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Late Antique Images of the Virgin Annunciate Spinning: Allotting the Scarlet and the Purple: Texts and Studies in Eastern Christianity, cartea 11

Autor Catherine Gines Taylor
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 mar 2018
In Late Antique Images of the Virgin Annunciate Spinning: allotting the scarlet and the purple, Catherine Gines Taylor traces the way early Christians assimilated the symbolism of spinning into images of the Annunciation. Taylor offers an art historical and interdisciplinary look at the earliest images of Mary spinning, underscoring the iconographic model of idealized matronage consistent with lay piety and the cult of Mary. The personal and domestic nature of this motif is evidence toward popular Mariological devotion that preceded the exclusive, semi-divine presentation of the Theotokos, and stands in contrast with traditional ascetic models for Mary.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004346758
ISBN-10: 9004346759
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Texts and Studies in Eastern Christianity


Cuprins

List of Figures

Introduction. Preceding the Ascetic Type: Earliest Images of the Virgin Annunciate Spinning
1The Protoevangelium of James: A Contemporary Apocryphum
2Methodological Considerations
3Patristic Considerations

1 The Roots and Precedents
1Catacombs of Priscilla, Cubiculum P—The First Annunciation
2Spinning and Roman Public Display: Minerva and Domition’s Forum Transitorium
3Spinning in Legend
4Spinning Iconography amongst Elites and Non-Elites in Roman Society
5The Attributes of Virtue: Spinning in Proverbs and the Jewish Tradition
6Conclusions

2 The Maiden. The Domestic Cult of Mary: Imitatio Mariae and Spinning a Sacred Conversation
1Mary the Maiden
2Annunciation Iconography and the Domestic Cult of Mary
3Maiden’s Tools: Sacred, Profane, Mundane
4The Maiden Imaged as the Ascetic
5Marian Devotion as Counter-Ascetic
6Proclus and the Constantinopolitan Tradition of Imitatio Mariae
7Imitatio Mariae and the Syriac Tradition of the Domestic Annunciation
8Conclusions: Work as a Sacred Conversation and a Life Pleasing to God

3 The Matron
1Marriage Art and Marriage Rings
2The Annunciation as Privileged Iconography: Ring Descriptions
3The Fifth-Century Legal Context and Family Life
4The Paraphernalia of Married Fertility and Early Church Councils
5Children, “An Inheritance of the Lord”
6Conclusions

4 The Household
1Women in Purple: Privileged Patronage
2Women in Linen and Wool: Domestic Piety and Patronage
3Late Antique Textiles and the Domestic Sphere
4Textile Patronage in Panopolis
5The Abegg-Stiftung “Mary Silk”
6A Linen Burial Cloth from the Victoria and Albert Museum
7Later Comparative Textiles
8Burial Garments and the Threshold of Death
9Conclusions

5 Memorial
1Comparisons from the Grave: Other Roman Catacombs
2The Pignatta Sarcophagus
3Patristics in Ravenna
4Attitudes toward Death and Salvation
5Phrygian Tombstones
6Conclusions

Conclusion. The Virgin Annunciate Spinning: A Matronly Model, “In Whom All Opposites are Reconciled”
1Santa Maria Maggiore
2Final Thoughts

Bibliography
Index

Notă biografică

Catherine Gines Taylor, Ph.D. (2012), The University of Manchester, is a Visiting Fellow at the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship at Brigham Young University. She has published articles and book chapters on iconography and women within early Christian memorial settings, including The Pignatta Sarcophagus: Late Antique Iconography and the Memorial Culture of Salvation (Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2016).