HOME :
Byzantine Art :
Byzantine Crosses : Byzantine Cross Reliquary
|
 |
|
|
Byzantine Cross Reliquary - SP.505
Origin: Mediterranean
Circa: 5
th
Century AD
to 12
th
Century AD
Dimensions:
4.35" (11.0cm) high
x 2" (5.1cm) wide
Collection: Byzantine Art
Medium: Bronze
$9,000.00
Location: United States
|
|
|
Photo Gallery |
|
Description |
A reliquary is a receptacle for keeping or
displaying sacred relics. For Christians, relics
were objects connected with saints or the actual
physical remains of saints. The veneration of the
sacred relics of martyrs is a practice known to
date from at least as early as the 2nd century.
The Crusades led to an influx of relics from the
Middle East and reliquaries became popular
items of adornment used for protection by
crusaders and the wealthy elite who could afford
such luxuries. Although the practice of
veneration was defended both by the 13th
century theologian St. Thomas Aquinas and by
the Council of Trent in the 16th century, the
veneration of icons has always had a greater
importance in the Eastern Orthodoxy.
This beautiful Byzantine reliquary cross once
housed the relics of a Christian martyr. The front
and back halves of the object are still seated
together by the hinges, having remained
unopened through the ages. Perhaps traces of
the martyr’s or saint’s remains, originally
deposited inside are still contained there. The
Latin-shaped cross has been incised with a
representation of Mary on the front. The Virgin is
shown with her arms outstretched in prayer, bent
upward towards the heavens. This specific pose
is known as the Virgin Orans, meaning “Praying
Virgin.” The forms of the Virgin have been
abstracted. This suggestive style heightens the
spirituality of the work, for it is the idea of the
holiness of the figure that is the focus, not her
physicality. Above the Virgin’s head is inscribed
in Greek letters the word “KOIENO,” the meaning
of which is unclear. Often on other similar
reliquaries, the name of the saint, or those of
other religious figures, is inscribed here. On the
reverse, incised lines outline the cruciform shape
of the reliquary. Incised details of various
shapes adorn the arms of the cross, and a circle
accented with a focal point rests in the nexus of
the cross. An early conservator of the artifact
identified its date as 5th to 6th century A.D.,
though others bearing similar style have been
dated as far forward as 8th to 12th century A.D.
The sacred, protective energies of this
spectacular reliquary cross continue to radiate
outwards, still as potent and powerful as the day
it was first worn.
- (SP.505)
|
|
|