fbpx
Wikipedia

Cross of Mathilde

The Cross of Mathilde (German: Mathildenkreuz; Latin: Crux Matildae) is an Ottonian processional cross in the crux gemmata style which has been in Essen in Germany since it was made in the 11th century. It is named after Abbess Mathilde (died in 1011) who is depicted as the donor on a cloisonné enamel plaque on the cross's stem. It was made between about 1000, when Mathilde was abbess, and 1058, when Abbess Theophanu died; both were princesses of the Ottonian dynasty. It may have been completed in stages, and the corpus, the body of the crucified Christ, may be a still later replacement. The cross, which is also called the "second cross of Mathilde", forms part of a group along with the Cross of Otto and Mathilde or "first cross of Mathilde" from late in the preceding century, a third cross, sometimes called the Senkschmelz Cross, and the Cross of Theophanu from her period as abbess. All were made for Essen Abbey, now Essen Cathedral, and are kept in Essen Cathedral Treasury, where this cross is inventory number 4.

The Cross of Mathilde in the Essen Cathedral Treasury

Description edit

 
The reverse of the Cross of Mathilde

The Cross of Mathilde is 45 cm (18 in) tall and 30.5 cm (12.0 in) wide and the cross beams are 6.3 cm (2.5 in) wide and 2.2 cm (0.87 in) deep. It consists of an oak core covered in gold sheet. Under the cross is a modern glass ball which serves as a handle. The ends of the Latin cross are flared in a way found in Mathilde's First Cross and the Ottonian Cross of Lothair at Aachen. The narrow sides and reverse of the Cross of Mathilde are covered with gilt copper. On the reverse it is decorated with a punchmarked Agnus Dei which is accompanied by the four Evangelists' symbols. On the obverse there is a crucifix cast in bronze[1] and gilt, with three cavities for holding relics: two in the back and one in the occiput. To the left and right of the crucifix there are enamel roundels with personifications of the Sun and the Moon, surrounded by four pearls each and by filigreework. Above the crucifix is the normal cross inscription in enamel: IHC NAZA/RENVS REX / IVDEORV (Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews), above which there is a large red stone surrounded by four pearls. Under the crucifix there is a brown cameo gem of a lion and under that there is an enamel plate with the donor portrait which depicts Mathilde (named) in monastic clothing, kneeling in prayer before the Madonna. The central area with the crucifix, donor portrait, cross inscription, sun, moon and lion cameo is bordered by a strip of alternating enamel plates and stones, each surrounded by four pearls. At the end of each cross beam there are four teardrop-shaped, coloured stones around a central stone. On the right arm, the central stone is a cameo with a female bust looking left. On the left arm it is an intaglio cut in a piece of striped onyx, showing a helmeted soldier in profile, holding a spear.

The Cross of Mathilde is generally considered the weakest of the four Essen processional crosses in artistic terms,[2] Pothmann considers the artistry and craftsmanship to be not as high as the others.[3] In 1904, Humann described it as a "cluttered grandeur and, every respect, a cruder image."[4] The assessment of the cross is significantly complicated by an undocumented restoration which must have occurred between 1904 and 1950. In this restoration the edging enamels were melted, allowing the colours underneath to be seen.[5]

Crucifix edit

 
Crucifix detail

Jesus stands on a suppedaneum, with his legs together. The feet are not nailed. The loincloth is knotted in the middle and falls evenly in broad folds. The arms are slightly unequal in length. The head is bent to the side and is surrounded by a halo which is attached to the horizontal member of the cross and is not adjusted to take account of the tilt of the head. Humann calls the position of the body clumsy and awkward.[6] Until 2010, the cavities on his back side contained three small relic packets, which were held in place by ties. The relics had been associated with the cross from its creation. The relic in the lowest cavity was wrapped in a purple-coloured piece of taffeta and lacks a cedula. A nocent relic wrapped in white linen is in the middle cavity with an accompanying cedula, from Innocent I (r.401-417). The script, Carolingian minuscule dates this to the 10th or 11th century and localises it to the scriptorium of Essen Abbey.[7] There are three further fragmentary parchment cedulae on cloth fragments in the cavity in the head. The script of these has typical elements of the Essen scriptorium; one of the fragments can be attributed to Lawrence of Rome (†258). The cross thus contained relics of Saints Lawrence and Innocent. Both of these saints were very important to the Ottonian dynasty to which Mathilde belonged: Innocent was patron saint of the oldest Ottonian abbey, Gandersheim and Otto I, Abbess Mathilde's grandfather, attributed his success in the Battle of Lechfeld (955) to Lawrence. The relic packets and cedulae are now stored in the Cathedral treasury chamber separately under inventory numbers MK1 to MK4.

Enamels edit

The Cross of Mathilde was equipped with forty enamel tablets, of which 37 remain: the enamel with the donor portrait, the enamel with the cross inscription, two round enamels with the personifications of the Sun and the Moon, and 33 ornamental enamels. Three further ornamental enamels were lost before the first description of the cross. Of all the objects in the Essen treasury, the Cross of Mathilde is the most richly decorated with enamel. All the enamel frames are filigreed.

Donor portrait edit

 
The enamel plaque with the donor portrait

The donor enamel is 6 cm × 2.9 cm (2.4 in × 1.1 in) in size. Its iconic "Seat of Wisdom" shows an enthroned Madonna in frontal view on the right, holding her son on her left knee, in front of a figure dressed in the white robes of a monastic. The monastic holds a cross with both hands, which she offers to the baby Jesus. The child stretches both hands towards the cross in a gesture of acceptance. An inscription MA/HTH/ILD / AB/BH/II makes it possible to identify the monastic as the Abbess Mathilde. The inscription is probably faulty, with the second word to be read as ABBATI(SSA).[8] Above and to the right of the Madonna are two further inscriptions, which are incomprehensible. It is theorised that they are mutilated versions of Greek inscriptions. The epigraphist Sonja Hermann suggests that the enameller confused the third and fourth letters and has inverted a Τ, which would yield ΜΗΤΗΡ (μήτηρ - "mother"). Hermann would read the symbols on the right, which are arranged vertically, as ΙΥ ΧΥ as an abbreviation of Ι(ησο)ύ Χ(ριστο)ύ ("of Jesus Christ").[9]

The background of the enamel is in translucent green, with the letters set in gold. Mary's head is surrounded by an opaque yellow halo and she wears a white hood as well as a translucent brown-violet robe with red ochre sleeves. Robe and sleeves are harmonised by a single gold wire outline. Mary sits on a yellow throne, with her feet in grey shoes placed on a blue footrest. Her face is beige, with her circular eyes in the same colour as the face. Eyebrows, nose and mouth are depicted with gold wire. The hieratic pose of Mary is a notable feature of the Sedes Sapentiae.

The child sits on Mary's left knee, his legs hanging down between her knees. Jesus has a red halo with a gold cross. His face is detailed in gold, like Mary's. Christ wears a blue robe, with gold wire indicating folds in it, and grey shoes. Mathilde's clothing is made up of a tight white robe of a monastic, with a white hood which is detailed with gold wire. Under the robe, as is visible on her arms, she wears a blue undergarment. The cross which she holds upright is delineated with broader gold wire. Since the vertical cross beam merges into the side of the throne and the horizontal cross beam merges into the throne's armrest, the cross itself is difficult to make out. Mathilde's line of sight passes through the transept of her cross and Christ's hand to the face of her saviour.

This donor portrait shows parallels with the donor portrait on the cover of the Theophanu Gospels, in which Theophanu in a similar but more horizontal pose, presents her donation to an enthroned Mary. Because of the similarity of the posture of the enthroned Madonna to the Golden Madonna of Essen it has been suggested that the actual act of donation was performed in the presence of the statue.[10]

Cross inscription edit

The cross inscription IHC NAZA/RENVS REX / IVDEORV is made of golden wire set in a translucent blue background. It is surrounded by a broad gold border, and the lines of the inscription are separated by golden stripes. The letters are made easily readable, but do not reach the precision of their model on the Cross of Otto and Mathilde.[11] The dotting of the gold border, which is characteristic of the workshop of Egbert of Trier, is absent, in contrast to the inscription plaque of the Cross of Otto and Mathilde.[12]

Sun and Moon edit

 
The personification of the Moon and the ancient cameo on the right arm of the cross

The two round enamel medallions with personifications of the Sun and Moon, which symbolise the mourning of all creation at Christ's death, are located on the horizontal beam of the cross. Both personifications look towards Jesus, the Sun from the left and the Moon from the right. The background of the enamel plaque depicting the Sun is green. The bust of the Sun has a mournful expression and its hands are raised to its face. Its brown-violet eyes are round and its eyebrows as well as its bulbous nose are formed with a wire, while its wide open mouth is formed from two other wires. A furrowed brow is formed from a Y-shaped wire, reinforcing the mournful expression. The Sun wears a crown with four jagged rays in his golden hair and holds a cloth before his face.

The enamel plaque of the Moon is made as a mirror image of the Sun's plaque. The Moon also holds a cloth before her face. The enamel is generally darker, the use of wire somewhat better.[13] In contrast to the Sun's enamel, the Moon's clothing and hair are full of wires. For the face, the enameller used a single wire for the nose and the mouth.

Enamels of the edging edit

The enamels of the edging alternate with gemstones. In total there are five different motifs in five different colours. Eleven of the enamels have a carpet-like stepped pattern, seven enamels are divided into fields. In five enamels a diagonal cross is the motif, often featuring circular motifs with quatrefoil flowers. The remaining enamels feature modified quatrefoil flowers. Diagonal crosses, stepped patterns and quatrefoil flowers also occur as motifs on the Senkschmelz Cross.[14] The colours employed are translucent bottle green and dark blue as well as opaque white, red, jade green, turquoise, blue and yellow. Several of the enamels have a reversed counterpart, which is sometimes located opposite.[15] It is probable that all of the enamels of the edging were originally paired, so that the appearance of the cross was less chaotic than it is today.[14]

Cameos edit

The Cross of Mathilde contains three classical cameo engraved gems, which have a significant iconographic role. On the horizontal beam of the cross is a brownish chalcedony, with a cameo of a lion lying down or sleeping. On the left arm of the cross, a horizontally striated onyx features a warrior with a spear and helmet in profile facing Jesus. Opposite him, on the right arm of the cross is an oval cameo with a lightly carved female bust on a dark background. All the cameos are ancient spolia[16]

The iconographic significance of the cameo gems is not yet completely clear. The lion stands on the vertical beam of the cross in the same spot in which the chased snake appears on the Cross of Otto and Mathilde and in which the Gorgon cameo appears on the Senkschmelz Cross - both of these symbolise evil's defeat as a result of the crucifixion of Christ. The lion cameo can also be put in this symbolic system.[17] But the depiction of the lion lying peacefully might also have another meaning: in the Physiologus, a characteristic of the lion is that it brings its newborn young to life on the third day with its breath, which makes lion a symbol for the resurrection of Christ. The lion cameo could therefore also be interpreted as a reference to the hope for the resurrection of the donor depicted on the enamel plaque below it.[18]

The meaning of the cameos on the horizontal arms is even less clear. The use of these particular items of spolia seems intentional, but a convincing iconographic interpretation of the naked warrior with spear and helmet and the noble women has not yet been made. Since both look towards Jesus, like the Sun and the Moon, it seems possible that they are intended to amplify those images.[19]

Dating and patroness edit

The Cross of Mathilde is always considered in connection with the other three Ottonian processional crosses of the Essen Cathedral Treasury. Long ago, Humann noticed significant parallels with the Cross of Otto and Mathilde and the Senkschmelz Cross, such that he assumed that the goldsmith of the Cross of Mathilde had knowledge of the Cross of Otto and Mathilde (known to him as the Older Cross of Mathilde).[20] The form and general idea of the Cross of Otto and Mathilde are adopted by the Cross of Mathilde: donor portrait, crucifixion inscription, the crucified Jesus on a golden background, surrounded by an elaborate border. The adoption is particularly significant in the case of the crucifixion inscription, since the inscription on the Cross of Mathilde is directly copied from the older cross. The border is adopted from the Senkschmelz Cross. The Cross of Mathilde must, therefore be younger than these models. In 1904, Humann concluded on the basis of the image of Mathilde on it, that the Cross of Mathilde was made before 1011, the year of her death.[21] On the grounds that the Cross of Mathilde is generally less harmonised, colourful, and technically successful, it was assumed that Mathilde donated it shortly before the end of her life, when she no longer had the superior artist of the Cross of Otto and Mathilde at her disposal.[9] Since the Cross of Otto and Mathilde was often called the "Cross of Mathilde" at that time, he called the cross the "Younger Cross of Mathilde" or the "Second Cross of Mathilde".

 
Cross of Mathilde
 
Cross of Hermann and Ida
 
Ivory on the bookcover of the Theophanu Gospels
The stylistic relationship of the crucified Jesus on the Cross of Mathilde is significant in comparison.

The dating of the Cross of Mathilde to before 1011 raised art historical problems. For one thing, individual ornamental motifs are found on the Senkschmelz Cross, which was meant to be created earlier, which only become common later. For another thing, the crucified Jesus of the Cross of Mathilde shows numerous parallels to a group of cast bronze crucifixes, of which the most prominent example is the crucifix on the Cross of Hermann and Ida, which was created at least thirty years after the death of Abbess Mathilde. There are further parallels with the depictions of the cross on Cologne ivory carvings, such as the ivory book cover of the Theophanu Gospels.[22] Since the current crucifix is not fitted on the inside, it was assumed that the Cross of Mathilde was made in the middle of the eleventh century and an original, chased crucifix was replaced by the casts.[21][9] Since scholars assumed that Abbess Sophia had discontinued several projects of Mathilde, such as the westwerk of Essen Minster or the Marsus shrine, it was also assumed that the Cross of Mathilde was first assembled under Abbess Theophanu, or rather that she had first arranged Mathilde's donation.[23] An argument in favour of this is the similarity of the donor portrait of the Cross of Mathilde to the donor portrait of Theophanu on the book cover of the Theophanu Gospels.

A newer interpretation of the Cross of Mathilde is suggested by Klaus Gereon Beuckers. Making Theophanu herself the donor of the cross, he dates it to c. 1050. The crucifix would then be original. Beuckers included the Cross of Mathilde among the efforts of Theophanu to memorialise Mathilde. Theophanu surrounded Mathilde's grave in the new building consecrated in 1051, the crypt of Theophanu which is known today as the Altfrid Crypt, with a memorial structure, increasing the liturgical importance of her predecessor in order to increase the importance of the Abbey.[24] Theophanu, therefore, would have had new enamel made for the Cross of Mathilde, which directly recalled the older enamel already at Essen. Beuckers supposes therefore that the Cross of Mathilde was made in Essen. Since the only enamels used on the older treasures of Theophanu (the Holy Nail Gospels and the Cross of Theophanu), Theophanu probably put the enamel workshop which had made the Senkschmelz Cross and the Marsus shrine under Mathilde, back into operation for the manufacture of the Cross of Mathilde.[25]

History edit

From its creation, the cross has been located in Essen, except for evacuations during wars and other crises. On account of the depiction of Mathilde and the similarities with two other crosses of the Cathedral Treasury, which were also donations to Essen, it is assumed that it belonged to the Abbey continuously from its donation until the secularisation of Essen Abbey in 1802. However, the sources for the Essen Cathedral Treasury do not explicitly mention the cross. The Inventarium reliquiarum Essendiensium of 12 July 1627, the earliest inventory of the Abbey's treasurym does not allow a certain identification, since it only recorded "Two crucifixes decorated with a lot of gemstones and gold, but gilded copper on the reverse."[26] This description applies to all four of the processional crosses in the Essen Cathedral Treasury. The Liber Ordinarius, which controlled the liturgical use of the Abbey's treasure, speaks of processional crosses only in general terms. During the Thirty Years War, the Abbess fled with the treasure to Cologne and in 1794, as the French advanced on Essen, the Abbey Treasury was taken to Steele (modern Essen-Steele), where it was kept in an orphanage donated by the Abbess Francisca Christina of Sulzbach.

At secularisation the Catholic church of St Johann Baptist took over the Abbey as well as its property, as the parish church. It made the cross, along with the rest of the Cathedral treasury accessible to the public for the first time. During the Ruhr Uprising of 1920 the whole treasury was taken in great secrecy to Hildesheim, whence it was returned in 1925 in equally secretive circumstances.[27]

In the Second World War the Cathedral Treasury was first taken to Warstein, then to Albrechtsburg in Meissen and thence to a bunker in Siegen. After the end of the war it was found there by American troops and the cross along with the rest of the treasury was taken to the State Museum in Marburg and later to a collection for displaced artworks in Schloss Dyck in Rheydt. From April to October 1949 the Essen Cathedral Treasury was displayed in Brussels and Amsterdam, before it was brought back to Essen.

With the creation of the Diocese of Essen in 1958 and the elevation of Essen Minster to the status of Cathedral, the cross became property of the diocese.

Liturgical use edit

The details of the liturgical use of the crosses in Essen Abbey are not known. Though the sources, particularly the Essen Liber Ordinarius which dates to around 1400, describe the use of the processional crosses for processions, they speak of these crosses in general terms, without mentioning specific crosses. Although the diocese no longer uses the Cross of Mathilde in processions on conservation grounds, it is not a museum piece, but a religious object, which can be used in religious services. For instance, it was used as the altar cross on 5 November 2011 in a memorial service on the thousandth anniversary of Mathilde's death, for whose memory it was originally gifted.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ The view that it is silver, often encountered in the literature, is faulty: Pawlik, Heilige, Reliquien und Reliquiare im Essener Stift – ein Inventar, p. 286 n. 71.
  2. ^ Eckenfels-Kunst, Goldemails. Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und frühsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen, p. 64.
  3. ^ Pothmann, Der Essener Kirchenschatz aus der Frühzeit der Stiftsgeschichte, p. 147.
  4. ^ Humann, Die Kunstwerke der Münsterkirche zu Essen, p. 145.
  5. ^ Falk, Catalogue "Krone und Schleier", p. 273; Beuckers, Catalogue "Gold vor Schwarz", p.86.
  6. ^ Humann, Die Kunstwerke der Münsterkirche zu Essen, p. 119.
  7. ^ Pawlik, Heilige, Reliquien und Reliquiare im Essener Stift – ein Inventar, S. 285.
  8. ^ Hermann, Die Inschriften der Stadt Essen (Die Deutschen Inschriften vol. 81), p. 17 n. 8.
  9. ^ a b c Hermann, Die Inschriften der Stadt Essen p. 18 n. 8.
  10. ^ Fremer, Äbtissin Theophanu und das Stift Essen, p. 102; Westermann-Angerhausen, Das Gedächtnis der Gegenstände, p. 218.
  11. ^ Eckenfels-Kunst, Goldemails. Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und frühsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen, p. 67.
  12. ^ Eckenfels-Kunst, Goldemails. Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und frühsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen, p. 251.
  13. ^ Eckenfels-Kunst, Goldemails. Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und frühsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen, p. 252.
  14. ^ a b Eckenfels-Kunst, Goldemails. Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und frühsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen, p. 66.
  15. ^ Eckenfels-Kunst, Goldemails. Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und frühsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen, S. 253-254.
  16. ^ Pothmann, Der Essener Kirchenschatz aus der Frühzeit der Stiftsgeschichte, p. 147, considered the lion cameo to be Medieval.
  17. ^ Leonhard Küppers, Paul Mikat, Der Essener Münsterschatz. Fredebeul & Koenen, Essen 1966, p. 46.
  18. ^ Westermann-Angerhausen, Das Gedächtnis der Gegenstände, pp. 219-220.
  19. ^ Westermann-Angerhausen, Das Gedächtnis der Gegenstände, p. 221.
  20. ^ Humann, Die Kunstwerke der Münsterkirche zu Essen, p. 145.
  21. ^ a b Humann, Die Kunstwerke der Münsterkirche zu Essen, p. 147.
  22. ^ Beuckers, Der Essener Marsus-Schrein, p. 117.
  23. ^ Fremer, Äbtissin Theophanu und das Stift Essen, p. 102.
  24. ^ Klaus Lange, "Die Krypta der Essener Stiftskirche. Heuristische Überlegungen zu ihrer architektonisch-liturgischen Konzeption," in Jan Gerchow, Thomas Schilp (edd.), Essen und die sächsischen Frauenstifte im Frühmittelalter. (Essener Forschungen zum Frauenstift, Band 2), p. 178.
  25. ^ Beuckers, Der Marsus-Schrein, p. 118; Beuckers, Catalogue "Gold vor Schwarz", p. 86; Beuckers, Farbiges Gold, p. 14, followed by Westermann-Angerhausen, Das Gedächtnis der Gegenstände, p. 217.
  26. ^ The inventory is presented by Humann, Die Kunstwerke der Münsterkirche zu Essen, pp. 34-35.
  27. ^ Lydia Konnegen, "Verborgene Schätze. Der Essener Münsterschatz in Zeiten des Ruhrkampfes." in Münster am Hellweg 58, 2005, pp. 67–81.

Sources edit

  • Georg Humann. Die Kunstwerke der Münsterkirche zu Essen. Schwann, Düsseldorf 1904, pp. 115–160.
  • Alfred Pothmann. Der Essener Kirchenschatz aus der Frühzeit der Stiftsgeschichte. in Günter Berghaus, Thomas Schilp, Michael Schlagheck (edd.): Herrschaft, Bildung und Gebet – Gründung und Anfänge des Frauenstifts Essen. Klartext Verlag, Essen 2000, ISBN 3-88474-907-2, pp. 135–153.
  • Thorsten Fremer. Äbtissin Theophanu und das Stift Essen. Gedächtnis und Individualität in ottonisch-salischer Zeit. Verlag Peter Pomp, Bottrop/Essen 2002, ISBN 3-89355-233-2.
  • Sybille Eckenfels-Kunst. Goldemails. Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und frühsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen. Pro Business Verlag, Berlin 2008 (zugleich Diss. Stuttgart 2004), ISBN 978-3-86805-061-5.
  • Klaus Gereon Beuckers. Der Essener Marsusschrein. Untersuchungen zu einem verlorenen Hauptwerk der ottonischen Goldschmiedekunst. Aschendorffsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Münster 2006, ISBN 3-402-06251-8.
  • Klaus Gereon Beuckers, Ulrich Knapp. Farbiges Gold - Die ottonischen Kreuze in der Domschatzkammer Essen und ihre Emails. Domschatzkammer Essen 2006, ISBN 3-00-020039-8.
  • Klaus Gereon Beuckers. "Mathildenkreuz." In Birgitta Falk (ed.): Gold vor Schwarz - Der Essener Domschatz auf Zollverein. Klartext-Verlag, Essen 2008, ISBN 978-3-8375-0050-9, p. 86.
  • Sonja Hermann. Die Essener Inschriften (= Die Deutschen Inschriften Bd. 81). Wiesbaden 2011, ISBN 978-3-89500-823-8, S. 17–19 Nr. 8.
  • Anna Pawlik. Heilige, Reliquien und Reliquiare im Essener Stift - ein Inventar. In Thomas Schilp (ed), Frauen bauen Europa. Essener Forschungen zum Frauenstift, Bd. 9. Klartext Verlag, Essen 2011, ISBN 978-3-8375-0672-3, pp. 261–317.
  • Hiltrud Westermann-Angerhausen. Das Gedächtnis der Gegenstände. Spolien im Essener Schatz als Zeichen von Rang und Herkunft. In Thomas Schilp (ed.): Frauen bauen Europa. Essener Forschungen zum Frauenstift, Bd. 9. Klartext Verlag, Essen 2011, ISBN 978-3-8375-0672-3, pp. 203–226.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Jüngeres Mathildenkreuz (Essen) at Wikimedia Commons

cross, mathilde, german, mathildenkreuz, latin, crux, matildae, ottonian, processional, cross, crux, gemmata, style, which, been, essen, germany, since, made, 11th, century, named, after, abbess, mathilde, died, 1011, depicted, donor, cloisonné, enamel, plaque. The Cross of Mathilde German Mathildenkreuz Latin Crux Matildae is an Ottonian processional cross in the crux gemmata style which has been in Essen in Germany since it was made in the 11th century It is named after Abbess Mathilde died in 1011 who is depicted as the donor on a cloisonne enamel plaque on the cross s stem It was made between about 1000 when Mathilde was abbess and 1058 when Abbess Theophanu died both were princesses of the Ottonian dynasty It may have been completed in stages and the corpus the body of the crucified Christ may be a still later replacement The cross which is also called the second cross of Mathilde forms part of a group along with the Cross of Otto and Mathilde or first cross of Mathilde from late in the preceding century a third cross sometimes called the Senkschmelz Cross and the Cross of Theophanu from her period as abbess All were made for Essen Abbey now Essen Cathedral and are kept in Essen Cathedral Treasury where this cross is inventory number 4 The Cross of Mathilde in the Essen Cathedral Treasury Contents 1 Description 1 1 Crucifix 1 2 Enamels 1 2 1 Donor portrait 1 2 2 Cross inscription 1 2 3 Sun and Moon 1 2 4 Enamels of the edging 1 3 Cameos 2 Dating and patroness 3 History 4 Liturgical use 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Sources 6 External linksDescription edit nbsp The reverse of the Cross of MathildeThe Cross of Mathilde is 45 cm 18 in tall and 30 5 cm 12 0 in wide and the cross beams are 6 3 cm 2 5 in wide and 2 2 cm 0 87 in deep It consists of an oak core covered in gold sheet Under the cross is a modern glass ball which serves as a handle The ends of the Latin cross are flared in a way found in Mathilde s First Cross and the Ottonian Cross of Lothair at Aachen The narrow sides and reverse of the Cross of Mathilde are covered with gilt copper On the reverse it is decorated with a punchmarked Agnus Dei which is accompanied by the four Evangelists symbols On the obverse there is a crucifix cast in bronze 1 and gilt with three cavities for holding relics two in the back and one in the occiput To the left and right of the crucifix there are enamel roundels with personifications of the Sun and the Moon surrounded by four pearls each and by filigreework Above the crucifix is the normal cross inscription in enamel IHC NAZA RENVS REX IVDEORV Jesus of Nazareth King of the Jews above which there is a large red stone surrounded by four pearls Under the crucifix there is a brown cameo gem of a lion and under that there is an enamel plate with the donor portrait which depicts Mathilde named in monastic clothing kneeling in prayer before the Madonna The central area with the crucifix donor portrait cross inscription sun moon and lion cameo is bordered by a strip of alternating enamel plates and stones each surrounded by four pearls At the end of each cross beam there are four teardrop shaped coloured stones around a central stone On the right arm the central stone is a cameo with a female bust looking left On the left arm it is an intaglio cut in a piece of striped onyx showing a helmeted soldier in profile holding a spear The Cross of Mathilde is generally considered the weakest of the four Essen processional crosses in artistic terms 2 Pothmann considers the artistry and craftsmanship to be not as high as the others 3 In 1904 Humann described it as a cluttered grandeur and every respect a cruder image 4 The assessment of the cross is significantly complicated by an undocumented restoration which must have occurred between 1904 and 1950 In this restoration the edging enamels were melted allowing the colours underneath to be seen 5 Crucifix edit nbsp Crucifix detailJesus stands on a suppedaneum with his legs together The feet are not nailed The loincloth is knotted in the middle and falls evenly in broad folds The arms are slightly unequal in length The head is bent to the side and is surrounded by a halo which is attached to the horizontal member of the cross and is not adjusted to take account of the tilt of the head Humann calls the position of the body clumsy and awkward 6 Until 2010 the cavities on his back side contained three small relic packets which were held in place by ties The relics had been associated with the cross from its creation The relic in the lowest cavity was wrapped in a purple coloured piece of taffeta and lacks a cedula A nocent relic wrapped in white linen is in the middle cavity with an accompanying cedula from Innocent I r 401 417 The script Carolingian minuscule dates this to the 10th or 11th century and localises it to the scriptorium of Essen Abbey 7 There are three further fragmentary parchment cedulae on cloth fragments in the cavity in the head The script of these has typical elements of the Essen scriptorium one of the fragments can be attributed to Lawrence of Rome 258 The cross thus contained relics of Saints Lawrence and Innocent Both of these saints were very important to the Ottonian dynasty to which Mathilde belonged Innocent was patron saint of the oldest Ottonian abbey Gandersheim and Otto I Abbess Mathilde s grandfather attributed his success in the Battle of Lechfeld 955 to Lawrence The relic packets and cedulae are now stored in the Cathedral treasury chamber separately under inventory numbers MK1 to MK4 Enamels edit The Cross of Mathilde was equipped with forty enamel tablets of which 37 remain the enamel with the donor portrait the enamel with the cross inscription two round enamels with the personifications of the Sun and the Moon and 33 ornamental enamels Three further ornamental enamels were lost before the first description of the cross Of all the objects in the Essen treasury the Cross of Mathilde is the most richly decorated with enamel All the enamel frames are filigreed Donor portrait edit nbsp The enamel plaque with the donor portraitThe donor enamel is 6 cm 2 9 cm 2 4 in 1 1 in in size Its iconic Seat of Wisdom shows an enthroned Madonna in frontal view on the right holding her son on her left knee in front of a figure dressed in the white robes of a monastic The monastic holds a cross with both hands which she offers to the baby Jesus The child stretches both hands towards the cross in a gesture of acceptance An inscription MA HTH ILD AB BH II makes it possible to identify the monastic as the Abbess Mathilde The inscription is probably faulty with the second word to be read as ABBATI SSA 8 Above and to the right of the Madonna are two further inscriptions which are incomprehensible It is theorised that they are mutilated versions of Greek inscriptions The epigraphist Sonja Hermann suggests that the enameller confused the third and fourth letters and has inverted a T which would yield MHTHR mhthr mother Hermann would read the symbols on the right which are arranged vertically as IY XY as an abbreviation of I hso y X risto y of Jesus Christ 9 The background of the enamel is in translucent green with the letters set in gold Mary s head is surrounded by an opaque yellow halo and she wears a white hood as well as a translucent brown violet robe with red ochre sleeves Robe and sleeves are harmonised by a single gold wire outline Mary sits on a yellow throne with her feet in grey shoes placed on a blue footrest Her face is beige with her circular eyes in the same colour as the face Eyebrows nose and mouth are depicted with gold wire The hieratic pose of Mary is a notable feature of the Sedes Sapentiae The child sits on Mary s left knee his legs hanging down between her knees Jesus has a red halo with a gold cross His face is detailed in gold like Mary s Christ wears a blue robe with gold wire indicating folds in it and grey shoes Mathilde s clothing is made up of a tight white robe of a monastic with a white hood which is detailed with gold wire Under the robe as is visible on her arms she wears a blue undergarment The cross which she holds upright is delineated with broader gold wire Since the vertical cross beam merges into the side of the throne and the horizontal cross beam merges into the throne s armrest the cross itself is difficult to make out Mathilde s line of sight passes through the transept of her cross and Christ s hand to the face of her saviour This donor portrait shows parallels with the donor portrait on the cover of the Theophanu Gospels in which Theophanu in a similar but more horizontal pose presents her donation to an enthroned Mary Because of the similarity of the posture of the enthroned Madonna to the Golden Madonna of Essen it has been suggested that the actual act of donation was performed in the presence of the statue 10 Cross inscription edit The cross inscription IHC NAZA RENVS REX IVDEORV is made of golden wire set in a translucent blue background It is surrounded by a broad gold border and the lines of the inscription are separated by golden stripes The letters are made easily readable but do not reach the precision of their model on the Cross of Otto and Mathilde 11 The dotting of the gold border which is characteristic of the workshop of Egbert of Trier is absent in contrast to the inscription plaque of the Cross of Otto and Mathilde 12 Sun and Moon edit nbsp The personification of the Moon and the ancient cameo on the right arm of the crossThe two round enamel medallions with personifications of the Sun and Moon which symbolise the mourning of all creation at Christ s death are located on the horizontal beam of the cross Both personifications look towards Jesus the Sun from the left and the Moon from the right The background of the enamel plaque depicting the Sun is green The bust of the Sun has a mournful expression and its hands are raised to its face Its brown violet eyes are round and its eyebrows as well as its bulbous nose are formed with a wire while its wide open mouth is formed from two other wires A furrowed brow is formed from a Y shaped wire reinforcing the mournful expression The Sun wears a crown with four jagged rays in his golden hair and holds a cloth before his face The enamel plaque of the Moon is made as a mirror image of the Sun s plaque The Moon also holds a cloth before her face The enamel is generally darker the use of wire somewhat better 13 In contrast to the Sun s enamel the Moon s clothing and hair are full of wires For the face the enameller used a single wire for the nose and the mouth Enamels of the edging edit The enamels of the edging alternate with gemstones In total there are five different motifs in five different colours Eleven of the enamels have a carpet like stepped pattern seven enamels are divided into fields In five enamels a diagonal cross is the motif often featuring circular motifs with quatrefoil flowers The remaining enamels feature modified quatrefoil flowers Diagonal crosses stepped patterns and quatrefoil flowers also occur as motifs on the Senkschmelz Cross 14 The colours employed are translucent bottle green and dark blue as well as opaque white red jade green turquoise blue and yellow Several of the enamels have a reversed counterpart which is sometimes located opposite 15 It is probable that all of the enamels of the edging were originally paired so that the appearance of the cross was less chaotic than it is today 14 Cameos edit The Cross of Mathilde contains three classical cameo engraved gems which have a significant iconographic role On the horizontal beam of the cross is a brownish chalcedony with a cameo of a lion lying down or sleeping On the left arm of the cross a horizontally striated onyx features a warrior with a spear and helmet in profile facing Jesus Opposite him on the right arm of the cross is an oval cameo with a lightly carved female bust on a dark background All the cameos are ancient spolia 16 The iconographic significance of the cameo gems is not yet completely clear The lion stands on the vertical beam of the cross in the same spot in which the chased snake appears on the Cross of Otto and Mathilde and in which the Gorgon cameo appears on the Senkschmelz Cross both of these symbolise evil s defeat as a result of the crucifixion of Christ The lion cameo can also be put in this symbolic system 17 But the depiction of the lion lying peacefully might also have another meaning in the Physiologus a characteristic of the lion is that it brings its newborn young to life on the third day with its breath which makes lion a symbol for the resurrection of Christ The lion cameo could therefore also be interpreted as a reference to the hope for the resurrection of the donor depicted on the enamel plaque below it 18 The meaning of the cameos on the horizontal arms is even less clear The use of these particular items of spolia seems intentional but a convincing iconographic interpretation of the naked warrior with spear and helmet and the noble women has not yet been made Since both look towards Jesus like the Sun and the Moon it seems possible that they are intended to amplify those images 19 Dating and patroness editThe Cross of Mathilde is always considered in connection with the other three Ottonian processional crosses of the Essen Cathedral Treasury Long ago Humann noticed significant parallels with the Cross of Otto and Mathilde and the Senkschmelz Cross such that he assumed that the goldsmith of the Cross of Mathilde had knowledge of the Cross of Otto and Mathilde known to him as the Older Cross of Mathilde 20 The form and general idea of the Cross of Otto and Mathilde are adopted by the Cross of Mathilde donor portrait crucifixion inscription the crucified Jesus on a golden background surrounded by an elaborate border The adoption is particularly significant in the case of the crucifixion inscription since the inscription on the Cross of Mathilde is directly copied from the older cross The border is adopted from the Senkschmelz Cross The Cross of Mathilde must therefore be younger than these models In 1904 Humann concluded on the basis of the image of Mathilde on it that the Cross of Mathilde was made before 1011 the year of her death 21 On the grounds that the Cross of Mathilde is generally less harmonised colourful and technically successful it was assumed that Mathilde donated it shortly before the end of her life when she no longer had the superior artist of the Cross of Otto and Mathilde at her disposal 9 Since the Cross of Otto and Mathilde was often called the Cross of Mathilde at that time he called the cross the Younger Cross of Mathilde or the Second Cross of Mathilde nbsp Cross of Mathilde nbsp Cross of Hermann and Ida nbsp Ivory on the bookcover of the Theophanu GospelsThe stylistic relationship of the crucified Jesus on the Cross of Mathilde is significant in comparison The dating of the Cross of Mathilde to before 1011 raised art historical problems For one thing individual ornamental motifs are found on the Senkschmelz Cross which was meant to be created earlier which only become common later For another thing the crucified Jesus of the Cross of Mathilde shows numerous parallels to a group of cast bronze crucifixes of which the most prominent example is the crucifix on the Cross of Hermann and Ida which was created at least thirty years after the death of Abbess Mathilde There are further parallels with the depictions of the cross on Cologne ivory carvings such as the ivory book cover of the Theophanu Gospels 22 Since the current crucifix is not fitted on the inside it was assumed that the Cross of Mathilde was made in the middle of the eleventh century and an original chased crucifix was replaced by the casts 21 9 Since scholars assumed that Abbess Sophia had discontinued several projects of Mathilde such as the westwerk of Essen Minster or the Marsus shrine it was also assumed that the Cross of Mathilde was first assembled under Abbess Theophanu or rather that she had first arranged Mathilde s donation 23 An argument in favour of this is the similarity of the donor portrait of the Cross of Mathilde to the donor portrait of Theophanu on the book cover of the Theophanu Gospels A newer interpretation of the Cross of Mathilde is suggested by Klaus Gereon Beuckers Making Theophanu herself the donor of the cross he dates it to c 1050 The crucifix would then be original Beuckers included the Cross of Mathilde among the efforts of Theophanu to memorialise Mathilde Theophanu surrounded Mathilde s grave in the new building consecrated in 1051 the crypt of Theophanu which is known today as the Altfrid Crypt with a memorial structure increasing the liturgical importance of her predecessor in order to increase the importance of the Abbey 24 Theophanu therefore would have had new enamel made for the Cross of Mathilde which directly recalled the older enamel already at Essen Beuckers supposes therefore that the Cross of Mathilde was made in Essen Since the only enamels used on the older treasures of Theophanu the Holy Nail Gospels and the Cross of Theophanu Theophanu probably put the enamel workshop which had made the Senkschmelz Cross and the Marsus shrine under Mathilde back into operation for the manufacture of the Cross of Mathilde 25 History editFrom its creation the cross has been located in Essen except for evacuations during wars and other crises On account of the depiction of Mathilde and the similarities with two other crosses of the Cathedral Treasury which were also donations to Essen it is assumed that it belonged to the Abbey continuously from its donation until the secularisation of Essen Abbey in 1802 However the sources for the Essen Cathedral Treasury do not explicitly mention the cross The Inventarium reliquiarum Essendiensium of 12 July 1627 the earliest inventory of the Abbey s treasurym does not allow a certain identification since it only recorded Two crucifixes decorated with a lot of gemstones and gold but gilded copper on the reverse 26 This description applies to all four of the processional crosses in the Essen Cathedral Treasury The Liber Ordinarius which controlled the liturgical use of the Abbey s treasure speaks of processional crosses only in general terms During the Thirty Years War the Abbess fled with the treasure to Cologne and in 1794 as the French advanced on Essen the Abbey Treasury was taken to Steele modern Essen Steele where it was kept in an orphanage donated by the Abbess Francisca Christina of Sulzbach At secularisation the Catholic church of St Johann Baptist took over the Abbey as well as its property as the parish church It made the cross along with the rest of the Cathedral treasury accessible to the public for the first time During the Ruhr Uprising of 1920 the whole treasury was taken in great secrecy to Hildesheim whence it was returned in 1925 in equally secretive circumstances 27 In the Second World War the Cathedral Treasury was first taken to Warstein then to Albrechtsburg in Meissen and thence to a bunker in Siegen After the end of the war it was found there by American troops and the cross along with the rest of the treasury was taken to the State Museum in Marburg and later to a collection for displaced artworks in Schloss Dyck in Rheydt From April to October 1949 the Essen Cathedral Treasury was displayed in Brussels and Amsterdam before it was brought back to Essen With the creation of the Diocese of Essen in 1958 and the elevation of Essen Minster to the status of Cathedral the cross became property of the diocese Liturgical use editThe details of the liturgical use of the crosses in Essen Abbey are not known Though the sources particularly the Essen Liber Ordinarius which dates to around 1400 describe the use of the processional crosses for processions they speak of these crosses in general terms without mentioning specific crosses Although the diocese no longer uses the Cross of Mathilde in processions on conservation grounds it is not a museum piece but a religious object which can be used in religious services For instance it was used as the altar cross on 5 November 2011 in a memorial service on the thousandth anniversary of Mathilde s death for whose memory it was originally gifted References editCitations edit The view that it is silver often encountered in the literature is faulty Pawlik Heilige Reliquien und Reliquiare im Essener Stift ein Inventar p 286 n 71 Eckenfels Kunst Goldemails Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und fruhsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen p 64 Pothmann Der Essener Kirchenschatz aus der Fruhzeit der Stiftsgeschichte p 147 Humann Die Kunstwerke der Munsterkirche zu Essen p 145 Falk Catalogue Krone und Schleier p 273 Beuckers Catalogue Gold vor Schwarz p 86 Humann Die Kunstwerke der Munsterkirche zu Essen p 119 Pawlik Heilige Reliquien und Reliquiare im Essener Stift ein Inventar S 285 Hermann Die Inschriften der Stadt Essen Die Deutschen Inschriften vol 81 p 17 n 8 a b c Hermann Die Inschriften der Stadt Essen p 18 n 8 Fremer Abtissin Theophanu und das Stift Essen p 102 Westermann Angerhausen Das Gedachtnis der Gegenstande p 218 Eckenfels Kunst Goldemails Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und fruhsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen p 67 Eckenfels Kunst Goldemails Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und fruhsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen p 251 Eckenfels Kunst Goldemails Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und fruhsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen p 252 a b Eckenfels Kunst Goldemails Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und fruhsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen p 66 Eckenfels Kunst Goldemails Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und fruhsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen S 253 254 Pothmann Der Essener Kirchenschatz aus der Fruhzeit der Stiftsgeschichte p 147 considered the lion cameo to be Medieval Leonhard Kuppers Paul Mikat Der Essener Munsterschatz Fredebeul amp Koenen Essen 1966 p 46 Westermann Angerhausen Das Gedachtnis der Gegenstande pp 219 220 Westermann Angerhausen Das Gedachtnis der Gegenstande p 221 Humann Die Kunstwerke der Munsterkirche zu Essen p 145 a b Humann Die Kunstwerke der Munsterkirche zu Essen p 147 Beuckers Der Essener Marsus Schrein p 117 Fremer Abtissin Theophanu und das Stift Essen p 102 Klaus Lange Die Krypta der Essener Stiftskirche Heuristische Uberlegungen zu ihrer architektonisch liturgischen Konzeption in Jan Gerchow Thomas Schilp edd Essen und die sachsischen Frauenstifte im Fruhmittelalter Essener Forschungen zum Frauenstift Band 2 p 178 Beuckers Der Marsus Schrein p 118 Beuckers Catalogue Gold vor Schwarz p 86 Beuckers Farbiges Gold p 14 followed by Westermann Angerhausen Das Gedachtnis der Gegenstande p 217 The inventory is presented by Humann Die Kunstwerke der Munsterkirche zu Essen pp 34 35 Lydia Konnegen Verborgene Schatze Der Essener Munsterschatz in Zeiten des Ruhrkampfes in Munster am Hellweg 58 2005 pp 67 81 Sources edit Georg Humann Die Kunstwerke der Munsterkirche zu Essen Schwann Dusseldorf 1904 pp 115 160 Alfred Pothmann Der Essener Kirchenschatz aus der Fruhzeit der Stiftsgeschichte in Gunter Berghaus Thomas Schilp Michael Schlagheck edd Herrschaft Bildung und Gebet Grundung und Anfange des Frauenstifts Essen Klartext Verlag Essen 2000 ISBN 3 88474 907 2 pp 135 153 Thorsten Fremer Abtissin Theophanu und das Stift Essen Gedachtnis und Individualitat in ottonisch salischer Zeit Verlag Peter Pomp Bottrop Essen 2002 ISBN 3 89355 233 2 Sybille Eckenfels Kunst Goldemails Untersuchungen zu ottonischen und fruhsalischen Goldzellenschmelzen Pro Business Verlag Berlin 2008 zugleich Diss Stuttgart 2004 ISBN 978 3 86805 061 5 Klaus Gereon Beuckers Der Essener Marsusschrein Untersuchungen zu einem verlorenen Hauptwerk der ottonischen Goldschmiedekunst Aschendorffsche Verlagsbuchhandlung Munster 2006 ISBN 3 402 06251 8 Klaus Gereon Beuckers Ulrich Knapp Farbiges Gold Die ottonischen Kreuze in der Domschatzkammer Essen und ihre Emails Domschatzkammer Essen 2006 ISBN 3 00 020039 8 Klaus Gereon Beuckers Mathildenkreuz In Birgitta Falk ed Gold vor Schwarz Der Essener Domschatz auf Zollverein Klartext Verlag Essen 2008 ISBN 978 3 8375 0050 9 p 86 Sonja Hermann Die Essener Inschriften Die Deutschen Inschriften Bd 81 Wiesbaden 2011 ISBN 978 3 89500 823 8 S 17 19 Nr 8 Anna Pawlik Heilige Reliquien und Reliquiare im Essener Stift ein Inventar In Thomas Schilp ed Frauen bauen Europa Essener Forschungen zum Frauenstift Bd 9 Klartext Verlag Essen 2011 ISBN 978 3 8375 0672 3 pp 261 317 Hiltrud Westermann Angerhausen Das Gedachtnis der Gegenstande Spolien im Essener Schatz als Zeichen von Rang und Herkunft In Thomas Schilp ed Frauen bauen Europa Essener Forschungen zum Frauenstift Bd 9 Klartext Verlag Essen 2011 ISBN 978 3 8375 0672 3 pp 203 226 External links edit nbsp Media related to Jungeres Mathildenkreuz Essen at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cross of Mathilde amp oldid 1206883465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.