Back to Search
Start Over
Fulcher’s Bestiary at the Door of the Holy Sepulchre
- Source :
- Ad Limina, Vol 6, Pp 99-147 (2015)
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Turismo de Galicia-S.A. de Xestión do Plan Xacobeo, 2015.
-
Abstract
- The southern façade of the Holy Sepulchre was adorned until 1929 with two carved lintels, distinct in their iconographies (exhibited ever since in the Rockefeller Museum). Whereas the western Christological lintel represents the narrative of the last days of Jesus in Jerusalem (albeit in breach with the narrative sequence), the eastern peopled-scroll lintel is a non-narrative representation of a variety of beasts, birds, and naked male figures, some of whom are obscenely pointing to their genitalia. The puzzling iconography of this bestial world includes the conspicuous images of a bird-siren and a centaur. Rather overlooked by past scholarship, it would seem implausible that the most important holy site in Christendom and a meta-pilgrimage church would have been decorated with meaningless imagery. This paper contextualizes the eastern lintel within crusader concepts of history and mythology, biblical symbolism, liturgy and patronage. The eastern door gave way to the funerary chapel of the crusader kings, located beneath the Calvary Chapel. An examination of the funerary context reveals that sirens played part in such schemes, endowing the lintel with an apotropaic vitality. A remarkable chapter in the chronicle of Fulcher of Chartres, illustrating the curiosities of the Lands of the Saracens, is suggested as a major conceptual notion for the understanding of the non-narrative lintel, which actually stands within the Bestiary tradition. The lintel thus becomes a liminal site, where all polyvalent layers meet, meant to show the opposition of good and evil forces. This opposition is established by installing a historiated Christological lintel to the west, embodying a liturgical vision of the New Jerusalem recently established by the Franks and, to the east, an image of the conquered beasts of the Saracens, doomed to hell, signaling Latin victory, on the one hand, and promising an apotropaic protection for the departed, on the other. The patronage of Queen Melisende, in collaboration with the crusader Church, is then analyzed.
- Subjects :
- holy sepulchre
crusader jerusalem
center of the world
pilgrimage culture
romanesque sculpture
santiago de compostela
st.-sernin of toulouse
peopled-scroll lintel
christological lintel
beasts
bestiary
siren
centaur
odyssey
children of israel
crusaders
fulcher of chartres
lands of the saracens
funerary context
calvary chapel
chapel of adam
good and evil forces
apotropaic imagery
liminal imagery
palm sunday procession
liturgy
franks
queen melisende
History of scholarship and learning. The humanities
AZ20-999
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- German, English, Spanish; Castilian, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese
- ISSN :
- 26595885
- Volume :
- 6
- Database :
- Directory of Open Access Journals
- Journal :
- Ad Limina
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- edsdoj.f25daec977c145779fa259a0bd0d29ca
- Document Type :
- article
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.61890/adlimina/6.2015/04