Archivo:BLW Reliquary Cross.jpg

Contenido de la página no disponible en otros idiomas.
De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Ver la imagen en su resolución original(2132 × 2325 píxeles; tamaño de archivo: 1,91 MB; tipo MIME: image/jpeg)

Resumen

Descripción
English: Reliquary Cross

About 1000 (back and sides 900-1000)
England (figure)
Germany (cross)
Gold plaques on a cedar base; walrus ivory for the figure of Christ

The cross is one of the rare surviving pieces which give substance to descriptions in contemporary documentary sources of the sumptuous church furnishings of pre-Conquest England. The enamels are unique in Anglo-Saxon art and may have been made by an English goldsmith familiar with German work. A fragmentary and not totally legible inscription around the edge of the cross seems to list the relics of saints once contained in the cavity beneath the ivory figure of Christ.
This ivory figure was temporarily removed in 1926 for the purpose of being photographed and cast. Beneath it, lying in a hollow cut in the wood approximately 8.5 cm long, 2 cm wide and 1 cm deep was a dried human finger (perhaps a female index finger) pointing downwards with its outer surface to the front. Despite Papal disapproval of the dismemberment of saints, a finger relic was by no means unusual in Anglo-Saxon England: King Athelstan bestowed one third of his extensive collection of relics to the monastery of St. Mary and St. Peter at Exeter in AD 932. The gift included a finger, purportedly that of Mary Magdalene.

Relics attracted the laity to a church. As court members in the heavenly kingdom, saints were held to be close to God. Believers considered the veneration of saint's relics (both the physical remains of saints and secondary relics such as clothing) a means to secure intercession on their behalf. Through relics, lay people sought mediation for their prayers, the care of their souls and also sought miracles and cures for their physical ailments. The New Testament refers to the healing power of objects which had been touched by Christ and the Apostles. The role of relics in miracle working increased in England in the tenth century, a phenomenon reflected in the contemporary compilation of miracle lists.

Relics could be either the physical remains of saints or secondary material.

Collection ID: 7943-1862

This photo was taken as part of Britain Loves Wikipedia in February 2010 by Jenny O'Donnell.

Fecha Photographed in febrero de 2010
Fuente Originally uploaded at http://www.britainloveswikipedia.org/
Autor Jenny O'Donnell

Licencia:

w:es:Creative Commons
atribución compartir igual
Este archivo se encuentra bajo la licencia Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales.
Atribución: Jenny O'Donnell
Eres libre:
  • de compartir – de copiar, distribuir y transmitir el trabajo
  • de remezclar – de adaptar el trabajo
Bajo las siguientes condiciones:
  • atribución – Debes otorgar el crédito correspondiente, proporcionar un enlace a la licencia e indicar si realizaste algún cambio. Puedes hacerlo de cualquier manera razonable pero no de manera que sugiera que el licenciante te respalda a ti o al uso que hagas del trabajo.
  • compartir igual – En caso de mezclar, transformar o modificar este trabajo, deberás distribuir el trabajo resultante bajo la misma licencia o una compatible como el original.



derivative works

Obras derivadas de ésta:

Leyendas

Añade una explicación corta acerca de lo que representa este archivo

Elementos representados en este archivo

representa a

image/jpeg

4c830e0f02e8e0e65c457c2c336085bbd549fb27

2 004 178 byte

2325 píxel

2132 píxel

Historial del archivo

Haz clic sobre una fecha y hora para ver el archivo tal como apareció en ese momento.

Fecha y horaMiniaturaDimensionesUsuarioComentario
actual22:59 10 abr 2010Miniatura de la versión del 22:59 10 abr 20102132 × 2325 (1,91 MB)File Upload Bot (Mike Peel){{BLW2010 | title=Reliquary Cross | description={{en|Reliquary Cross<br /> About 1000 (back and sides 900-1000)<br /> England (figure)<br /> Germany (cross)<br /> Gold plaques on a cedar base; walrus ivory for the figure of Christ<br /> <br /> The cross i

La siguiente página usa este archivo:

Uso global del archivo

Las wikis siguientes utilizan este archivo:

Metadatos