the steps of Christ, serving Him with devotion, O Myrrhbearers, you did not forsake Him even after His death. Moved by compassion, you went, bearing myrrh with tears.// Therefore we celebrate your sacred memory! v. (8) Out of the depths I cry to You, O Lord. Lord, hear my voice! The divine company of women desiring to see the Life, slain, in the tomb, came in the night and heard from the angels: “Christ is risen, as He said! Go with haste and tell the disciples: ‘Drive away the sorrow from your souls!// Instead of tears, accept ineffable joy!’” v. (7) Let Your ears be attentive to the voice of my supplications! O Myrrhbearers, today we faithful rejoice in your memory, glorifying the most gracious Lord Who glorified you! Entreat Him to grant us eternal glory, the joy of the saints:// For you always have boldness before Him, O blessed ones! 1 v.
    [Show full text]
  • Practicing Love of God in Medieval Jerusalem, Gaul and Saxony
    he collection of essays presented in “Devotional Cross-Roads: Practicing Love of God in Medieval Gaul, Jerusalem, and Saxony” investigates test case witnesses of TChristian devotion and patronage from Late Antiquity to the Late Middle Ages, set in and between the Eastern and Western Mediterranean, as well as Gaul and the regions north of the Alps. Devotional practice and love of God refer to people – mostly from the lay and religious elite –, ideas, copies of texts, images, and material objects, such as relics and reliquaries. The wide geographic borders and time span are used here to illustrate a broad picture composed around questions of worship, identity, reli- gious affiliation and gender. Among the diversity of cases, the studies presented in this volume exemplify recurring themes, which occupied the Christian believer, such as the veneration of the Cross, translation of architecture, pilgrimage and patronage, emergence of iconography and devotional patterns. These essays are representing the research results of the project “Practicing Love of God: Comparing Women’s and Men’s Practice in Medieval Saxony” guided by the art historian Galit Noga-Banai, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and the histori- an Hedwig Röckelein, Georg-August-University Göttingen. This project was running from 2013 to 2018 within the Niedersachsen-Israeli Program and financed by the State of Lower Saxony. Devotional Cross-Roads Practicing Love of God in Medieval Jerusalem, Gaul and Saxony Edited by Hedwig Röckelein, Galit Noga-Banai, and Lotem Pinchover Röckelein/Noga-Banai/Pinchover Devotional Cross-Roads ISBN 978-3-86395-372-0 Universitätsverlag Göttingen Universitätsverlag Göttingen Hedwig Röckelein, Galit Noga-Banai, and Lotem Pinchover (Eds.) Devotional Cross-Roads This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
    [Show full text]
  • Gold Jewellery in Ptolemaic, Roman and Byzantine Egypt. Jack M
    Gold Jewellery in Ptolemaic, Roman and Byzantine Egypt. Jack M. Ogden ABSTRACT This study deals with the gold jewellery made and worn in Egypt during the millennium between Alexander the Great's invasion of Egypt and the Arab conquest. Funerary jewellery is largely ignored as are ornaments in the traditional, older Egyptian styles. The work draws upon a wide variety of evidence, in particular the style, composition and construction of surviving jewellery, the many repre- sentations of jewellery in wear, such as funerary portraits, and the numerous literary references from the papyri and from Classical and early Christian writers. Egypt, during the period considered, has provided a greater wealth of such information than anywhere else in the ancient or medieval world and this allows a broadly based study of jewellery in a single ancient society. The individual chapters deal with a brief historical background; the information available from papyri and other literary sources; the sources, distribution, composition and value of gold; the origins and use of mineral and organic gem materials; the economic and social organisation of the goldsmiths' trade; and the individual jewellery types, their chronology, manufacture and significance. This last section is covered in four chapters which deal respectively with rings, earrings, necklets and pendants, and bracelets and armiets. These nine chapters are followed by a detailed bibliography and a list of the 511 illustrations. Gold Jewellery in Ptolemaic, Roman and Byzantine Egypt. In two volumes Volume 1 - Text. Jack M. Ogden Ph.D. Thesis Universtity of Durham, Department of Oriental Studies. © 1990 The copyright of this thesis rests with the author.
    [Show full text]