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Doubting Thomas

A doubting Thomas is a skeptic who refuses to believe without direct personal experience — a reference to the Gospel of John's depiction of the Apostle Thomas, who, in John's account, refused to believe the resurrected Jesus had appeared to the ten other apostles until he could see and feel Jesus's crucifixion wounds.

In art, the episode (formally called the Incredulity of Thomas) has been frequently depicted since at least the 15th century, with its depiction reflecting a range of theological interpretations.

Gospel account

 
Duccio, a panel from his Maestà (1308-1311)

The episode is related in chapter 20 of the Gospel of John, but not in the three synoptic Gospels. The text of the King James Version is as follows:[1]

24 But Thomas, one of the twelve, called Didymus, was not with them when Jesus came.
25 The other disciples therefore said unto him, We have seen the Lord. But he said unto them, Except I shall see in his hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe.
26 And after eight days again his disciples were within, and Thomas with them: then came Jesus, the doors being shut, and stood in the midst, and said, Peace be unto you.
27 Then saith he to Thomas, Reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands; and reach hither thy hand, and thrust it into my side: and be not faithless, but believing.
28 And Thomas answered and said unto him, My Lord and my God.
29 Jesus saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.

Commentators have noted that John avoids saying whether Thomas actually did "thrust" his hand in.[2] Before the Protestant Reformation the usual belief, reflected in artistic depictions, was that he had done so, which most Catholic writers continued to believe, while Protestant writers often thought that he had not.[3]

Regardless of the question of whether Thomas had felt as well as "seen" the physical evidence of the Resurrection of Jesus, the Catholic interpretation was that, although Jesus asserts the superiority of those who have faith without physical evidence, he was nonetheless willing to show Thomas his wound, and let him feel it. This was used by theologians as biblical encouragement for the use of physical experiences such as pilgrimages, veneration of relics and ritual in reinforcing Christian beliefs.[4][5]

Protestant theologians emphasized Jesus's statement of the superiority of "faith alone" (see sola fide), although the evangelical-leaning Anglican Thomas Hartwell Horne, in his widely read Introduction to the Critical Study and Knowledge of the Holy Scriptures (first published in 1818) treated Thomas's incredulity, which he extended somewhat to the other apostles, approvingly, as evidence both of the veracity of the gospels, as a "forger" would be unlikely to have invented it, and of their proper suspicion of the seemingly impossible, demonstrating their reliability as witnesses.[6] In the early church, Gnostic authors were very insistent that Thomas did not actually examine Jesus, and elaborated on this in apocryphal accounts,[7] perhaps tending to push their non-Gnostic opponents in the other direction.[8]

The theological interpretation of the episode has concentrated on it as a demonstration of the reality of the resurrection, but as early as the writings of the 4th- and 5th-century saints John Chrysostom and Cyril of Alexandria it had been given a eucharistic interpretation, seen as an allegory of the sacrament of the Eucharist, what remained a recurring theme in commentary.[9][10]

Art

 

In art this subject, formally termed The Incredulity of Saint Thomas, has been common since at least the early 6th century, when it appears in the mosaics at Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo in Ravenna,[11] and on the Monza ampullae.[12] In those depictions, as later in the Baroque, the subject, normally depicted at the moment Thomas puts his fingers into Jesus's side, was used to emphasize the importance of physical experiences and evidences for the believer, as described above.[5] The Ravenna mosaic introduces the motif of Jesus raising his hand high to reveal the wound in his side;[13] his pose often, but not always, is such that the wounds on his hands can also be seen, and often those on his feet as well.

The scene was used in a number of contexts in medieval art, including Byzantine icons. Where there was room all the apostles were often shown, and sometimes Thomas' acceptance of the Resurrection is shown, with Thomas kneeling and Jesus blessing him. This iconography leaves it unclear whether the moment shown follows an examination or not, but probably suggests that it does not, especially in Protestant art. From the late Middle Ages onwards a number of variations of the poses of the two figures occur (see gallery). The typical "touching" representation formed one of a number of scenes sometimes placed around a central Crucifixion of Jesus, and is one of the scenes shown on the Irish Muiredach's High Cross, and the subject of a large relief in the famous Romanesque sculpted cloister at the Abbey of Santo Domingo de Silos.[14] In works showing pairs of typologically related scenes from the Old and New Testaments it could be paired with Jacob Wrestling with the Angel,[15] but in a 10th-century Ottonian ivory diptych it is paired with Moses receiving the Law, comparing both the two Biblical Testaments and the support for the faith from both textual "sacred writ" and physical evidences.

 
Ostentatio vulnerum

In the later Middle Ages Jesus with one side of his robe pulled back, displaying the wound in his side and his other four wounds (called the ostentatio vulnerum), was taken from images with Thomas and turned into a pose adopted by Jesus alone, who often places his own fingers into the wound in his side. This form became a common feature of single iconic figures of Jesus and subjects such as the Last Judgement (where Bamberg Cathedral has an early example of about 1235), Christ in Majesty, the Man of Sorrows and Christ with the Arma Christi, and was used to emphasize Christ's suffering as well as the fact of his Resurrection.[16]

In the Renaissance the famous sculpted pair of Christ and St. Thomas by Andrea del Verrocchio (1467–1483) for the Orsanmichele in Florence is the best known representation; the subject is rare in free-standing sculpture.[17] This guild church also housed commercial tribunals, and the presentation of physical evidence gave the subject a particular relevance to courts and justice, and it appeared on many other buildings in Tuscany with judicial functions. The Medici family, heavily involved in the commission, also had a particular association with St Thomas,[18] though the painting by Salviati seems to reflect anti-Medici feeling in the 1540s.

The subject enjoyed a revival in popularity in Counter-Reformation art as an assertion of Catholic doctrine against Protestant rejection of the Catholic practices which the episode was held to support, and Protestant belief in "faith alone". In the Catholic interpretation, although Jesus asserts the superiority of those who have faith without physical evidence, he was nonetheless willing to show Thomas his wound, and let him feel it. The Incredulity of Saint Thomas by Caravaggio (c. 1601–1602) is now the most famous depiction (unusually showing Thomas to the viewer's right of Jesus), but there are many others, especially by the Utrecht Caravaggisti, painting in a Protestant environment,[19] such as the Flemish Caravaggist Matthias Stom, whose two versions of the subject are now in Madrid and Bergamo. Both Rembrandt (Pushkin Museum) and Rubens (centrepiece of the Rockox Triptych, Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp) also painted it.[20]

Gallery


Medieval drama

The dramatic nature of the episode meant that it often featured in medieval drama telling the story of the life of Jesus.[22] It takes the whole of "Play 41" of the York Mystery Cycle, probably dating from some time between 1463 and 1477, which takes 195 six-line stanzas to tell it.[23] Other shorter cycles omit it, and the Chester Mystery Plays take 70 lines to cover it.[24]

Related legends

The biblical episode generated two late medieval legends or stories, which also appear in art.

Girdle of Thomas

In this story, at the Assumption of Mary, where the other apostles were present, Thomas once again missed the occasion (being on his way back from his mission to India), so the Virgin Mary, aware of Thomas' sceptical nature, appeared to him individually and dropped the girdle (cloth belt) she was wearing down onto him, to give him a physical proof of what he had seen. In other versions he is present at the actual Assumption, and the Virgin dropped her girdle down to him as she was taken up to heaven. The supposed girdle itself (Sacra Cintola) is a relic of Prato Cathedral,[25] and its veneration was regarded as especially helpful for pregnant women. After Florence took control of Prato in 1350–51, the girdle begins to feature in Florentine art and to be shown worn by figures of Madonna del Parto, iconic figures showing the Virgin Mary when pregnant.

The first version of the story is called the Madonna of the Girdle in art. An altarpiece by Palma Vecchio, now in the Brera Gallery in Milan, shows an intermediate version, with Thomas hurrying towards the other apostles, and the Virgin taking off her girdle. In other works Thomas is catching the falling girdle, or has received the girdle and holds it.[25]

Incredulity of Jerome

Saint Francis of Assisi (1181/1182 – 1226) had a vision in 1224, after which he acquired stigmata on his own body, repeating the wounds of Jesus, which he kept until his death. According to the many who saw them, the wounds on his hands and feet were as if the nails still remained in place, and the nail-like projections could be moved. An early biographer of Francis, Saint Bonaventure (1221 – 1274), reported that a soldier called Jerome was sceptical and moved the "nails" about.[26] Jerome is thought to be shown examining Francis' feet in the frescos of the Bardi Chapel of Santa Croce, Florence by Giotto and his workshop, and appears in some other Franciscan works.[27]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ John 20:24–29
  2. ^ Most 2009, pp. 79–80.
  3. ^ Salisbury 2006, p. 95.
  4. ^ Schiller 1972, p. 188.
  5. ^ a b Vikan 1982, pp. 24–25.
  6. ^ Horne 1836, pp. 111–112.
  7. ^ Most 2009, p. 121.
  8. ^ Most 2009, Ch. 2.
  9. ^ Butterfield 1992, p. 232 and notes.
  10. ^ Jacks & Caferro 2001, p. 159.
  11. ^ Soper 1938, p. 188 listing several other early occurrences
  12. ^ Monza no. 9, Bobbio no. 10, see Leroy 1959, p. 322 and Milburn 1988, p. 264
  13. ^ Gurewich 1957, p. 358 but the same detail is seen in the early 5th-century ivory box with scenes of the passion in the British Museum
  14. ^ Schiller 1972, pp. 102, 116.
  15. ^ Schiller 1972, p. 130.
  16. ^ Schiller 1972, pp. 188–189, 202.
  17. ^ Pickard 1916, p. 413.
  18. ^ Butterfield 1992, pp. 228–229 on Medici involvement in the commission, Butterfield 1992, pp. 230–232 on justice and Medici patronage of Thomas; for justice also see Jacks & Caferro 2001, pp. 160–161
  19. ^ van Eck 1993, pp. 224–228.
  20. ^ Gurewich 1957, p. 362.
  21. ^ An eccentricity of Rubens, discussed in Gurewich 1957, p. 362, and more fully in Gurewich 1963, p. 358
  22. ^ Scoville 2004, Ch. 2 is entirely about the treatment of Thomas
  23. ^ Play 41, Doubting Thomas, Edited by Clifford Davidson, Originally Published in The York Corpus Christi Plays
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-02-23. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  25. ^ a b Rylands 1977, p. 249.
  26. ^ O'Rahilly 1938, p. 191.
  27. ^ Jacks & Caferro 2001, pp. 157–158.

Sources

  • Butterfield, Andrew (April 1992). "Verrocchio's Christ and St Thomas: Chronology, Iconography and Political Context". The Burlington Magazine. Vol. 134, no. 1069. pp. 225–233. JSTOR 885119.
  • Cassidy, Brendan, "A Relic, Some Pictures and the Mothers of Florence in the Late Fourteenth Century", Gesta, Vol. 30, No. 2 (1991), pp. 91–99, The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the International Center of Medieval Art, JSTOR
  • Gurewich, Vladimir (1957). "Observations on the Iconography of the Wound in Christ's Side, with Special Reference to Its Position". Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes. Warburg Institute. 20 (3/4): 358–362. doi:10.2307/750787. JSTOR 50787. S2CID 192284546.
  • Gurewich, Vladimir (1963). "Rubens and the Wound in Christ's Side. A Postscript". Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes. The Warburg Institute. 26 (3/4): 358. doi:10.2307/750501. JSTOR 750501. S2CID 194963813.
  • Horne, Thomas Hartwell (1836). An Introduction to the Critical Study and Knowledge of the Holy Scriptures. R. Carter.
  • Jacks, Philip J.; Caferro, William (2001). The Spinelli of Florence: Fortunes of a Renaissance Merchant Family. Penn State Press. ISBN 0271019247.
  • Leroy, Jules (1959). "Review of André Grabar Les Ampoules de Terre Sainte". Syria. Archéologie, Art et histoire (in French). 36.
  • Milburn, Robert Leslie Pollington (1988). Early Christian Art and Architecture. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-06326-6.
  • Most, Glenn W. (2009). Doubting Thomas. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674041257.
  • O'Rahilly, Alfred (June 1938). "The Stigmata of Saint Francis". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. Irish Province of the Society of Jesus. 27 (106): 177–198. JSTOR 30097539.
  • Pickard, John (August 1916). "The Doubting Thomas: The Bronze Group by Andrea del Verrocchio'". The American Magazine of Art. 7 (10): 410–414. JSTOR 20559503.
  • Rylands, Philip (April 1977). "Palma Vecchio's 'Assumption of the Virgin'". The Burlington Magazine. 119 (889): 244–250. JSTOR 878802.
  • Salisbury, Joyce E. (January 2006). "review of Doubting Thomas by Glen W. Most". The Catholic Historical Review. Catholic University of America Press. 92 (1): 95–96. doi:10.1353/cat.2006.0113. JSTOR 25027014. S2CID 161105370.
  • Schiller, Gertrud (1972). Iconography of Christian Art: the Passion of Jesus Christ. Vol. 2. London: Lund Humphries.
  • Scoville, Chester Norman (2004). Saints and the Audience in Middle English Biblical Drama. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-8944-1.
  • Soper, Alexander Coburn (June 1938). "The Italo-Gallic School of Early Christian Art". The Art Bulletin. 20 (2): 145–192. doi:10.1080/00043079.1938.11408677. JSTOR 3046576.
  • van Eck, Xander (1993). "From Doubt to Conviction: Clandestine Catholic Churches as Patrons of Dutch Caravaggesque Painting". Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art. 22 (4): 217–234. doi:10.2307/3780813. ISSN 0037-5411. JSTOR 3780813.
  • Vikan, Gary (1982), Byzantine pilgrimage art, Byzantine Collection Publications, Dumbarton Oaks: Trustees for Harvard University

doubting, thomas, other, uses, disambiguation, doubting, thomas, skeptic, refuses, believe, without, direct, personal, experience, reference, gospel, john, depiction, apostle, thomas, john, account, refused, believe, resurrected, jesus, appeared, other, apostl. For other uses see Doubting Thomas disambiguation A doubting Thomas is a skeptic who refuses to believe without direct personal experience a reference to the Gospel of John s depiction of the Apostle Thomas who in John s account refused to believe the resurrected Jesus had appeared to the ten other apostles until he could see and feel Jesus s crucifixion wounds The Incredulity of Saint Thomas by Caravaggio c 1602 In art the episode formally called the Incredulity of Thomas has been frequently depicted since at least the 15th century with its depiction reflecting a range of theological interpretations Contents 1 Gospel account 2 Art 3 Gallery 4 Medieval drama 5 Related legends 5 1 Girdle of Thomas 5 2 Incredulity of Jerome 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 SourcesGospel account Edit Duccio a panel from his Maesta 1308 1311 The episode is related in chapter 20 of the Gospel of John but not in the three synoptic Gospels The text of the King James Version is as follows 1 24 But Thomas one of the twelve called Didymus was not with them when Jesus came 25 The other disciples therefore said unto him We have seen the Lord But he said unto them Except I shall see in his hands the print of the nails and put my finger into the print of the nails and thrust my hand into his side I will not believe 26 And after eight days again his disciples were within and Thomas with them then came Jesus the doors being shut and stood in the midst and said Peace be unto you 27 Then saith he to Thomas Reach hither thy finger and behold my hands and reach hither thy hand and thrust it into my side and be not faithless but believing 28 And Thomas answered and said unto him My Lord and my God 29 Jesus saith unto him Thomas because thou hast seen me thou hast believed blessed are they that have not seen and yet have believed Commentators have noted that John avoids saying whether Thomas actually did thrust his hand in 2 Before the Protestant Reformation the usual belief reflected in artistic depictions was that he had done so which most Catholic writers continued to believe while Protestant writers often thought that he had not 3 Regardless of the question of whether Thomas had felt as well as seen the physical evidence of the Resurrection of Jesus the Catholic interpretation was that although Jesus asserts the superiority of those who have faith without physical evidence he was nonetheless willing to show Thomas his wound and let him feel it This was used by theologians as biblical encouragement for the use of physical experiences such as pilgrimages veneration of relics and ritual in reinforcing Christian beliefs 4 5 Protestant theologians emphasized Jesus s statement of the superiority of faith alone see sola fide although the evangelical leaning Anglican Thomas Hartwell Horne in his widely read Introduction to the Critical Study and Knowledge of the Holy Scriptures first published in 1818 treated Thomas s incredulity which he extended somewhat to the other apostles approvingly as evidence both of the veracity of the gospels as a forger would be unlikely to have invented it and of their proper suspicion of the seemingly impossible demonstrating their reliability as witnesses 6 In the early church Gnostic authors were very insistent that Thomas did not actually examine Jesus and elaborated on this in apocryphal accounts 7 perhaps tending to push their non Gnostic opponents in the other direction 8 The theological interpretation of the episode has concentrated on it as a demonstration of the reality of the resurrection but as early as the writings of the 4th and 5th century saints John Chrysostom and Cyril of Alexandria it had been given a eucharistic interpretation seen as an allegory of the sacrament of the Eucharist what remained a recurring theme in commentary 9 10 Art Edit Ottonian ivory diptych In art this subject formally termed The Incredulity of Saint Thomas has been common since at least the early 6th century when it appears in the mosaics at Basilica of Sant Apollinare Nuovo in Ravenna 11 and on the Monza ampullae 12 In those depictions as later in the Baroque the subject normally depicted at the moment Thomas puts his fingers into Jesus s side was used to emphasize the importance of physical experiences and evidences for the believer as described above 5 The Ravenna mosaic introduces the motif of Jesus raising his hand high to reveal the wound in his side 13 his pose often but not always is such that the wounds on his hands can also be seen and often those on his feet as well The scene was used in a number of contexts in medieval art including Byzantine icons Where there was room all the apostles were often shown and sometimes Thomas acceptance of the Resurrection is shown with Thomas kneeling and Jesus blessing him This iconography leaves it unclear whether the moment shown follows an examination or not but probably suggests that it does not especially in Protestant art From the late Middle Ages onwards a number of variations of the poses of the two figures occur see gallery The typical touching representation formed one of a number of scenes sometimes placed around a central Crucifixion of Jesus and is one of the scenes shown on the Irish Muiredach s High Cross and the subject of a large relief in the famous Romanesque sculpted cloister at the Abbey of Santo Domingo de Silos 14 In works showing pairs of typologically related scenes from the Old and New Testaments it could be paired with Jacob Wrestling with the Angel 15 but in a 10th century Ottonian ivory diptych it is paired with Moses receiving the Law comparing both the two Biblical Testaments and the support for the faith from both textual sacred writ and physical evidences Ostentatio vulnerum In the later Middle Ages Jesus with one side of his robe pulled back displaying the wound in his side and his other four wounds called the ostentatio vulnerum was taken from images with Thomas and turned into a pose adopted by Jesus alone who often places his own fingers into the wound in his side This form became a common feature of single iconic figures of Jesus and subjects such as the Last Judgement where Bamberg Cathedral has an early example of about 1235 Christ in Majesty the Man of Sorrows and Christ with the Arma Christi and was used to emphasize Christ s suffering as well as the fact of his Resurrection 16 In the Renaissance the famous sculpted pair of Christ and St Thomas by Andrea del Verrocchio 1467 1483 for the Orsanmichele in Florence is the best known representation the subject is rare in free standing sculpture 17 This guild church also housed commercial tribunals and the presentation of physical evidence gave the subject a particular relevance to courts and justice and it appeared on many other buildings in Tuscany with judicial functions The Medici family heavily involved in the commission also had a particular association with St Thomas 18 though the painting by Salviati seems to reflect anti Medici feeling in the 1540s The subject enjoyed a revival in popularity in Counter Reformation art as an assertion of Catholic doctrine against Protestant rejection of the Catholic practices which the episode was held to support and Protestant belief in faith alone In the Catholic interpretation although Jesus asserts the superiority of those who have faith without physical evidence he was nonetheless willing to show Thomas his wound and let him feel it The Incredulity of Saint Thomas by Caravaggio c 1601 1602 is now the most famous depiction unusually showing Thomas to the viewer s right of Jesus but there are many others especially by the Utrecht Caravaggisti painting in a Protestant environment 19 such as the Flemish Caravaggist Matthias Stom whose two versions of the subject are now in Madrid and Bergamo Both Rembrandt Pushkin Museum and Rubens centrepiece of the Rockox Triptych Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp also painted it 20 Gallery Edit Relief in the Romanesque cloister at the Abbey of Santo Domingo de Silos c 1150 Christ and St Thomas by Andrea del Verrocchio 1467 1483 Hendrick ter Brugghen c 1622 Kneeling and touching Martin Schongauer and workshop panel from a late 15th century altarpiece Kneeling and showing early 16th century Swedish carved wood altarpiece Strangnas Cathedral Rubens the Rockox Altarpiece 1613 1615 showing the hands with an almost invisible wound on the wrong side 21 with donor portraits of Nicolaas II Rockox A 19th century Danish Lutheran non touching composition The ostentatio vulnerum in an especially complex Man of Sorrows by Geertgen tot Sint Jans c 1485 1495 From an Armenian Gospels manuscript dated 1609 held by the Bodleian Library The incredulity of Thomas from an English manuscript c 1504Medieval drama EditThe dramatic nature of the episode meant that it often featured in medieval drama telling the story of the life of Jesus 22 It takes the whole of Play 41 of the York Mystery Cycle probably dating from some time between 1463 and 1477 which takes 195 six line stanzas to tell it 23 Other shorter cycles omit it and the Chester Mystery Plays take 70 lines to cover it 24 Related legends EditThe biblical episode generated two late medieval legends or stories which also appear in art Girdle of Thomas Edit Main article Girdle of Thomas In this story at the Assumption of Mary where the other apostles were present Thomas once again missed the occasion being on his way back from his mission to India so the Virgin Mary aware of Thomas sceptical nature appeared to him individually and dropped the girdle cloth belt she was wearing down onto him to give him a physical proof of what he had seen In other versions he is present at the actual Assumption and the Virgin dropped her girdle down to him as she was taken up to heaven The supposed girdle itself Sacra Cintola is a relic of Prato Cathedral 25 and its veneration was regarded as especially helpful for pregnant women After Florence took control of Prato in 1350 51 the girdle begins to feature in Florentine art and to be shown worn by figures of Madonna del Parto iconic figures showing the Virgin Mary when pregnant The first version of the story is called the Madonna of the Girdle in art An altarpiece by Palma Vecchio now in the Brera Gallery in Milan shows an intermediate version with Thomas hurrying towards the other apostles and the Virgin taking off her girdle In other works Thomas is catching the falling girdle or has received the girdle and holds it 25 Incredulity of Jerome Edit Saint Francis of Assisi 1181 1182 1226 had a vision in 1224 after which he acquired stigmata on his own body repeating the wounds of Jesus which he kept until his death According to the many who saw them the wounds on his hands and feet were as if the nails still remained in place and the nail like projections could be moved An early biographer of Francis Saint Bonaventure 1221 1274 reported that a soldier called Jerome was sceptical and moved the nails about 26 Jerome is thought to be shown examining Francis feet in the frescos of the Bardi Chapel of Santa Croce Florence by Giotto and his workshop and appears in some other Franciscan works 27 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Doubting Saint Thomas Look up doubting Thomas in Wiktionary the free dictionary Life of Jesus in the New TestamentReferences EditCitations Edit John 20 24 29 Most 2009 pp 79 80 Salisbury 2006 p 95 Schiller 1972 p 188 a b Vikan 1982 pp 24 25 Horne 1836 pp 111 112 Most 2009 p 121 Most 2009 Ch 2 Butterfield 1992 p 232 and notes Jacks amp Caferro 2001 p 159 Soper 1938 p 188 listing several other early occurrences Monza no 9 Bobbio no 10 see Leroy 1959 p 322 and Milburn 1988 p 264 Gurewich 1957 p 358 but the same detail is seen in the early 5th century ivory box with scenes of the passion in the British Museum Schiller 1972 pp 102 116 Schiller 1972 p 130 Schiller 1972 pp 188 189 202 Pickard 1916 p 413 Butterfield 1992 pp 228 229 on Medici involvement in the commission Butterfield 1992 pp 230 232 on justice and Medici patronage of Thomas for justice also see Jacks amp Caferro 2001 pp 160 161 van Eck 1993 pp 224 228 Gurewich 1957 p 362 An eccentricity of Rubens discussed in Gurewich 1957 p 362 and more fully in Gurewich 1963 p 358 Scoville 2004 Ch 2 is entirely about the treatment of Thomas Play 41 Doubting Thomas Edited by Clifford Davidson Originally Published in The York Corpus Christi Plays Chester Play 20 Archived from the original on 2015 02 23 Retrieved 2013 03 30 a b Rylands 1977 p 249 O Rahilly 1938 p 191 Jacks amp Caferro 2001 pp 157 158 Sources Edit Butterfield Andrew April 1992 Verrocchio s Christ and St Thomas Chronology Iconography and Political Context The Burlington Magazine Vol 134 no 1069 pp 225 233 JSTOR 885119 Cassidy Brendan A Relic Some Pictures and the Mothers of Florence in the Late Fourteenth Century Gesta Vol 30 No 2 1991 pp 91 99 The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the International Center of Medieval Art JSTOR Gurewich Vladimir 1957 Observations on the Iconography of the Wound in Christ s Side with Special Reference to Its Position Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes Warburg Institute 20 3 4 358 362 doi 10 2307 750787 JSTOR 50787 S2CID 192284546 Gurewich Vladimir 1963 Rubens and the Wound in Christ s Side A Postscript Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes The Warburg Institute 26 3 4 358 doi 10 2307 750501 JSTOR 750501 S2CID 194963813 Horne Thomas Hartwell 1836 An Introduction to the Critical Study and Knowledge of the Holy Scriptures R Carter Jacks Philip J Caferro William 2001 The Spinelli of Florence Fortunes of a Renaissance Merchant Family Penn State Press ISBN 0271019247 Leroy Jules 1959 Review of Andre Grabar Les Ampoules de Terre Sainte Syria Archeologie Art et histoire in French 36 Milburn Robert Leslie Pollington 1988 Early Christian Art and Architecture University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06326 6 Most Glenn W 2009 Doubting Thomas Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674041257 O Rahilly Alfred June 1938 The Stigmata of Saint Francis Studies An Irish Quarterly Review Irish Province of the Society of Jesus 27 106 177 198 JSTOR 30097539 Pickard John August 1916 The Doubting Thomas The Bronze Group by Andrea del Verrocchio The American Magazine of Art 7 10 410 414 JSTOR 20559503 Rylands Philip April 1977 Palma Vecchio s Assumption of the Virgin The Burlington Magazine 119 889 244 250 JSTOR 878802 Salisbury Joyce E January 2006 review of Doubting Thomas by Glen W Most The Catholic Historical Review Catholic University of America Press 92 1 95 96 doi 10 1353 cat 2006 0113 JSTOR 25027014 S2CID 161105370 Schiller Gertrud 1972 Iconography of Christian Art the Passion of Jesus Christ Vol 2 London Lund Humphries Scoville Chester Norman 2004 Saints and the Audience in Middle English Biblical Drama University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 8944 1 Soper Alexander Coburn June 1938 The Italo Gallic School of Early Christian Art The Art Bulletin 20 2 145 192 doi 10 1080 00043079 1938 11408677 JSTOR 3046576 van Eck Xander 1993 From Doubt to Conviction Clandestine Catholic Churches as Patrons of Dutch Caravaggesque Painting Simiolus Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 22 4 217 234 doi 10 2307 3780813 ISSN 0037 5411 JSTOR 3780813 Vikan Gary 1982 Byzantine pilgrimage art Byzantine Collection Publications Dumbarton Oaks Trustees for Harvard University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doubting Thomas amp oldid 1150734781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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