By Martin Bailey – 22/12/13
Analysis of illuminated gospels suggests that first Christian manuscript art may have come from Ethiopia.
Evidence
has emerged for a previously unknown school of painting in sub-Saharan
Africa that may have been responsible for the earliest Christian
paintings in manuscripts. New research suggests that illuminations in
two Ethiopian gospels dating back 1,500 years were painted in the
ancient kingdom of Aksum, and not in the Middle East, as previously
believed.
These illustrations, which include a set of the
Evangelists, are evidence of an Aksumite School of painting, says
Jacques Mercier, a specialist in Ethiopian art at the Centre National de
la Recherche Scientifique in Paris. Aksum lies in present-day Eritrea
and northern Ethiopia. If Mercier’s theory is correct, it sheds new
light on the development of early Christian art.
An early dating
for these texts (known as the Garima Gospels, after the monastery that
houses them) was first brought to international attention by The Art
Newspaper, when we reported the existence of two bound Gospels with
parchment leaves carbon-dated to between 330 and 650 (The Art Newspaper,
June 2010, p46). They had been assumed to date to around 1100, since no
earlier manuscript was believed to have survived in Ethiopia. A second
set of small samples of parchment was recently dated by the University
of Oxford’s Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art.
The
results were announced last month at a conference in Oxford on the
Garima Gospels, organised by the Ethiopian Heritage Fund. They confirm
the previous results, with a date range of 390 to 570 for the first book
of Gospels and 530 to 630 for the second. The middle dates from these
two results average out at 530.
It has been assumed that the
parchment was prepared and the illuminations created in the Middle East.
The pages would then have been taken to Ethiopia, where the text was
added in Ge’ez (the local language) by Ethiopian scribes. But Mercier
has noticed that scored lines, added to help the scribes writing the
text, were also used for the layout of the illuminations. Some of the 28
horizontal lines are visible behind the pink background of the
Evangelist Luke, and the upper and lower decorated frames have been
painted directly on top of the lines. Mercier argues that if the Ge’ez
text was written in Ethiopia, as seems highly likely, then the
illuminations must have been made there too. Theoretically, the images
could have been painted by a Middle Eastern artist who had travelled
3,000km south, but Mercier argues that it is much more likely that they
are the work of an Aksumite artist, copying earlier (lost) images made
in the Middle East or Aksum.
Among the earliest works
As
to the dating, 530 gives only a rough indication, but it does suggest
that the Garima Gospels include some of the earliest Christian paintings
(other than wall paintings). The earliest dated illuminated manuscript
is the Rabbula Gospels, which was created in 586 in Beth Zagba, in
modern-day Syria, and is now in the collection of the Laurentian Library
in Florence. The Cotton Genesis (British Library), Vienna Genesis
(Austrian National Library) and Rossano Gospels (Rossano cathedral,
Italy) are likely to be slightly earlier. The oldest icons, now in St
Catherine’s monastery in Sinai, date from the mid-sixth century.
The
first volume of the Garima Gospels was conserved and rebound in 2006.
Similar work, organised by the Ethiopian Heritage Fund, was carried out
on the second volume this year.
The Orthodox monastery of Garima
lies in northern Ethiopia, at an altitude of 7,000ft and hemmed in by
rugged cliffs. It is a relatively humble complex of buildings, with 50
monks living in a few simple houses. There is a small treasury building,
where the Gospels have been kept. Last year, a museum was set up in a
converted building, with greater security and armed guards.
The
monastery was founded in the sixth century by Abba Garima, but the area
was occupied by Muslims from the ninth to the 14th centuries and the
monastery would have been abandoned. It remains a mystery how the Garima
Gospels were preserved, but they may have been hidden in a cave before
being rediscovered centuries later.
Source: theorthodoxchurch.info blog
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