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Beheading of John the Baptist

The beheading of John the Baptist, also known as the decollation of Saint John the Baptist or the beheading of the Forerunner, is a biblical event commemorated as a holy day by various Christian churches. According to the New Testament, Herod Antipas, ruler of Galilee under the Roman Empire, had imprisoned John the Baptist because he had publicly reproved Herod for divorcing his first wife and unlawfully taking his sister-in-law (his brother's wife) as his second wife Herodias. He then ordered him to be killed by beheading.

Beheading of Saint John the Baptist
  • Decollation of Saint John the Baptist
  • Beheading of the Forerunner
Venerated in
Feast29 August (Translation of Relic)
AttributesThe severed head of Saint John the Baptist on a round silver platter, often held by Salome or Herod Antipas
Salome and the Apparition of the Baptist's Head by Gustave Moreau. Watercolor painting, 1876. Now in Musée d'Orsay, Paris, France.
Icon of the Beheading of John the Baptist (Museum of Icons, Recklinghausen)

As a non-Biblical source, Jewish historian Josephus also recounts that Herod had John imprisoned and killed, stating, however, that the real reason Herod had for doing so was "the great influence John had over the people", which might persuade John "to raise a rebellion (for they seemed ready to do anything he should advise)". Josephus further states that many of the Jews believed that the military disaster that later on fell upon Herod was God's punishment for his unrighteous behavior towards John.[1]

Traditional accounts edit

According to the synoptic Gospels, Herod, who was tetrarch, or sub-king, of Galilee under the Roman Empire, had imprisoned John the Baptist because he reproved Herod for divorcing his wife (Phasaelis, daughter of King Aretas of Nabataea) and unlawfully taking Herodias, the wife of his brother Herod Philip I. On Herod's birthday, Herodias' daughter (whom Josephus identifies as Salome) danced before the king and his guests. Her dancing pleased Herod so much that in his drunkenness he promised to give her anything she desired, up to half of his kingdom. When Salome asked her mother what she should request, she was told to ask for the head of John the Baptist on a platter. Although Herod was appalled by the request, he reluctantly agreed and had John executed by beheading in the prison.[2] In art, the episode is known as The Feast of Herod.

Jewish historian Josephus also relates in his Antiquities of the Jews that Herod killed John, stating that he did so, "lest the great influence John had over the people might put it into his [John's] power and inclination to raise a rebellion, (for they seemed ready to do any thing he should advise), [so Herod] thought it best [to put] him to death." He further states that many of the Jews believed that the military disaster that fell upon Herod at the hands of Aretas, his father-in-law (Phasaelis' father), was God's punishment for his unrighteous behavior.[1]

None of the sources gives an exact date, which was probably in the years 28–29 AD (Matthew 14:1–12; Mark 6:14–27; Luke 9:9) after imprisoning John the Baptist in 27 AD (Matthew 4:12; Mark 1:14) at the behest of Herodias his brother's wife whom he took as his mistress. (Matthew 14:3–5; Mark 6:17–20);[3] According to Josephus, the death took place at the fortress of Machaerus. The following comparison table is primarily based on the New International Version (NIV) English translation of the New Testament.[4] The account of Flavius Josephus in Antiquities of the Jews was translated by William Whiston.[5]

Matthew Mark Luke–Acts John Josephus
Prologue Luke 1:5–80 John 1:6–18
Ministry Matthew 3:1–17 Mark 1:4–11
  • John the Baptist preached to people and baptised them in the Jordan.
  • John the Baptist baptised Jesus.
Luke 3:1–22; Acts 1:5, 1:21–22, 10:37–38, 11:16, 13:24–25, 18:25, 19:3–4
  • John the Baptist preached to people and baptised them in the Jordan.
  • John the Baptist baptised Jesus.
John 1:19–42, 3:22–36, 4:1
  • John the Baptist preached to people and baptised them in the Jordan. He denied being the Messiah.
  • It is unstated whether or not John the Baptist baptised Jesus. He insisted Jesus was superior: the Son/Lamb of God.
  • Two of John the Baptist's disciples – including Andrew – defected to Jesus at John's own insistence.
  • John the Baptist baptised at Enon/Salim before being arrested. His disciples told him Jesus was successful; John endorsed Jesus as his superior and the Son of God.
  • Jesus heard the rumour he was more successful than John.
Jewish Antiquities 18. 5. 2.
  • John the Baptist preached to people and baptised them.
Prison Matthew 11:2–7, 14:6–12
  • John the Baptist criticised king Herod Antipas for marrying his brother's ex-wife Herodias.
  • John the Baptist was therefore arrested by Herod Antipas.
  • John the Baptist, in prison, heard about Jesus' deeds, sent some disciples to ask if Jesus was the awaited one. Jesus listed his miracles and said: 'Blessed is he who doesn't reject me'. The disciples returned to John the Baptist.
  • Herod wanted to kill John, but was afraid of the people.
  • John the Baptist was executed by beheading by Herod Antipas on the request of Herodias' daughter. His disciples buried his remains and told Jesus.
Mark 1:14, 6:17–29
  • John the Baptist criticised king Herod Antipas for marrying his brother's ex-wife Herodias.
  • John the Baptist was therefore arrested by Herod Antipas.
  • Herodias wanted John killed, but Herod Antipas protected John because he knew John was a just and holy man.
  • John the Baptist was executed by beheading by Herod Antipas on the request of Herodias' daughter. His disciples buried his remains.
Luke 3:19–20, 7:18–25, 9:9
  • John the Baptist criticised king Herod Antipas for marrying his brother's ex-wife Herodias and other evils.
  • John the Baptist was therefore arrested by Herod Antipas.
  • John the Baptist [in prison?] heard about Jesus' deeds (in Capernaum and Nain), sent 2 disciples to ask if Jesus was the awaited one. Jesus listed his miracles and said: 'Blessed is he who doesn't reject me.' The disciples returned to John the Baptist.
  • [no execution motive mentioned]
  • John the Baptist was executed by beheading by Herod Antipas.
John 3:24
  • [no arrest motive mentioned]
  • John the Baptist was arrested.
  • [no execution motive mentioned]
  • [no execution mentioned]
Jewish Antiquities 18. 5. 2.
  • John the Baptist gained a large following.
  • Herod Antipas feared the widely popular John the Baptist would incite his followers to launch a rebellion against his rule.
  • Therefore, he had John the Baptist arrested and imprisoned at Macherus.
  • Herod Antipas later had John the Baptist executed 'to prevent any mischief he might cause, and not bring himself into difficulties'.
Epilogue Matthew 14:1–6
  • Word of Jesus' miracles spread.
  • Herod Antipas concluded Jesus was actually John the Baptist risen from the dead.
Mark 6:14–16
  • Word of Jesus' miracles spread; some people believed Jesus was actually John the Baptist risen from the dead, others believed he was Elijah, still others he was like a prophet of the past.
  • Herod Antipas agreed with those saying Jesus was actually John the Baptist risen from the dead.
Luke 9:7–9
  • Word of Jesus' miracles spread; some people believed Jesus was actually John the Baptist risen from the dead, others believed he was Elijah, still others that an old prophet had risen.
  • Herod Antipas didn't believe Jesus was John the Baptist, but had to be someone else.
John 5:30–38
  • Jesus said his claims were reliable, because he knew John the Baptist's testimony about Jesus was reliable, even though Jesus didn't need human testimony.

John 10:40–42

  • The narrator downplays John the Baptist's deeds in comparison to Jesus, and claims John's testimony of Jesus had convinced many people to believe in Jesus.
Jewish Antiquities 18. 5. 2.
  • Some Jews believed God later destroyed Herod Antipas' army as a punishment, because he had unjustly executed John the Baptist.

Feast day edit

The liturgical commemoration of the Beheading of St. John the Baptist is almost as old as that commemorating his birth, which is one of the oldest feasts, if not the oldest, introduced into both the Eastern and Western liturgies to honour a saint.

The Roman Catholic Church celebrates the feast on 29 August, as does the Lutheran Church. Many other churches of the Anglican Communion do so as well, including the Church of England, though some designate it a commemoration rather than a feast day.[6]

The Eastern Orthodox and Byzantine Catholic churches also celebrate this feast on 29 August. This date in the Julian Calendar, used by the Russian, Macedonian, Serbian and Ethiopian Orthodox Churches, corresponds in the twenty-first century to 11 September in the Gregorian Calendar. The day is always observed with strict fasting, and in some cultures, the pious will not eat food from a flat plate, use a knife, or eat round food on this day.

The Armenian Apostolic Church commemorates the Decollation of St. John on the Saturday of Easter Week, while the Syriac Orthodox, Indian Orthodox, and Syro-Malankara Catholic Churches commemorate his death on 7 January.

Related feasts edit

 
The Beheading of St John the Baptist by Jan Rombouts

There are two other related feasts observed by Eastern Christians:

  • First and Second Finding of the Head of St. John the Baptist (24 February). According to church tradition, after the execution of John the Baptist, his disciples buried his body at Sebastia, except for his head, which Herodias took and buried it in a dung heap. Later, Saint Joanna, who was married to Herod's steward,[7] secretly took his head and buried it on the Mount of Olives, where it remained hidden for centuries.
The First Finding is said to have occurred in the fourth century. The property on the Mount of Olives where the head was buried eventually passed into the possession of a government official who became a monk with the name of Innocent. He built a church and a monastic cell there. When he started to dig the foundation, the vessel with the head of John the Baptist was uncovered, but fearful that the relic might be abused by unbelievers, he hid it again in the same place it had been found. Upon his death, the church fell into ruin and was destroyed.
The Second Finding is said to have occurred in the year 452. During the days of Constantine the Great, two monks on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem reportedly saw visions of John the Baptist, who revealed to them the location of his head. They uncovered the relic, placed it in a sack and proceeded home. Along the way, they encountered an unnamed potter and gave him the bag to carry, not telling him what it was. John the Baptist appeared to him and ordered him to flee from the careless and lazy monks, with what he held in his hands. He did so and took the head home with him. Before his death, he placed it in a container and gave it to his sister. After some time, a hieromonk by the name of Eustathius, an Arian, came into possession of it, using it to attract followers to his teaching. He buried the head in a cave, near Emesa. Eventually, a monastery was built at that place. In the year 452, St. John the Baptist appeared to Archimandrite Marcellus of this monastery and indicated where his head was hidden in a water jar buried in the earth. The relic was brought into the city of Emesa and was later transferred to Constantinople.[8]
  • Third Finding of the Head of St. John the Baptist (25 May). The head was transferred to Comana of Cappadocia during a period of Muslim raids (about 820), and it was hidden in the ground during a period of iconoclastic persecution. When the veneration of icons was restored in 850, Patriarch Ignatius of Constantinople (847–857) saw in a vision place where the head of St. John had been hidden. The patriarch communicated this to the emperor Michael III, who sent a delegation to Comana, where the head was found. Afterwards, the head was again transferred to Nyc, and here on 25 May, it was placed in a church at the court.[9]
 
Iconostasis in the Church of the Ascension of Jesus, Skopje from 1867, Northern Macedonia. The Beheading of John the Baptist is carried out by figures stylized like Ottoman Turks.

Relics edit

 
The purported head of Saint John the Baptist, enshrined in its own Roman side chapel in the San Silvestro in Capite, Rome
 
A Muslim shrine inside the Umayyad Mosque, in Damascus, Syria, purportedly houses the head of John the Baptist.
 
A 1742 Tarì coin of the Knights Hospitaller, depicting the head of Saint John the Baptist on a round silver platter.

John the Baptist is said to have been buried at the Palestinian village of Sebastia, near modern-day Nablus in the West Bank. Mention is made of his relics being honored there in the fourth century. The historians Rufinus and Theodoretus record that the shrine was desecrated under Julian the Apostate around 362, the bones being partly burned. The tomb at Sebastia continued, nevertheless, to be visited by pious pilgrims, and St. Jerome bears witness to miracles being worked there. Today, the tomb is housed in the Nabi Yahya Mosque ("John the Baptist Mosque").

John the Baptist's head edit

What became of the head of John the Baptist is difficult to determine. Nicephorus[10] and Symeon Metaphrastes say that Herodias had it buried in the fortress of Machaerus (in accordance with Josephus). Other writers say that it was interred in Herod's palace at Jerusalem; there, it was found during the reign of Constantine and thence secretly taken to Emesa, in Phoenicia, where it was concealed, the place remaining unknown for years, until it was manifested by a revelation in 453.

Over the centuries, there have been many discrepancies in the various legends and claimed relics throughout the world. Several different locations claim to possess the severed head of John the Baptist. Among the various claimants are:[11]

  • In medieval times, it was rumored that the Knights Templar had possession of the head, and multiple records from their Inquisition in the early 14th century make reference to some form of head veneration.[12]
  • During the Crusaders' looting of Constantinople in 1204, Wallo or Walo(n) de Sarton, canon of Picquigny in Picardy, discovered a half-ball of transparent crystal on a silver plate that contained front facial bones of the skull without mandible. The Greek lettering around the plate indicated that the bones were from John the Baptist but he could not read Greek and so went from monastery to monastery trying to get information. Walon sold the plate in order to pay for his voyage back home, brought the relic and gave it to the bishop at Amiens. This made the Amiens Cathedral a major pilgrimage site in France, and was the main impetus for building the magnificent Gothic cathedral that still stands.[13][14]
  • At the beginning of the 17th century there was some confusion about whose relics were venerated in the Basilica of Saint Sylvester the First: some claimed they were bones of St. John, the martyr of Rome, and the others that they were the Baptist's. Pope Clement VIII, to remove all reasonable doubt, requested that the canons of Amiens provide a particle of the relics of St John for the basilica. In 1604, he was given a part of parietal bone that was inserted into a wax skull, and is still kept in the basilica.[15][16] The Roman Catholic tradition holds that the bone on display in San Silvestro in Capite is a true relic of John the Baptist.[17]
  • The occipital bone of St John's skull is said to be kept at the Topkapı Palace Museum together with parts of the right hand.[18]
  • The Eastern Orthodox Church of John the Baptist in Jerusalem displays a purported fragment of the Skull of John the Baptist.
  • A reliquary at the Residenz in Munich, Germany, is labeled as containing what previous Bavarian rulers thought was the skull of John the Baptist.[19]
  • It is also believed by some [by whom?] that a piece of his skull is held at the Romanian skete Prodromos on Mount Athos.
  • Islamic tradition maintains that the head of Saint John the Baptist was interred in the once-called Basilica of Saint John the Baptist in Damascus, now the Umayyad Mosque. Pope John Paul II visited the Mosque during his visit to Syria in 2001.

John the Baptist's right arm edit

  • According to some traditions, Luke the Evangelist went to the city of Sebastia, the place of John's burial site, from which he took the right hand of the Forerunner (the hand that baptized Jesus) and brought it to Antioch, his home city, where it performed miracles. It is reported that the relic would be brought out and shown to the faithful on the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross (14 September). If the fingers of the hand were open, it was interpreted as a sign of a bountiful year; if the hand was closed, it would be a poor harvest (1 September was the beginning of the liturgical year and the harvest season).
  • The arm is then said to have been transferred from Antioch to Constantinople in 956. On 7 January, the Orthodox Church celebrates the "Feast of the Transfer of the Right Hand of the Holy Forerunner" from Antioch to Constantinople and the Miracle of Saint John the Forerunner against the Hagarines at Chios.
  • Having been brought from Antioch to Constantinople at the time of Constantine VII, the arm was kept in the Emperor's chapel in the 12th century, then in the Church of the Virgin of the Pharos, then in the Church of Peribleptos in the first half of the 15th century. Spanish envoy Clavijo reported that he saw two different arms in two different monasteries while on a visit to Constantinople in 1404.
  • When the Ottomans conquered Constantinople in 1453, they seized possession of the relic. In 1484, Sultan Bayezid II sent it to the knights of Rhodes, who held his brother Cem captive in order to obtain the relic back. Two different accounts then exist as to the fate of the relic:
    • The Turks allege that in 1585, Sultan Murad III managed to retrieve a part of the relic from the Christian Knights and had the arm brought back to Constantinople (presently Istanbul, Turkey), where it remains up to this day at the Topkapı Palace. The arm is kept in a gold-embellished silver reliquary. There are several inscriptions on the arm: "The beloved of God" on the forefinger, "This is the hand of the Baptist" on the wrist, and "belongs to monk Dolin" on the band above the elbow.[20]
    • The Orthodox Christians, nonetheless, claim that, when in 1798 Napoleon conquered the island of Malta, then the Knight's siege, John's arm was one of the few treasures that Grand Master Ferdinand von Hompesch was allowed to take with him.[21] On 12 October 1799, after the resignation of Hompesch, it was presented to Russian emperor Paul I, who had been elected the new Grand Master of the Order, and taken to the chapel of the Priory Palace[22] at Gatchina in Russia. After the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, Eastern Orthodox Church authorities had it transferred from the church in Gatchina to the Ostrog Monastery in Montenegro, and from there to its current location at Cetinje Monastery, also in Montenegro, where it is displayed up to this day.[23]
    • The right hand of John the Baptist that is kept in Siena Cathedral (in the chapel in the north arm of the transept) was acquired by the first Serbian archbishop Saint Sava, as testified by the inscription on the reliquary, sometime after the fall of Constantinople. It was kept in the Žiča monastery, and around 1290, when warfare made the northern areas of Serbia unsafe, transferred to the newly established archiepiscopal see of the Serbian Orthodox Church at Peć. From there it was presumably relocated by Helena, daughter of the last Byzantine emperor, Constantine XI Palaiologos and widow of the despot of Serbia, Lazar Branković, either to Constantinople or directly to her uncle Thomas Palaiologos, despot of the Morea, who fled to Italy in 1461 and sold his whole collection of relics to Pope Pius II. The pope bequeathed the hand to Siena cathedral in 1464. A special chapel was built for it. The relic is displayed only once a year, on Whit Monday. [24]

Other purported relics include:

  • It has also been claimed that a fragment of the right forearm is kept at the Dionysiou Monastery on Mount Athos, Greece. At the beginning of the 19th century, the advisor to Prussia in Constantinople, John Frangopoulos, was in possession of this relic and he adorned it with jewels. On 10 March 1802 it was brought to Dionysiou Monastery through the efforts of its abbot, Joachim Agiostratiti.[25]
  • Relics of John the Baptist are said to be in the possession of the Coptic Orthodox Monastery of Saint Macarius the Great in Scetes, Egypt.[26]
  • Aachen Cathedral, in Germany, contains a robe supposedly worn by John the Baptist, adored as a relic.
  • In July 2010, a small reliquary was discovered under the ruins of a 5th-century monastery on St. Ivan Island, Bulgaria. Local archaeologists opened the reliquary in August and found bone fragments of a skull, a hand and a tooth, which they believe belong to John the Baptist, based on their interpretation of a Greek inscription on the reliquary. The Bulgarian Orthodox bishop who witnessed the opening speculated that the relics might have been a gift from an 11th-century church on the island possibly dedicated to the saint.[27] The remains have been carbon-dated to the 1st century.[citation needed]
  • A reliquary with a purported finger of Saint John the Baptist is displayed in the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri.[28]

On 29 August 2012, during a public audience at the summer palace of Castel Gandolfo, Pope Benedict XVI mentioned the traditional crypt in the Palestinian town of Sebastia, where relics of the Baptist have been venerated since at least the fourth century.[17] The Pope also noted that a religious feast particularly commemorates the transfer of John's head relic to the Basilica of San Silvestro in Capite in Rome.

Biblical Commentary edit

The Catholic German theologian, Friedrich Justus Knecht wrote that:

St. John died a martyr to his calling. Having been called by God to be a preacher of penance, he represented Herod’s sin to him, and reminded him of the law of God. On this account he died a violent death at the age of thirty-two. To him applies the eighth beatitude: “Blessed are they who suffer persecution, for justice’ sake.” His soul passed directly into Limbo, where he, like St. Joseph, awaited the arrival of the Messias, and the speedy accomplishment of the work of Redemption. When our Lord ascended into heaven, he was taken up with Him into everlasting happiness. The Church honours him as a great Saint, and on the 24th of June celebrates his nativity, because he was born without original sin. [29]

The subsequent history of Herod and Salome is related in the great commentary of Cornelius a Lapide:

Wherefore the just vengeance of God burned against all who were concerned in this crime. Herod was defeated by Aretas. Afterwards he was banished with Herodias to Lyons, and deprived of his tetrarchy and everything by Caligula, at the instigation of Herod Agrippa, the brother of Herodias, as Josephus relates (xvii. 10). Moreover, the head of the dancing daughter was cut off by means of ice. Hear what Nicephorus says, "As she was journeying once in the winter-time, and a frozen river had to be crossed on foot, the ice broke beneath her, not without the providence of God. Straightway she sank down up to her neck. This made her dance and wriggle about with all the lower parts of her body, not on land, but in the water. Her wicked head was glazed with ice, and at length severed from her body by the sharp edges, not of iron, but of the frozen water. Thus in the very ice she displayed the dance of death, and furnished a spectacle to all who beheld it, which brought to mind what she had done.[30]

Depictions of Salome, Herod, and the death of John the Baptist edit

 
The Beheading of Saint John the Baptist, 1608 (Valletta Co-Cathedral, Malta)
 
Feast of Herod with the Beheading of St John the Baptist by Bartholomeus Strobel in the Prado Museum in Madrid. The painting is almost 10 metres wide.
 
Icon of the Third Finding of the Head of John the Forerunner (the end of 19th century, Russia)
 
Head of John the Baptist (Gaspar Nuñez Delgado), Museum of Fine Arts of Seville

Scenes from the events around the death of John were an extremely common subject in the treatment of John the Baptist in art, initially most often in small predella scenes, and later as a subject for larger independent works. The following list does not attempt completeness but begins with works with their own articles, then includes many of the best-known depictions in chronological order (to see each work, follow the link through the footnote):[31]

With articles

Other

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Flavius Josephus. Jewish Antiquities 19 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine XVIII, v, 2.
  2. ^ Matthew 14:1–12, Mark 6:14–29, Luke 9:7–9
  3. ^ Harmony of the Gospels, The People's New Testament Commentary
  4. ^ "Online Bible – New International Version". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  5. ^ Flavius Josephus, Jewish Antiquities 18. 5. 2. (Translation by William Whiston). Original Greek.
  6. ^ . 16 October 2013. Archived from the original on 22 October 2019. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  7. ^ Luke 8:3
  8. ^ First and Second Finding of the Head of the Forerunner at Orthodox Church in America/Lives of the Saints
  9. ^ Third Finding of the Head of the Forerunner at Orthodox Church in America
  10. ^ Nicephorus Ecclesiastical History I, ix. See Patrologia Graeca, cxlv.-cxlvii.
  11. ^ Lost Worlds: Knights Templar, 10 July 2006 video documentary on The History Channel, directed and written by Stuart Elliott
  12. ^ Sean Martin, The Knights Templar: The History & Myths of the Legendary Military Order, 2005. ISBN 1-56025-645-1
  13. ^ Massalitin, Maxim (6 June 2023). "The Mysteries of the Findings of the Head of Saint John the Baptist". Retrieved 16 June 2023.
  14. ^ Bloch, Howard (24 December 2022). "The Wild Tale of How John the Baptist's Head Ended Up in France's Largest Cathedral". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 16 June 2023.
  15. ^ Massalitin, Maxim (6 June 2023). "The Mysteries of the Findings of the Head of Saint John the Baptist". Retrieved 16 June 2023.
  16. ^ Butler, Alban (1866). The Lives of the Saints. Volume VIII: August. James Duffy, Dublin.
  17. ^ a b . Vatican.va. 29 August 2012. Archived from the original on 18 July 2014. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  18. ^ Wendy M. K. Shaw (2010). "Between the secular and the sacred: a new face for the Department of the Holy Relics at the Topkapı Palace Museum". Material Religion (6/1). Taylor and Francis Ltd.: 129–131. ISSN 1743-2200.
  19. ^ Hooper, Simon (30 August 2010). "Are these the bones of John the Baptist?". Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
  20. ^ Aydın, Hilmi (16 February 2010). The Sacred Trusts: Pavilion of the Sacred Relics, Topkapı Palace Museum . Tughra Books. p. 150. ISBN 9781932099720.
  21. ^ Grima, Noel (25 July 2010). . Malta Independent. Archived from the original on 15 March 2012. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  22. ^ Hamer, Galina Puntusova, David. "History of the Priory Palace". history-gatchina.ru.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ . The City of Cetinje. Archived from the original on 9 October 2011. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  24. ^ Danica Popović (January 2017). "The Siena relic of St John the Baptist's right arm". Zograf (41). Department of History of Art, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade: 77–94. ISSN 0350-1361.
  25. ^ "Incorrupt Right Hand Of St John the Baptist". www.johnsanidopoulos.com. Retrieved 16 June 2023.
  26. ^ . www.stmacariusmonastery.org. Archived from the original on 9 July 2011. Retrieved 30 August 2007.
  27. ^ Remains of John the Baptist Found, Archaeologists Claim 6 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine, 3 August 2010
  28. ^ "Reliquary with Finger of Saint John the Baptist – Nelson-Atkins Museum". Flickr. 28 July 2008.
  29. ^ Friedrich Justus Knecht (1910). "XXXII. John the Baptist is put to Death" . A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture. B. Herder.
  30. ^ Cornelius Cornelii a Lapide; Thomas Wimberly Mossman The great commentary of Cornelius à Lapide, London: J. Hodges, 1889–1896.
  31. ^ Web page titled "Links to images of Salome/Herod/the Death of John the Baptist" at The Text This Week Web site, accessed February 11, 2007

Further reading edit

  • Friedrich Justus Knecht (1910). "John the Baptist is put to Death" . A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture. B. Herder.

External links edit

  • Beheading of the Forerunner Icon and Synaxarion of the feast (Eastern Orthodox)
  • from The Golden Legend (1275)
  • from the Prologue from Ochrid
  • First and Second Finding of the Head of the Forerunner
  • Third Finding of the Head of the Forerunner
  • January 7 24 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Synaxis of John the Forerunner – accounts of various relics
Beheading of John the Baptist
Preceded by New Testament
Events
Succeeded by

beheading, john, baptist, this, article, about, biblical, event, liturgical, commemoration, other, uses, disambiguation, beheading, john, baptist, also, known, decollation, saint, john, baptist, beheading, forerunner, biblical, event, commemorated, holy, vario. This article is about the biblical event and its liturgical commemoration For other uses see Beheading of John the Baptist disambiguation The beheading of John the Baptist also known as the decollation of Saint John the Baptist or the beheading of the Forerunner is a biblical event commemorated as a holy day by various Christian churches According to the New Testament Herod Antipas ruler of Galilee under the Roman Empire had imprisoned John the Baptist because he had publicly reproved Herod for divorcing his first wife and unlawfully taking his sister in law his brother s wife as his second wife Herodias He then ordered him to be killed by beheading Beheading of Saint John the BaptistSalome with the Head of John the Baptist by Caravaggio National Gallery London c 1607 1610Decollation of Saint John the BaptistBeheading of the ForerunnerVenerated inCatholic ChurchEastern Orthodox ChurchOriental Orthodox ChurchAnglican CommunionFeast29 August Translation of Relic AttributesThe severed head of Saint John the Baptist on a round silver platter often held by Salome or Herod Antipas Salome and the Apparition of the Baptist s Head by Gustave Moreau Watercolor painting 1876 Now in Musee d Orsay Paris France Icon of the Beheading of John the Baptist Museum of Icons Recklinghausen As a non Biblical source Jewish historian Josephus also recounts that Herod had John imprisoned and killed stating however that the real reason Herod had for doing so was the great influence John had over the people which might persuade John to raise a rebellion for they seemed ready to do anything he should advise Josephus further states that many of the Jews believed that the military disaster that later on fell upon Herod was God s punishment for his unrighteous behavior towards John 1 Contents 1 Traditional accounts 2 Feast day 3 Related feasts 4 Relics 4 1 John the Baptist s head 4 2 John the Baptist s right arm 5 Biblical Commentary 6 Depictions of Salome Herod and the death of John the Baptist 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksTraditional accounts editAccording to the synoptic Gospels Herod who was tetrarch or sub king of Galilee under the Roman Empire had imprisoned John the Baptist because he reproved Herod for divorcing his wife Phasaelis daughter of King Aretas of Nabataea and unlawfully taking Herodias the wife of his brother Herod Philip I On Herod s birthday Herodias daughter whom Josephus identifies as Salome danced before the king and his guests Her dancing pleased Herod so much that in his drunkenness he promised to give her anything she desired up to half of his kingdom When Salome asked her mother what she should request she was told to ask for the head of John the Baptist on a platter Although Herod was appalled by the request he reluctantly agreed and had John executed by beheading in the prison 2 In art the episode is known as The Feast of Herod Jewish historian Josephus also relates in his Antiquities of the Jews that Herod killed John stating that he did so lest the great influence John had over the people might put it into his John s power and inclination to raise a rebellion for they seemed ready to do any thing he should advise so Herod thought it best to put him to death He further states that many of the Jews believed that the military disaster that fell upon Herod at the hands of Aretas his father in law Phasaelis father was God s punishment for his unrighteous behavior 1 None of the sources gives an exact date which was probably in the years 28 29 AD Matthew 14 1 12 Mark 6 14 27 Luke 9 9 after imprisoning John the Baptist in 27 AD Matthew 4 12 Mark 1 14 at the behest of Herodias his brother s wife whom he took as his mistress Matthew 14 3 5 Mark 6 17 20 3 According to Josephus the death took place at the fortress of Machaerus The following comparison table is primarily based on the New International Version NIV English translation of the New Testament 4 The account of Flavius Josephus in Antiquities of the Jews was translated by William Whiston 5 Matthew Mark Luke Acts John Josephus Prologue Luke 1 5 80 Birth of John the Baptist John 1 6 18 Prologue about John the Baptist s identity and mission Ministry Matthew 3 1 17 John the Baptist preached to people and baptised them in the Jordan John the Baptist baptised Jesus Mark 1 4 11 John the Baptist preached to people and baptised them in the Jordan John the Baptist baptised Jesus Luke 3 1 22 Acts 1 5 1 21 22 10 37 38 11 16 13 24 25 18 25 19 3 4 John the Baptist preached to people and baptised them in the Jordan John the Baptist baptised Jesus John 1 19 42 3 22 36 4 1 John the Baptist preached to people and baptised them in the Jordan He denied being the Messiah It is unstated whether or not John the Baptist baptised Jesus He insisted Jesus was superior the Son Lamb of God Two of John the Baptist s disciples including Andrew defected to Jesus at John s own insistence John the Baptist baptised at Enon Salim before being arrested His disciples told him Jesus was successful John endorsed Jesus as his superior and the Son of God Jesus heard the rumour he was more successful than John Jewish Antiquities 18 5 2 John the Baptist preached to people and baptised them Prison Matthew 11 2 7 14 6 12 John the Baptist criticised king Herod Antipas for marrying his brother s ex wife Herodias John the Baptist was therefore arrested by Herod Antipas John the Baptist in prison heard about Jesus deeds sent some disciples to ask if Jesus was the awaited one Jesus listed his miracles and said Blessed is he who doesn t reject me The disciples returned to John the Baptist Herod wanted to kill John but was afraid of the people John the Baptist was executed by beheading by Herod Antipas on the request of Herodias daughter His disciples buried his remains and told Jesus Mark 1 14 6 17 29 John the Baptist criticised king Herod Antipas for marrying his brother s ex wife Herodias John the Baptist was therefore arrested by Herod Antipas Herodias wanted John killed but Herod Antipas protected John because he knew John was a just and holy man John the Baptist was executed by beheading by Herod Antipas on the request of Herodias daughter His disciples buried his remains Luke 3 19 20 7 18 25 9 9 John the Baptist criticised king Herod Antipas for marrying his brother s ex wife Herodias and other evils John the Baptist was therefore arrested by Herod Antipas John the Baptist in prison heard about Jesus deeds in Capernaum and Nain sent 2 disciples to ask if Jesus was the awaited one Jesus listed his miracles and said Blessed is he who doesn t reject me The disciples returned to John the Baptist no execution motive mentioned John the Baptist was executed by beheading by Herod Antipas John 3 24 no arrest motive mentioned John the Baptist was arrested no execution motive mentioned no execution mentioned Jewish Antiquities 18 5 2 John the Baptist gained a large following Herod Antipas feared the widely popular John the Baptist would incite his followers to launch a rebellion against his rule Therefore he had John the Baptist arrested and imprisoned at Macherus Herod Antipas later had John the Baptist executed to prevent any mischief he might cause and not bring himself into difficulties Epilogue Matthew 14 1 6 Word of Jesus miracles spread Herod Antipas concluded Jesus was actually John the Baptist risen from the dead Mark 6 14 16 Word of Jesus miracles spread some people believed Jesus was actually John the Baptist risen from the dead others believed he was Elijah still others he was like a prophet of the past Herod Antipas agreed with those saying Jesus was actually John the Baptist risen from the dead Luke 9 7 9 Word of Jesus miracles spread some people believed Jesus was actually John the Baptist risen from the dead others believed he was Elijah still others that an old prophet had risen Herod Antipas didn t believe Jesus was John the Baptist but had to be someone else John 5 30 38 Jesus said his claims were reliable because he knew John the Baptist s testimony about Jesus was reliable even though Jesus didn t need human testimony John 10 40 42 The narrator downplays John the Baptist s deeds in comparison to Jesus and claims John s testimony of Jesus had convinced many people to believe in Jesus Jewish Antiquities 18 5 2 Some Jews believed God later destroyed Herod Antipas army as a punishment because he had unjustly executed John the Baptist Feast day editThe liturgical commemoration of the Beheading of St John the Baptist is almost as old as that commemorating his birth which is one of the oldest feasts if not the oldest introduced into both the Eastern and Western liturgies to honour a saint The Roman Catholic Church celebrates the feast on 29 August as does the Lutheran Church Many other churches of the Anglican Communion do so as well including the Church of England though some designate it a commemoration rather than a feast day 6 The Eastern Orthodox and Byzantine Catholic churches also celebrate this feast on 29 August This date in the Julian Calendar used by the Russian Macedonian Serbian and Ethiopian Orthodox Churches corresponds in the twenty first century to 11 September in the Gregorian Calendar The day is always observed with strict fasting and in some cultures the pious will not eat food from a flat plate use a knife or eat round food on this day The Armenian Apostolic Church commemorates the Decollation of St John on the Saturday of Easter Week while the Syriac Orthodox Indian Orthodox and Syro Malankara Catholic Churches commemorate his death on 7 January Related feasts edit nbsp The Beheading of St John the Baptist by Jan Rombouts There are two other related feasts observed by Eastern Christians First and Second Finding of the Head of St John the Baptist 24 February According to church tradition after the execution of John the Baptist his disciples buried his body at Sebastia except for his head which Herodias took and buried it in a dung heap Later Saint Joanna who was married to Herod s steward 7 secretly took his head and buried it on the Mount of Olives where it remained hidden for centuries The First Finding is said to have occurred in the fourth century The property on the Mount of Olives where the head was buried eventually passed into the possession of a government official who became a monk with the name of Innocent He built a church and a monastic cell there When he started to dig the foundation the vessel with the head of John the Baptist was uncovered but fearful that the relic might be abused by unbelievers he hid it again in the same place it had been found Upon his death the church fell into ruin and was destroyed The Second Finding is said to have occurred in the year 452 During the days of Constantine the Great two monks on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem reportedly saw visions of John the Baptist who revealed to them the location of his head They uncovered the relic placed it in a sack and proceeded home Along the way they encountered an unnamed potter and gave him the bag to carry not telling him what it was John the Baptist appeared to him and ordered him to flee from the careless and lazy monks with what he held in his hands He did so and took the head home with him Before his death he placed it in a container and gave it to his sister After some time a hieromonk by the name of Eustathius an Arian came into possession of it using it to attract followers to his teaching He buried the head in a cave near Emesa Eventually a monastery was built at that place In the year 452 St John the Baptist appeared to Archimandrite Marcellus of this monastery and indicated where his head was hidden in a water jar buried in the earth The relic was brought into the city of Emesa and was later transferred to Constantinople 8 Third Finding of the Head of St John the Baptist 25 May The head was transferred to Comana of Cappadocia during a period of Muslim raids about 820 and it was hidden in the ground during a period of iconoclastic persecution When the veneration of icons was restored in 850 Patriarch Ignatius of Constantinople 847 857 saw in a vision place where the head of St John had been hidden The patriarch communicated this to the emperor Michael III who sent a delegation to Comana where the head was found Afterwards the head was again transferred to Nyc and here on 25 May it was placed in a church at the court 9 nbsp Iconostasis in the Church of the Ascension of Jesus Skopje from 1867 Northern Macedonia The Beheading of John the Baptist is carried out by figures stylized like Ottoman Turks Relics edit Head of John the Baptist redirects here For other uses see Head of John the Baptist disambiguation nbsp The purported head of Saint John the Baptist enshrined in its own Roman side chapel in the San Silvestro in Capite Rome nbsp A Muslim shrine inside the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus Syria purportedly houses the head of John the Baptist nbsp A 1742 Tari coin of the Knights Hospitaller depicting the head of Saint John the Baptist on a round silver platter John the Baptist is said to have been buried at the Palestinian village of Sebastia near modern day Nablus in the West Bank Mention is made of his relics being honored there in the fourth century The historians Rufinus and Theodoretus record that the shrine was desecrated under Julian the Apostate around 362 the bones being partly burned The tomb at Sebastia continued nevertheless to be visited by pious pilgrims and St Jerome bears witness to miracles being worked there Today the tomb is housed in the Nabi Yahya Mosque John the Baptist Mosque John the Baptist s head edit What became of the head of John the Baptist is difficult to determine Nicephorus 10 and Symeon Metaphrastes say that Herodias had it buried in the fortress of Machaerus in accordance with Josephus Other writers say that it was interred in Herod s palace at Jerusalem there it was found during the reign of Constantine and thence secretly taken to Emesa in Phoenicia where it was concealed the place remaining unknown for years until it was manifested by a revelation in 453 Over the centuries there have been many discrepancies in the various legends and claimed relics throughout the world Several different locations claim to possess the severed head of John the Baptist Among the various claimants are 11 In medieval times it was rumored that the Knights Templar had possession of the head and multiple records from their Inquisition in the early 14th century make reference to some form of head veneration 12 During the Crusaders looting of Constantinople in 1204 Wallo or Walo n de Sarton canon of Picquigny in Picardy discovered a half ball of transparent crystal on a silver plate that contained front facial bones of the skull without mandible The Greek lettering around the plate indicated that the bones were from John the Baptist but he could not read Greek and so went from monastery to monastery trying to get information Walon sold the plate in order to pay for his voyage back home brought the relic and gave it to the bishop at Amiens This made the Amiens Cathedral a major pilgrimage site in France and was the main impetus for building the magnificent Gothic cathedral that still stands 13 14 At the beginning of the 17th century there was some confusion about whose relics were venerated in the Basilica of Saint Sylvester the First some claimed they were bones of St John the martyr of Rome and the others that they were the Baptist s Pope Clement VIII to remove all reasonable doubt requested that the canons of Amiens provide a particle of the relics of St John for the basilica In 1604 he was given a part of parietal bone that was inserted into a wax skull and is still kept in the basilica 15 16 The Roman Catholic tradition holds that the bone on display in San Silvestro in Capite is a true relic of John the Baptist 17 The occipital bone of St John s skull is said to be kept at the Topkapi Palace Museum together with parts of the right hand 18 The Eastern Orthodox Church of John the Baptist in Jerusalem displays a purported fragment of the Skull of John the Baptist A reliquary at the Residenz in Munich Germany is labeled as containing what previous Bavarian rulers thought was the skull of John the Baptist 19 It is also believed by some by whom that a piece of his skull is held at the Romanian skete Prodromos on Mount Athos Islamic tradition maintains that the head of Saint John the Baptist was interred in the once called Basilica of Saint John the Baptist in Damascus now the Umayyad Mosque Pope John Paul II visited the Mosque during his visit to Syria in 2001 John the Baptist s right arm edit According to some traditions Luke the Evangelist went to the city of Sebastia the place of John s burial site from which he took the right hand of the Forerunner the hand that baptized Jesus and brought it to Antioch his home city where it performed miracles It is reported that the relic would be brought out and shown to the faithful on the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross 14 September If the fingers of the hand were open it was interpreted as a sign of a bountiful year if the hand was closed it would be a poor harvest 1 September was the beginning of the liturgical year and the harvest season The arm is then said to have been transferred from Antioch to Constantinople in 956 On 7 January the Orthodox Church celebrates the Feast of the Transfer of the Right Hand of the Holy Forerunner from Antioch to Constantinople and the Miracle of Saint John the Forerunner against the Hagarines at Chios In 1204 after the Sack of Constantinople by the Crusaders the Frankish emperor Baldwin allegedly gave one bone from the wrist of Saint John the Baptist to Othon de Cicon who in turn gave it to Citeaux Abbey in France Having been brought from Antioch to Constantinople at the time of Constantine VII the arm was kept in the Emperor s chapel in the 12th century then in the Church of the Virgin of the Pharos then in the Church of Peribleptos in the first half of the 15th century Spanish envoy Clavijo reported that he saw two different arms in two different monasteries while on a visit to Constantinople in 1404 When the Ottomans conquered Constantinople in 1453 they seized possession of the relic In 1484 Sultan Bayezid II sent it to the knights of Rhodes who held his brother Cem captive in order to obtain the relic back Two different accounts then exist as to the fate of the relic The Turks allege that in 1585 Sultan Murad III managed to retrieve a part of the relic from the Christian Knights and had the arm brought back to Constantinople presently Istanbul Turkey where it remains up to this day at the Topkapi Palace The arm is kept in a gold embellished silver reliquary There are several inscriptions on the arm The beloved of God on the forefinger This is the hand of the Baptist on the wrist and belongs to monk Dolin on the band above the elbow 20 The Orthodox Christians nonetheless claim that when in 1798 Napoleon conquered the island of Malta then the Knight s siege John s arm was one of the few treasures that Grand Master Ferdinand von Hompesch was allowed to take with him 21 On 12 October 1799 after the resignation of Hompesch it was presented to Russian emperor Paul I who had been elected the new Grand Master of the Order and taken to the chapel of the Priory Palace 22 at Gatchina in Russia After the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 Eastern Orthodox Church authorities had it transferred from the church in Gatchina to the Ostrog Monastery in Montenegro and from there to its current location at Cetinje Monastery also in Montenegro where it is displayed up to this day 23 The right hand of John the Baptist that is kept in Siena Cathedral in the chapel in the north arm of the transept was acquired by the first Serbian archbishop Saint Sava as testified by the inscription on the reliquary sometime after the fall of Constantinople It was kept in the Zica monastery and around 1290 when warfare made the northern areas of Serbia unsafe transferred to the newly established archiepiscopal see of the Serbian Orthodox Church at Pec From there it was presumably relocated by Helena daughter of the last Byzantine emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos and widow of the despot of Serbia Lazar Brankovic either to Constantinople or directly to her uncle Thomas Palaiologos despot of the Morea who fled to Italy in 1461 and sold his whole collection of relics to Pope Pius II The pope bequeathed the hand to Siena cathedral in 1464 A special chapel was built for it The relic is displayed only once a year on Whit Monday 24 Other purported relics include It has also been claimed that a fragment of the right forearm is kept at the Dionysiou Monastery on Mount Athos Greece At the beginning of the 19th century the advisor to Prussia in Constantinople John Frangopoulos was in possession of this relic and he adorned it with jewels On 10 March 1802 it was brought to Dionysiou Monastery through the efforts of its abbot Joachim Agiostratiti 25 Relics of John the Baptist are said to be in the possession of the Coptic Orthodox Monastery of Saint Macarius the Great in Scetes Egypt 26 Aachen Cathedral in Germany contains a robe supposedly worn by John the Baptist adored as a relic In July 2010 a small reliquary was discovered under the ruins of a 5th century monastery on St Ivan Island Bulgaria Local archaeologists opened the reliquary in August and found bone fragments of a skull a hand and a tooth which they believe belong to John the Baptist based on their interpretation of a Greek inscription on the reliquary The Bulgarian Orthodox bishop who witnessed the opening speculated that the relics might have been a gift from an 11th century church on the island possibly dedicated to the saint 27 The remains have been carbon dated to the 1st century citation needed A reliquary with a purported finger of Saint John the Baptist is displayed in the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City Missouri 28 On 29 August 2012 during a public audience at the summer palace of Castel Gandolfo Pope Benedict XVI mentioned the traditional crypt in the Palestinian town of Sebastia where relics of the Baptist have been venerated since at least the fourth century 17 The Pope also noted that a religious feast particularly commemorates the transfer of John s head relic to the Basilica of San Silvestro in Capite in Rome Biblical Commentary editThe Catholic German theologian Friedrich Justus Knecht wrote that St John died a martyr to his calling Having been called by God to be a preacher of penance he represented Herod s sin to him and reminded him of the law of God On this account he died a violent death at the age of thirty two To him applies the eighth beatitude Blessed are they who suffer persecution for justice sake His soul passed directly into Limbo where he like St Joseph awaited the arrival of the Messias and the speedy accomplishment of the work of Redemption When our Lord ascended into heaven he was taken up with Him into everlasting happiness The Church honours him as a great Saint and on the 24th of June celebrates his nativity because he was born without original sin 29 The subsequent history of Herod and Salome is related in the great commentary of Cornelius a Lapide Wherefore the just vengeance of God burned against all who were concerned in this crime Herod was defeated by Aretas Afterwards he was banished with Herodias to Lyons and deprived of his tetrarchy and everything by Caligula at the instigation of Herod Agrippa the brother of Herodias as Josephus relates xvii 10 Moreover the head of the dancing daughter was cut off by means of ice Hear what Nicephorus says As she was journeying once in the winter time and a frozen river had to be crossed on foot the ice broke beneath her not without the providence of God Straightway she sank down up to her neck This made her dance and wriggle about with all the lower parts of her body not on land but in the water Her wicked head was glazed with ice and at length severed from her body by the sharp edges not of iron but of the frozen water Thus in the very ice she displayed the dance of death and furnished a spectacle to all who beheld it which brought to mind what she had done 30 Depictions of Salome Herod and the death of John the Baptist edit nbsp The Beheading of Saint John the Baptist 1608 Valletta Co Cathedral Malta nbsp Feast of Herod with the Beheading of St John the Baptist by Bartholomeus Strobel in the Prado Museum in Madrid The painting is almost 10 metres wide nbsp Icon of the Third Finding of the Head of John the Forerunner the end of 19th century Russia nbsp Head of John the Baptist Gaspar Nunez Delgado Museum of Fine Arts of Seville Scenes from the events around the death of John were an extremely common subject in the treatment of John the Baptist in art initially most often in small predella scenes and later as a subject for larger independent works The following list does not attempt completeness but begins with works with their own articles then includes many of the best known depictions in chronological order to see each work follow the link through the footnote 31 With articles Herod s Banquet Donatello 1427 The Beheading of Saint John the Baptist Giovanni di Paolo 1455 1460 Art Institute of Chicago Salome with the Head of Saint John the Baptist Titian c 1515 Galleria Doria Pamphilj Rome Salome with the Head of John the Baptist Caravaggio c 1607 1610 National Gallery London Salome with the Head of John the Baptist Caravaggio c 1609 Palacio Real Madrid The Beheading of Saint John the Baptist Caravaggio 1608 Valletta Co Cathedral Malta Feast of Herod with the Beheading of St John the Baptist Bartholomeus Strobel c 1630 43 Prado Other Herod s Feast Daurade Monastery c 1100 Musee des Augustins Toulouse Death of John the Baptist Gilabertus Saint Etienne Cathedral 1120 1140 Musee des Augustins Toulouse Feast of Herod Giotto di Bondone 1320 The Feast of Herod and the Beheading of the Baptist Master of the Life of Saint John the Baptist c 1300 1330 Metropolitan Museum of Art Entombment of the Baptist Andrea Pisano 1330 St John the Evangelist and Stories from His Life Giovanni del Biondo 1360 70 Feast of Herod Spinello Aretino 1385 The Banquet of Herod Lorenzo Monaco c 1400 The Beheading of St John the Baptist Masaccio 1426 Banquet of Herod Masolino da Panicale 1435 Herod s Banquet Fra Filippo Lippi 1452 65 The Head of John the Baptist Brought to Herod Giovanni di Paolo 1454 National Gallery London The Feast of Herod and the Beheading of Saint John the Baptist Benozzo Gozzoli 1461 62 National Gallery of Art The Head of St John the Baptist Giovanni Bellini 1464 68 The Beheading of St John the Baptist Lieven van Lathem 1469 The J Paul Getty Museum Herod s Feast Heydon Norfolk c 1470 wall painting in an English parish church St John Altarpiece Hans Memling 1474 79 Beheading of John the Baptist Andrea del Verrocchio 1477 80 Salome with the Head of St John the Baptist Sandro Botticelli 1488 Uffizi Florence Salome with the Head of John the Baptist Cornelis Engelbrechtsz c 1490 J Paul Getty Museum The Head of St John the Baptist with Mourning Angels and Putti Jan Mostaert early 16th century National Gallery London St John Altarpiece left wing Quentin Massys 1507 08 The Beheading of St John Albrecht Durer 1510 Christian Theological Seminary Indianapolis The Daughter of Herodias Sebastiano del Piombo 1510 National Gallery London Salome Tilman Riemenschneider 1500 1510 Salome Casare da Sesta 1510 20 National Gallery London Salome Giampietrino c 1510 30 National Gallery London The Head of St John the Baptist Brought to Herod Albrecht Durer 1511 Salome Alonso Berruguete 1512 16 Uffizi Gallery Florence The Beheading of Saint John the Baptist Hans Fries 1514 Kunstmuseum Basel Salome with the Head of John the Baptist Titian c 1515 Head of John the Baptist Hans Baldung Grien 1516 National Gallery of Art Salome with the Head of John the Baptist Jacob Cornelisz van Oostsanen Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Herodias Bernardino Luini 1527 31 Salome Lucas Cranach the Elder c 1530 Beheading of John the Baptist Vincenzo Danti 1569 70 Salome Giovanni Battista Caracciolo 1615 20 The Feast of Herod Frans Francken the Younger c 1620 State Hermitage Museum Head of Saint John the Baptist Juan de Mesa ca 1625 Seville Cathedral Herodias with the Head of St John the Baptist Francesco del Cairo c 1625 30 The Beheading of John the Baptist Matthaeus Merrian the Elder 1625 30 Decapitation of St John Unknown British 17th century Tate Gallery Salome Dancing before Herod Jacob Hogers c 1630 55 Rijksmuseum Salome Presented with the Head of St John the Baptist Leonaert Bramer 1630s The Beheading of St John the Baptist Massimo Stanzione c 1634 Salome Receives the Head of John the Baptist Guercino 1637 Museum of Fine Arts of Rennes French Wikipedia page Salome with the Head of John the Baptist Guido Reni 1639 40 The Beheading of John the Baptist Rembrandt 1640 The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco The Beheading of John the Baptist Rombout van Troyen 1650s State Hermitage Museum St John Reproaching Herod Mattia Preti 1662 66 St John the Baptist Before Herod Mattia Preti 1665 Decapitation of St John British School 17th century Tate Gallery John the Baptist Beheaded Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld 1851 60 World Mission Collection The Daughter of Herodias Receiving the Head of John the Baptist Gustave Dore 1865 Head of St John the Baptist Jean Baptiste Chatigny fr 1869 The J Paul Getty Museum The Beheading of John the Baptist Pierre Puvis de Chavannes c 1869 National Gallery London Salome Henri Regnault 1870 Metropolitan Museum of Art Gustave Moreau Salome Dancing before Herod 1874 76 The Apparition 1874 76 Salome 1876 Herodias Gustave Flaubert 1877 James Tissot 1886 96 The Daughter of Herodias Dancing King Herod The Head of John the Baptist on a Platter Salome Franz von Stuck 1906 Salome Nikolai Astrup Salome With the Head of John the Baptist Aubrey Beardsley See also editChronology of Jesus Messengers from John the BaptistNotes edit a b Flavius Josephus Jewish Antiquities Archived 19 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine XVIII v 2 Matthew 14 1 12 Mark 6 14 29 Luke 9 7 9 Harmony of the Gospels The People s New Testament Commentary Online Bible New International Version Biblehub com 2011 Retrieved 8 February 2021 Flavius Josephus Jewish Antiquities 18 5 2 Translation by William Whiston Original Greek The Calendar 16 October 2013 Archived from the original on 22 October 2019 Retrieved 29 August 2015 Luke 8 3 First and Second Finding of the Head of the Forerunner at Orthodox Church in America Lives of the Saints Third Finding of the Head of the Forerunner at Orthodox Church in America Nicephorus Ecclesiastical History I ix See Patrologia Graeca cxlv cxlvii Lost Worlds Knights Templar 10 July 2006 video documentary on The History Channel directed and written by Stuart Elliott Sean Martin The Knights Templar The History amp Myths of the Legendary Military Order 2005 ISBN 1 56025 645 1 Massalitin Maxim 6 June 2023 The Mysteries of the Findings of the Head of Saint John the Baptist Retrieved 16 June 2023 Bloch Howard 24 December 2022 The Wild Tale of How John the Baptist s Head Ended Up in France s Largest Cathedral The Daily Beast Retrieved 16 June 2023 Massalitin Maxim 6 June 2023 The Mysteries of the Findings of the Head of Saint John the Baptist Retrieved 16 June 2023 Butler Alban 1866 The Lives of the Saints Volume VIII August James Duffy Dublin a b Benedict XVI General Audience August 29 2012 Vatican va 29 August 2012 Archived from the original on 18 July 2014 Retrieved 25 December 2014 Wendy M K Shaw 2010 Between the secular and the sacred a new face for the Department of the Holy Relics at the Topkapi Palace Museum Material Religion 6 1 Taylor and Francis Ltd 129 131 ISSN 1743 2200 Hooper Simon 30 August 2010 Are these the bones of John the Baptist Cable News Network Turner Broadcasting System Inc Retrieved 31 August 2011 Aydin Hilmi 16 February 2010 The Sacred Trusts Pavilion of the Sacred Relics Topkapi Palace Museum Tughra Books p 150 ISBN 9781932099720 Grima Noel 25 July 2010 Re establishing a long lost connection Malta Independent Archived from the original on 15 March 2012 Retrieved 24 June 2011 Hamer Galina Puntusova David History of the Priory Palace history gatchina ru a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Cetinje The Old Royal Capital of Montenegro Relics The City of Cetinje Archived from the original on 9 October 2011 Retrieved 24 June 2011 Danica Popovic January 2017 The Siena relic of St John the Baptist s right arm Zograf 41 Department of History of Art Faculty of Philosophy University of Belgrade 77 94 ISSN 0350 1361 Incorrupt Right Hand Of St John the Baptist www johnsanidopoulos com Retrieved 16 June 2023 The Monastery of St Macarius the Great www stmacariusmonastery org Archived from the original on 9 July 2011 Retrieved 30 August 2007 Remains of John the Baptist Found Archaeologists Claim Archived 6 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine 3 August 2010 Reliquary with Finger of Saint John the Baptist Nelson Atkins Museum Flickr 28 July 2008 Friedrich Justus Knecht 1910 XXXII John the Baptist is put to Death A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture B Herder Cornelius Cornelii a Lapide Thomas Wimberly Mossman The great commentary of Cornelius a Lapide London J Hodges 1889 1896 Web page titled Links to images of Salome Herod the Death of John the Baptist at The Text This Week Web site accessed February 11 2007Further reading editFriedrich Justus Knecht 1910 John the Baptist is put to Death A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture B Herder External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Execution of John the Baptist Beheading of the Forerunner Icon and Synaxarion of the feast Eastern Orthodox The Decollation of Saint John Baptist from The Golden Legend 1275 Beheading of Saint John the Baptist from the Prologue from Ochrid First and Second Finding of the Head of the Forerunner Third Finding of the Head of the Forerunner January 7 Archived 24 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Synaxis of John the Forerunner accounts of various relics Beheading of John the BaptistLife of Jesus Ministry Preceded byRejection of JesusMinistry of Jesus New TestamentEvents Succeeded byTo bring a SwordMinistry of Jesus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beheading of John the Baptist amp oldid 1215533009, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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