Preview

Russian Journal of Church History

Advanced search

The 19th century Old Believers’ chased icon “Cross of Calvary” as a heritage of Old Russian Staurotheke

https://doi.org/10.15829/2686-973X-2022-91

Abstract

This article examines the chased relief icon “Cross of Calvary” made on a thin brass plate fastened to a rectangular wooden board. The chased icon compositional construction and the inscriptions-cryptograms are similar to the wood-carved Old Believers’ icons of the 18th — 19th centuries made by masters of the Russian North. The general composition, the style of the ornament, the technique of execution and the inset inscription on the engraved icon “Cross of Calvary” testify that this work was created by an Old Believers master, a follower of the Old Pomor community Filippovtsy in the Russian North in the first half of the 19th century and is focused on the oldest traditions of church art. The chased relief icon depicting the eight-pointed Calvary Cross is an echo of the ancient tradition of creating a Staurotheke, well-known in ancient Russian and Byzantine art. Such icons did not only belong to churches but also were carefully kept as family relics in the Cross chambers or in the Red corners of the living quarters and subsequently contributed to the church. Making of a Staurotheke is associated with the veneration and preservation of liturgical or pectoral crosses, which were cut into a board or placed in closed arks then becoming an icon of the Cross. Those Staurothekes were сonsidered to be sacred objects richly decorated with oklads, precious stones and pearls. This article also presents various types of liturgical and pectoral crosses with embedded sacred relics, which were especially revered. Old Russian crosses were made in different periods of time with different art styles, shape, proportions, sizes, nature of decor. All this indicates a variety of traditions and revered sanctities which served as models in the process of making later crosses.

About the Author

Valeriy V. Igoshev
State Research Institute for Restoration; The Central Andrey Rublev Museum of Ancient Russian Culture and Art; The Moscow Theological Academy
Russian Federation

Moscow



References

1. Bobrinsky 2011 — Bobrinsky, A. A. (2011). Folk Russian wooden products. Household, household and partly church household items. (Reprint. ed.) Ed. V. Shevchuk. M. ISBN: 978-5-94232-079-9.

2. Decorative and Applied Art of Novgorod 1996 — Decorative and applied Art of Veliky Novgorod. Artistic metal of the XI — XV centuries (1996). Ed.-comp. Sterligova, I. A. Izd. Nauka. M. ISBN: 5-02-011534-7.

3. Decorative and applied art of Novgorod 2008 — Decorative and applied art of Veliky Novgorod. Artistic metal of the XVI — XVII centuries (2008). Ed.-comp. Sterligova, I. A. Ed. The Northern Pilgrim. M. ISBN: 978-5-94431-252-5.

4. Igoshev 2009 — Igoshev, V. V. (2009). Precious church utensils of the XVI — XVII centuries: Veliky Novgorod. Yaroslavl. Solvychegodsk. Ed. Indrik. M. ISBN: 978-5-91674-050-9.

5. Igoshev 2017 — Igoshev, V. V. (2017). The Old Russian liturgical cross of the end of the XV century from the Athos St. Panteleimon Monastery. Athos is the Light of Orthodoxy: The Interaction of Cultures. Proceedings of the International Conference on October 5-7, 2016. I. E. Repin Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture at the Russian Academy of Arts. SPb., 67-78. ISBN: 978- 5-903677-56-6.

6. Igoshev 2020 — Igoshev, V. V. (2020). Artistic silver of the XV — XVIII centuries from the Pereslavl-Zalessky Museum-Reserve. Publishing house BuksMArt. M. ISBN: 978-5-907267-02-2.

7. Inventory of the Novgorod St. Sophia Cathedral 1988 — Inventory of the property of the Novgorod St. Sophia Cathedral of the XVIII — early XIX century. Comp. Gordienko, E. A., Markina, G. K. M.-L. 042(02)1.

8. Petrenko 2002 — Petrenko, T. A. (2002). Works of ancient Russian applied art from the Alexander-Svir monastery (according to archival materials). Pages of the history of Russian art. XII — the first half of the XIX century. Issue VIII. SPb.

9. Pivovarova 2005 — Pivovarova, N. V. (2005). About the collection of Old Believers carved “gravestones” from the fund of the Department of Ancient Russian Art of the Russian Museum. Pages of the history of Russian art of the XVI — XX century. St. Petersburg.

10. Scribal books of Old Russia 2009 — Scribal and census books of Old Russia of the late XV — XVII centuries (2009). Comp. Ankundinov, I. Y. Ed. Handwritten monuments of Ancient Russia. M. ISBN: 978-5-95510310-5.

11. Plaksina 2019 — Plaksina, N. E. (2019). On the question of attribution of the Old Believer wooden carved plastic of the lower Pechora of the late XVIII — XIX century. Problems of attribution of monuments of decorative and applied art of the XVI — XIX centuries. Materials of the V Scientific and practical Conference on October 25-27, 2017 Proceedings of the GIM. Issue 212. Comp. Vorozhbitova, M. V., Shpolyanskaya, D. V. M.

12. Carved iconostases 1995 — Carved iconostases and wooden sculpture of the Russian North (1995). Exhibition catalog. The author is comp. T. M. Koltsova. Arkhangelsk-Moscow, 163-166. ISBN: 5-7196-0759-5.

13. Savvaitov 1886 — Savvaitov, P. I. (1886). Stroganov’s contributions to the Solvychegodsky Annunciation Cathedral according to the inscriptions on them. St. Petersburg.

14. Sobolev 2000 — Sobolev, N. N. (2000). Russian folk wood carving. M.

15. Preserved shrines of the Solovetsky Monastery 2001 — Preserved shrines of the Solovetsky Monastery. Exhibition catalog (2001). Publishing house. Bely Bereg. M. ISBN: 5-88678-083-1. ISBN: 5-89652-013-1.

16. Sterligova 2000 — Sterligova, I. A. (2000). New Testament relics in Ancient Russia. Christian relics in the Moscow Kremlin. Exhibition catalog. Ed.-comp. Lidov, A. M. Ed. Radunitsa. M. ISBN: 5-88123-034-5.

17. Titov 1890 — Titov, A. A. (1890). The city of Lyubim and the abolished monasteries in Lyubim and its county. M., p. 43.

18. Tsarsky Temple 2003 — Tsarsky Temple. Shrines of the Annunciation Cathedral in the Kremlin (2003). The author of the catalog article Martynova, M. V. M. ISBN: 5-88678-095-5.


Review

For citations:


Igoshev V.V. The 19th century Old Believers’ chased icon “Cross of Calvary” as a heritage of Old Russian Staurotheke. Russian Journal of Church History. 2022;3(1S):116-129. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.15829/2686-973X-2022-91

Views: 772


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2686-973X (Print)
ISSN 2687-069X (Online)