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Halo (religious iconography)

A halo (from the Greek ἅλως, halōs;[1] also known as a nimbus, aureole, glory, or gloriole) is a crown of light rays, circle or disk of light[2] that surrounds a person in art. It has been used in the iconography of many religions to indicate holy or sacred figures, and has at various periods also been used in images of rulers and heroes. In the religious art of Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, Christianity, Hinduism, and Buddhism among other religions, sacred persons may be depicted with a halo in the form of a circular glow, or flames in Asian art, around the head or around the whole body—this last one is often called a mandorla. Halos may be shown as almost any colour or combination of colours, but are most often depicted as golden, yellow or white when representing light or red when representing flames.

Standing Buddha with a halo, 1st–2nd century AD (or earlier), Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara.
Jesus and nine of the Twelve Apostles depicted with "Floating" disk haloes in perspective (detail from The Tribute Money, illustrating Matthew 17:24–27, by Masaccio, 1424, Brancacci Chapel).

Ancient Mesopotamia

Sumerian religious literature frequently speaks of melam (melammu in Akkadian), a "brilliant, visible glamour which is exuded by gods, heroes, sometimes by kings, and also by temples of great holiness and by gods' symbols and emblems."[3]

Ancient Greek world

Homer describes a more-than-natural light around the heads of heroes in battle.[4] Depictions of Perseus in the act of slaying Medusa, with lines radiating from his head, appear on a white-ground toiletry box and on a slightly later red-figured vase in the style of Polygnotos, c. 450–30 BC.[5] On painted wares from south Italy, radiant lines or simple haloes appear on a range of mythic figures: Lyssa, a personification of madness; a sphinx; a sea demon; and Thetis, the sea-nymph who was mother to Achilles.[6] The Colossus of Rhodes was a statue of the sun-god Helios and had his usual radiate crown (copied for the Statue of Liberty). Hellenistic rulers are often shown wearing radiate crowns that seem clearly to imitate this effect.[7]

Asian art

 
Coin of Indo-Greek king Menander II (90–85 BCE), displaying Nike with a halo on the reverse.

In India, use of the halo might date back to the second half of the second millennium BC. Two figures appliqued on a pottery vase fragment from Daimabad's Malwa phase (1600–1400 BC) have been interpreted as a holy figure resembling the later Hindu god Shiva and an attendant, both with halos surrounding their heads,[8] Aureola have been widely used in Indian art, particularly in Buddhist iconography[9] where it has appeared since at least the 1st century AD; the Kushan Bimaran casket in the British Museum is dated 60 AD (at least between 30BC and 200 AD). The rulers of the Kushan Empire were perhaps the earliest to give themselves haloes on their coins, and the nimbus in art may have originated in Central Asia and spread both east and west.[9]

In Chinese and Japanese Buddhist art the halo has also been used since the earliest periods in depicting the image of Amitabha Buddha and others. Tibetan Buddhism uses haloes and aureoles of many types, drawing from both Indian and Chinese traditions, extensively in statues and Thangka paintings of Buddhist saints such as Milarepa and Padmasambhava and deities. Different coloured haloes have specific meanings: orange for monks, green for the Buddha and other more elevated beings,[10] and commonly figures have both a halo for the head, and another circular one for the body, the two often intersecting somewhere around the head or neck. Thin lines of gold often radiate outwards or inwards from the rim of the halo, and sometimes a whole halo is made up of these.[11]

In India the head halo is called Prabhamandala or Siras-cakra, while the full body halo is Prabhavali.[12] Elaborate haloes and especially aureoles also appear in Hindu sculpture, where they tend to develop into architectural frames in which the original idea can be hard to recognise. Theravada Buddhism and Jainism did not use the halo for many centuries, but later adopted it, though less thoroughly than other religious groups.

 
Muhammad leads Abraham, Moses, Jesus and others in prayer. Persian miniature

In Asian art, the nimbus is often imagined as consisting not just of light, but of flames. This type seems to first appear in Chinese bronzes of which the earliest surviving examples date from before 450.[13] The depiction of the flames may be very formalized, as in the regular little flames on the ring aureole surrounding many Chola bronzes and other classic Hindu sculptures of divinities, or very prominent, as with the more realistic flames, and sometimes smoke, shown rising to a peak behind many Tibetan Buddhist depictions of the "wrathful aspect" of divinities, and also in Persian miniatures of the classic period. Sometimes a thin line of flames rise up from the edges of a circular halo in Buddhist examples.[14] In Tibetan paintings the flames are often shown as blown by a wind, usually from left to right.[15] This type is also very rarely found, and on a smaller scale, in medieval Christian art.[16][page needed]

Halos are found in Islamic art from various places and periods, especially in Persian miniatures and Moghul and Ottoman art influenced by them. Flaming halos derived from Buddhist art surround angels, and similar ones are often seen around Muhammad and other sacred human figures. From the early 17th century, plainer round haloes appear in portraits of Mughal Emperors and subsequently Rajput and Sikh rulers;[9] despite the more local precedents art historians believe the Mughals took the motif from European religious art, though it expresses a Persian idea of the God-given charisma of kingship that is far older.[17] The Ottomans avoided using halos for the sultans, despite their title as Caliph, and they are only seen on Chinese emperors if they are posing as Buddhist religious figures, as some felt entitled to do.[18]

Egypt and Asia

Roman art

 
Apollo with a radiant halo in a Roman floor mosaic (late 2nd century, El Djem, Tunisia)

The halo represents an aura or the glow of sanctity which was conventionally drawn encircling the head. It first appeared in the culture of Hellenistic Greece and Rome, possibly related to the Zoroastrian hvarena – "glory" or "divine lustre" – which marked the Persian kings, and may have been imported with Mithraism.[20] Though Roman paintings have largely disappeared, save some fresco decorations, the haloed figure remains fresh in Roman mosaics. In a 2nd-century AD Roman floor mosaic preserved at Bardo, Tunisia,[21] a haloed Poseidon appears in his chariot drawn by hippocamps. Significantly, the triton and nereid who accompany the sea-god are not haloed.

In a late 2nd century AD floor mosaic from Thysdrus, El Djem, (illustration) Apollo Helios is identified by his effulgent halo. Another haloed Apollo in mosaic, from Hadrumentum, is in the museum at Sousse.[22] The conventions of this representation, head tilted, lips slightly parted, large-eyed, curling hair cut in locks grazing the neck, were developed in the 3rd century BC to depict Alexander the Great (Bieber 1964; Yalouris 1980). Sometime after this mosaic was executed, the Emperor began to be depicted with a halo,[23] which was not abandoned when they became Christian; initially Christ only had one when shown on a throne as Christ in Majesty.[24]

Christian art

 
Early pre-4th century Mosaic of Sol Invictus[25] in Mausoleum M in the pre-4th-century necropolis beneath St Peter's Basilica – interpreted by many as representing Christ.

The halo was incorporated into Early Christian art sometime in the 4th century with the earliest iconic images of Christ, initially the only figure shown with one (together with his symbol, the Lamb of God). Initially the halo was regarded by many as a representation of the Logos of Christ, his divine nature, and therefore in very early (before 500) depictions of Christ before his Baptism by John he tends not to be shown with a halo, it being a matter of debate whether his Logos was innate from conception (the Orthodox view), or acquired at Baptism (the Adoptionist view). At this period he is also shown as a child or youth in Baptisms, though this may be a hieratic rather than an age-related representation.[26]

 
Nativity and Transfiguration of Christ, with cross haloes; the apostles, angels and prophets have plain ones. (1025–50, Cologne).

A cruciform halo, that is to say a halo with a cross within, or extending beyond, the circle is used to represent the persons of the Holy Trinity, especially Jesus, and especially in medieval art. In Byzantine and Orthodox images, inside each of the bars of the cross in Christ's halo is one of the Greek letters Ο Ω Ν, making up ὁ ὢν—"ho ōn", literally, "the Existing One"—indicating the divinity of Jesus.[27] At least in later Orthodox images, each bar of this cross is composed of three lines, symbolising the dogmas of the Trinity, the oneness of God and the two natures of Christ.

In mosaics in Santa Maria Maggiore (432–40) the juvenile Christ has a four-armed cross either on top of his head in the radius of the nimbus, or placed above the radius, but this is unusual. In the same mosaics the accompanying angels have haloes (as, in a continuation of the Imperial tradition, does King Herod), but not Mary and Joseph. Occasionally other figures have crossed haloes, such as the seven doves representing the Seven gifts of the Holy Spirit in the 11th century Codex Vyssegradensis Tree of Jesse (where Jesse and Isaiah also have plain haloes, as do the Ancestors of Christ in other miniatures).[28]

Later, triangular haloes are sometimes given to God the Father to represent the Trinity.[29] When he is represented by a hand emerging from a cloud, this may be given a halo.

Plain round haloes are typically used to signify saints, the Virgin Mary, Old Testament prophets, angels, symbols of the Four Evangelists, and some other figures. Byzantine emperors and empresses were often shown with them in compositions including saints or Christ, however the haloes were outlined only. This was copied by Ottonian and later Russian rulers. Old Testament figures become less likely to have haloes in the West as the Middle Ages go on.[30]

 
Pope Paschal I is depicted during his lifetime, so with a square halo, c. 820, Santa Prassede, Rome.

Beatified figures, not yet canonised as saints, are sometimes shown in medieval Italian art with linear rays radiating out from the head, but no circular edge of the nimbus defined; later this became a less obtrusive form of halo that could be used for all figures.[31] Mary has, especially from the Baroque period onwards, a special form of halo in a circle of twelve stars, derived from her identification as the Woman of the Apocalypse.

Square haloes were sometimes used for the living in donor portraits of about 500–1100 in Italy;[32] Most surviving ones are of Popes and others in mosaics in Rome, including the Episcopa Theodora head of the mother of the Pope of the day. They seem merely an indication of a contemporary figure, as opposed to the saints usually accompanying them, with no real implication of future canonization. A late example is of Desiderius, Abbot of Monte Cassino, later Pope, from a manuscript of 1056–86;[33] Pope Gregory the Great had himself depicted with one, according to the 9th-century writer of his vita, John, deacon of Rome.[34] A figure who may represent Moses in the 3rd century Dura Europos Synagogue has one, where no round halos are found.[35] Personifications of the Virtues are sometimes given hexagonal haloes.[36] Scalloped haloes, sometimes just appearing as made of radiating bars, are found in the manuscripts of the Carolingian "Ada School", such as the Ada Gospels.

The whole-body image of radiance is sometimes called the 'aureole' or glory; it is shown radiating from all round the body, most often of Christ or Mary, occasionally of saints (especially those reported to have been seen surrounded by one). Such an aureola is often a mandorla ("almond-shaped" vesica piscis), especially around Christ in Majesty, who may well have a halo as well. In depictions of the Transfiguration of Jesus a more complicated shape is often seen, especially in the Eastern Orthodox tradition, as in the famous 15th century icon in the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow.[37]

Where gold is used as a background in miniatures, mosaics and panel paintings, the halo is often formed by inscribing lines in the gold leaf, and may be decorated in patterns (diapering) within the outer radius, and thus becomes much less prominent. The gold leaf inside the halo may also be burnished in a circular manner, so as to produce the effect of light radiating out from the subject's head. In the early centuries of its use, the Christian halo may be in most colours (though black is reserved for Judas, Satan and other evil figures) or multicoloured; later gold becomes standard, and if the entire background is not gold leaf, the halo itself usually will be.[38]

Decline of the halo

 
Fra Angelico. Coronation of the Virgin. Note the haloes of the kneeling figures at the front, seen from behind.

With increasing realism in painting, the halo came to be a problem for artists. So long as they continued to use the old compositional formulae which had been worked out to accommodate haloes, the problems were manageable, but as Western artists sought more flexibility in composition, this ceased to be the case. In free-standing medieval sculpture, the halo was already shown as a flat disk above or behind the head. When perspective came to be considered essential, painters also changed the halo from an aura surrounding the head, always depicted as though seen full-on, to a flat golden disk or ring that appeared in perspective, floating above the heads of the saints, or vertically behind, sometimes transparent. This can be seen first in Giotto, who still gives Christ the cruciform halo which began to be phased out by his successors. In northern Europe the radiant halo, made up of rays like a sunburst, came into fashion in French painting around the end of the 14th century.[39]

In the early 15th century Jan van Eyck and Robert Campin largely abandoned their use, although some other Early Netherlandish artists continued to use them.[40] In Italy at around the same time, Pisanello used them if they did not clash with one of the enormous hats he liked to paint. Generally they lasted longer in Italy, although often reduced to a thin gold band depicting the outer edge of the nimbus, usual for example in Giovanni Bellini. Christ began to be shown with a plain halo.

 
Leonardo da Vinci (attributed), Benois Madonna. Floating semi-transparent haloes in perspective.

Fra Angelico, himself a monk, was a conservative as far as haloes are concerned, and some of his paintings demonstrate the problems well, as in several of his more crowded compositions, where they are shown as solid gold disks on the same plane as the picture surface, it becomes difficult to prevent them obstructing other figures. At the same time they were useful in crowded narrative scenes for distinguishing the main, identifiable, figures from the mass of a crowd. Giotto's Lamentation of Christ from the Scrovegni Chapel has eight figures with haloes and ten without, to whom the viewer knows they are not meant to attach a specific identity. In the same way, a Baptism of Christ by Perugino in Vienna gives neither Christ nor John the Baptist haloes, as sufficiently recognisable without them, but a saint in the background, not usually present in this scene, has a ring halo to denote his status.[41]

In the High Renaissance, even most Italian painters dispensed with haloes altogether, but in the Church's reaction to the Protestant Reformation, that culminated in the decrees on images of the Council of Trent of 1563, their use was mandated by clerical writers on religious art such as Molanus and Saint Carlo Borromeo. Figures were placed where natural light sources would highlight their heads, or instead more discreet quasi-naturalistic flickering or glowing light was shown around the head of Christ and other figures (perhaps pioneered by Titian in his late period). Rembrandt's etchings, for example, show a variety of solutions of all of these types, as well as a majority with no halo effect at all. The disk halo was rarely used for figures from classical mythology in the Renaissance, although they are sometimes seen, especially in the classical radiant form, in Mannerist and Baroque art.

By the 19th century haloes had become unusual in Western mainstream art, although retained in iconic and popular images, and sometimes as a medievalising effect. When John Millais gives his otherwise realist St Stephen (1895) a ring halo, it seems rather surprising.[42] In popular graphic culture, a simple ring has become the predominant representation of a halo since at least the late 19th century, as seen for example in the logo for the Simon Templar ("The Saint") series of novels and other adaptations.

Spiritual significance in Christianity

 
Eastern Orthodox icon of Christ "Not Made by Hand" with the Greek letters Ο Ν. Simon Ushakov, 17th century.

The early Church Fathers expended much rhetorical energy on conceptions of God as a source of light; among other things this was because "in the controversies in the 4th century over the consubstantiality of the Father and the Son, the relation of the ray to the source was the most cogent example of emanation and of distinct forms with a common substance" – key concepts in the theological thought of the time.[43]

A more Catholic interpretation is that the halo represents the light of divine grace suffusing the soul, which is perfectly united and in harmony with the physical body.

In the theology of the Eastern Orthodox Church, an icon is a "window into heaven" through which Christ and the Saints in heaven can be seen and communicated with. The gold ground of the icon indicates that what is depicted is in heaven. The halo is a symbol of the Uncreated Light (Greek: Ἄκτιστον Φῶς) or grace of God shining forth through the icon. Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite in his Celestial Hierarchies speaks of the angels and saints being illuminated by the grace of God, and in turn illumining others.

Gallery – Christian art

Origins and usage of the different terms

 
Late Byzantine/Russian icon of the Transfiguration. Christ is shown surrounded by a light blue aureole with white flashes of lightning (15th century, attributed to Theophanes the Greek, Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow).

The distinction between the alternative terms used in English for various types of halo is rather unclear. The oldest term in English is "glory", the only one available in the Middle Ages, but now largely obsolete. It came from the French gloire which has much the same range of meanings as "glory". "Gloriole" does not appear in this sense until 1844, being a modern invention, as a diminutive, in French also. "Halo" is first found in English in this sense in 1646 (nearly a century after the optical or astronomical sense). Both "halos" and "haloes" may be used as plural forms, and halo may be used as a verb.[44] Halo comes originally from the Greek for "threshing-floor" – a circular, slightly sloping area kept very clean, around which slaves or oxen walked to thresh the grain. In Greek, this came to mean a divine, bright disk.

Nimbus means "a cloud" in Latin, and is found as "a divine cloud" in 1616, whereas as "a bright or golden disk surrounding the head" it does not appear until 1727. The plural nimbi is correct but "rare"; "nimbuses" is not in the OED but sometimes used. Nimb is an obsolete form of the noun, but not a verb, except that the obsolete "nimbated", like the commoner "nimbate", means "furnished with a nimbus". It is sometimes preferred by art-historians, as sounding more technical than halo.[45]

Aureole, from the Latin for "golden", has been used in English as a term for a gold crown, especially that traditionally considered the reward of martyrs, since the Middle Ages (OED 1220). However, the first use recorded as a term for a halo is in 1848, very shortly after which matters were greatly complicated by the publication in 1851 of the English translation of Adolphe Napoléon Didron's important Christian Iconography: Or, The History of Christian Art in the Middle Ages. This, by what the OED calls a "strange blunder", derived the word from the Latin aura as a diminutive, and also defined it as meaning a halo or glory covering the whole body, whilst saying that "nimbus" referred only to a halo around the head. This, according to the OED, reversed the historical usage of both words, but whilst Didron's diktat was "not accepted in France", the OED noted it had already been picked up by several English dictionaries, and influenced usage in English, which still seems to be the case, as the word "nimbus" is mostly found describing whole-body haloes, and seems to have also influenced "gloriole" in the same direction.[46]

The only English term that unequivocally means a full-body halo, and cannot be used for a circular disk around the head is "mandorla", first occurring in 1883. However, this term, which is the Italian word for "almond", is usually reserved for the vesica piscis shape, at least in describing Christian art. In discussing Asian art, it is used more widely.[47] Otherwise, there could be said to be an excess of words that could refer to either a head-disk or a full-body halo, and no word that clearly denotes a full-body halo that is not vesica piscis shaped. "Halo" by itself, according to recent dictionaries,[48] means only a circle around the head, although Rhie and Thurman use the word also for circular full-body aureoles.[49]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Harper, Douglas. "halo". Online Etymology Dictionary. ἅλως. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  2. ^ "halo – art". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  3. ^ J. Black and A. Green, Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotmia (Austin, 1992) p. 130.
  4. ^ Iliad v.4ff, xviii.203ff.
  5. ^ Marjorie J. Milne, "Perseus and Medusa on an Attic Vase" The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin New Series, 4.5 (January 1946, pp. 126–130) 126.p.) JSTOR 3257993
  6. ^ L. Stephani, "Nimbus und Strahlenkranz in den Werken der Alten Kunst" in Mémoires de l'Académie des Sciences de Saint-Petersbourg, series vi, vol. vol ix, noted in Milne 1946:130.
  7. ^ Stevenson, Gregory M. (1995). "Conceptual Background to Golden Crown Imagery in the Apocalypse of John (4:4, 10; 14:14)". Journal of Biblical Literature. 114 (2): 257–272. doi:10.2307/3266939. ISSN 0021-9231. JSTOR 3266939.
  8. ^ Sali, S. A. "Daimabad : 1976–79". INDIAN CULTURE. p. 499. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  9. ^ a b c "Metropolitan Museum of Art: Art of South Asia" (PDF). metmuseum.org.
  10. ^ including the Qianlong Emperor – see note below. Rhie, Marylin and Thurman, Robert (eds):Wisdom And Compassion: The Sacred Art of Tibet, p. 99, & passim, 2000, 1991, ISBN 0-8109-2526-5
  11. ^ Rhie and Thurman, pp 77, 176, 197 etc.
  12. ^ Gopinatha Rao, T. A. (1985). Elements of Hindu Iconography. pp. 31–32. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 9788120808782
  13. ^ No doubt, as later, the same motif appeared in paintings, but none survive from this early. L Sickman & A Soper, "The Art and Architecture of China", Pelican History of Art, 3rd ed 1971, pp. 86–7, Penguin (now Yale History of Art), LOC 70-125675
  14. ^ Often in paintings from the Dunhuang caves, see Anne Farrer (ed), "Caves of the Thousand Buddhas", 1990, British Museum publications, nos 42, 53, 54 etc, ISBN 0-7141-1447-2
  15. ^ Rhie and Thurman, p. 161
  16. ^ See Didron
  17. ^ Crill & Jariwala, 29 and note
  18. ^ Such as the Qianlong Emperor the Qianlong Emperor in Buddhist Dress, and his father.
  19. ^ The ring of fire is ascribed other meanings in many accounts of the iconography of the Nataraja, but many other types of statue have similar aureoles, and their origin as such is clear.
  20. ^ Ramsden, E. H. (1941). "The Halo: A Further Enquiry into Its Origin". The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs. 78 (457): 123–131. JSTOR 868232.
  21. ^ Illustrated.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 July 2008.
  23. ^ Initially only dead and therefore deified Emperors were haloed, later the living Catholic Encyclopedia
  24. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Nimbus". www.newadvent.org.
  25. ^ According to the 1967 New Catholic Encyclopedia, a standard library reference, in an article on Constantine the Great: "Besides, the Sol Invictus had been adopted by the Christians in a Christian sense, as demonstrated in the Christ as Apollo-Helios in a mausoleum (c. 250) discovered beneath St. Peter's in the Vatican."
  26. ^ G Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. I, 1971 (English trans. from German), Lund Humphries, London, p. 135, figs 150-53, 346–54. ISBN 0-85331-270-2
  27. ^ (PDF). Catholic Biblical Association of Canada. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 December 2011. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
  28. ^ G Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. I, 1971 (English trans. from German), Lund Humphries, London, figs 20–22, ISBN 0-85331-270-2
  29. ^ Nationalgallery.org.uk 23 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Late 15th century reliefs by Jacopo della Quercia on the portal of San Petronio, Bologna are an early example of the triangular halo. According to Didron, Adolphe Napoléon: Christian Iconography: Or, The History of Christian Art in the Middle Ages, London, 1851, Vol 2, p30, this is "extremely rare in France, but common enough in Italy and Greece
  30. ^ Didron, Vol 2, pp. 68–71
  31. ^ The distinction is observed in the Christ Glorified in the Court of Heaven (1423–4) by Fra Angelico, National Gallery, London, where only the beatified saints at the edges have radiating linear haloes.
  32. ^ only in Italy, according to Didron, Vol 2 p. 79.
  33. ^ see Didron, Vol 2 p. 79 and Dodwell, C.R.; The Pictorial arts of the West, 800–1200, 1993, Yale UP, ISBN 0-300-06493-4, p. 170
  34. ^ Johannes Diaconus gives the reason: circa verticem tabulae similitudinem, quod viventis insigne est, preferens, non-coronam ("bearing around his head the likeness of a square, which is the sign for a living person, and not a crown") (Migne, Pat. Lat. 75, 231). The deacon of Rome was unaware of the Eastern tradition of depicting the emperor with a halo. Surviving examples are rare, and seem to be becoming rarer; Bishop Ecclesius has a clear one in older photos of the mosaics in San Vitale, Ravenna, which appears to have been removed in recent restoration Cupola of the choir – see: James Hall, A History of Ideas and Images in Italian Art, p100 & photo p. 93, 1983, John Murray, London, ISBN 0-7195-3971-4. Other surviving examples are Pope Hadrian I in a mural formerly in Santa Prassede, Rome, donor figures in the church at Saint Catherine's Monastery and two more Roman examples – items 3 and 5 30 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine, one of Paschal's mother, the rather mysterious Episcopa Theodora. see also: Fisher, Sally. The Square Halo and Other Mysteries of Western Art: Images and the Stories that Inspired Them. Edited by Harriet Whelchel, Harry N Abrams, Inc., 1995
  35. ^ Becklectic, made by photographer. "Joshua. Fresco from the Dura Europos synagogue (Jewish Art, ed. Cecil Roth, Tel Aviv: Massadah Press, 1961, cols. 203–204: "Joshua")" – via Wikimedia Commons.
  36. ^ As in the frescoes by the workshop of Giotto in the lower church at Assisi. James Hall, A History of Ideas and Images in Italian Art, p202, 1983, John Murray, London, ISBN 0-7195-3971-4
  37. ^ Didron, Vol 2, pp. 107–126
  38. ^ Robin Margaret Jensen, Understanding Early Christian Art, p. 112, 2000, Routledge, ISBN 0-415-20454-2
  39. ^ Tait, Hugh. Catalogue of the Waddesdon Bequest in the British Museum, p. 43, 1986, British Museum Press, ISBN 978-0-7141-0525-3
  40. ^ Haloes were also often added by later dealers and restorers to such works, and indeed sometimes used to convert portraits into "saints". Intentional Alterations of Early Netherlandish Painting, Metropolitan Museum
  41. ^ If not their identity. The painting has been partly repainted, and the current appearance may not be the original one. Vienna Perugino
  42. ^ Tate. "'Saint Stephen', Sir John Everett Millais, Bt, 1895 – Tate". tate.org.uk.
  43. ^ Notes on Castelseprio (1957) in Meyer Schapiro, Selected Papers, volume 3, p117, Late Antique, Early Christian and Mediaeval Art, 1980, Chatto & Windus, London, ISBN 0-7011-2514-4
  44. ^ OED original edition for "glory", "gloriole" and "halo".
  45. ^ OED original edition for "nimbus" etc.
  46. ^ OED original edition for "aureole".
  47. ^ For example by Sickman and Soper, op. cit.
  48. ^ Concise Oxford Dictionary, 1995, and Collins English Dictionary.
  49. ^ op & pages cit. The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1911 (link above) has a further set of meanings for these terms, including glory.

References

  • Aster, Shawn Zelig, The Unbeatable Light: Melammu and Its Biblical Parallels, Alter Orient und Altes Testament vol. 384 (Münster), 2012, ISBN 978-3-86835-051-7
  • Crill, Rosemary, and Jariwala, Kapil. The Indian Portrait, 1560–1860, National Portrait Gallery, London, 2010, ISBN 978-1-85514-409-5
  • Didron, Adolphe Napoléon, Christian Iconography: Or, The History of Christian Art in the Middle Ages, Translated by Ellen J. Millington, H. G. Bohn, (Original from Harvard University, Digitized for Google Books) – Volume I, Part I (pp. 25–165) is concerned with the halo in its different forms, though the book is not up to date.
  • Dodwell, C. R., The Pictorial arts of the West, 800–1200, 1993, Yale UP, ISBN 0-300-06493-4
  • Rhie, Marylin and Thurman, Robert (eds.): Wisdom And Compassion: The Sacred Art of Tibet, 1991, ISBN 0-8109-2526-5
  • Schiller, Gertrud, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. I, 1971 (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, ISBN 0-85331-270-2

Further reading

  • Ainsworth, Maryan W., "Intentional Alterations of Early Netherlandish Paintings", Metropolitan Museum Journal, Vol. 40, Essays in Memory of John M. Brealey (2005), pp. 51–65, 10, University of Chicago Press on behalf of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, JSTOR 20320643 – on the later addition and removal of halos

External links

  • Article on some early Japanese Buddhist haloes

halo, religious, iconography, other, uses, halo, disambiguation, halo, from, greek, ἅλως, halōs, also, known, nimbus, aureole, glory, gloriole, crown, light, rays, circle, disk, light, that, surrounds, person, been, used, iconography, many, religions, indicate. For other uses see Halo disambiguation A halo from the Greek ἅlws halōs 1 also known as a nimbus aureole glory or gloriole is a crown of light rays circle or disk of light 2 that surrounds a person in art It has been used in the iconography of many religions to indicate holy or sacred figures and has at various periods also been used in images of rulers and heroes In the religious art of Ancient Greece Ancient Rome Christianity Hinduism and Buddhism among other religions sacred persons may be depicted with a halo in the form of a circular glow or flames in Asian art around the head or around the whole body this last one is often called a mandorla Halos may be shown as almost any colour or combination of colours but are most often depicted as golden yellow or white when representing light or red when representing flames Standing Buddha with a halo 1st 2nd century AD or earlier Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara Jesus and nine of the Twelve Apostles depicted with Floating disk haloes in perspective detail from The Tribute Money illustrating Matthew 17 24 27 by Masaccio 1424 Brancacci Chapel Contents 1 Ancient Mesopotamia 2 Ancient Greek world 3 Asian art 3 1 Egypt and Asia 4 Roman art 5 Christian art 5 1 Decline of the halo 6 Spiritual significance in Christianity 7 Gallery Christian art 8 Origins and usage of the different terms 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksAncient Mesopotamia EditSumerian religious literature frequently speaks of melam melammu in Akkadian a brilliant visible glamour which is exuded by gods heroes sometimes by kings and also by temples of great holiness and by gods symbols and emblems 3 Ancient Greek world Edit Octadrachm of Ptolemy III Homer describes a more than natural light around the heads of heroes in battle 4 Depictions of Perseus in the act of slaying Medusa with lines radiating from his head appear on a white ground toiletry box and on a slightly later red figured vase in the style of Polygnotos c 450 30 BC 5 On painted wares from south Italy radiant lines or simple haloes appear on a range of mythic figures Lyssa a personification of madness a sphinx a sea demon and Thetis the sea nymph who was mother to Achilles 6 The Colossus of Rhodes was a statue of the sun god Helios and had his usual radiate crown copied for the Statue of Liberty Hellenistic rulers are often shown wearing radiate crowns that seem clearly to imitate this effect 7 Asian art Edit Coin of Indo Greek king Menander II 90 85 BCE displaying Nike with a halo on the reverse In India use of the halo might date back to the second half of the second millennium BC Two figures appliqued on a pottery vase fragment from Daimabad s Malwa phase 1600 1400 BC have been interpreted as a holy figure resembling the later Hindu god Shiva and an attendant both with halos surrounding their heads 8 Aureola have been widely used in Indian art particularly in Buddhist iconography 9 where it has appeared since at least the 1st century AD the Kushan Bimaran casket in the British Museum is dated 60 AD at least between 30BC and 200 AD The rulers of the Kushan Empire were perhaps the earliest to give themselves haloes on their coins and the nimbus in art may have originated in Central Asia and spread both east and west 9 In Chinese and Japanese Buddhist art the halo has also been used since the earliest periods in depicting the image of Amitabha Buddha and others Tibetan Buddhism uses haloes and aureoles of many types drawing from both Indian and Chinese traditions extensively in statues and Thangka paintings of Buddhist saints such as Milarepa and Padmasambhava and deities Different coloured haloes have specific meanings orange for monks green for the Buddha and other more elevated beings 10 and commonly figures have both a halo for the head and another circular one for the body the two often intersecting somewhere around the head or neck Thin lines of gold often radiate outwards or inwards from the rim of the halo and sometimes a whole halo is made up of these 11 In India the head halo is called Prabhamandala or Siras cakra while the full body halo is Prabhavali 12 Elaborate haloes and especially aureoles also appear in Hindu sculpture where they tend to develop into architectural frames in which the original idea can be hard to recognise Theravada Buddhism and Jainism did not use the halo for many centuries but later adopted it though less thoroughly than other religious groups Muhammad leads Abraham Moses Jesus and others in prayer Persian miniature In Asian art the nimbus is often imagined as consisting not just of light but of flames This type seems to first appear in Chinese bronzes of which the earliest surviving examples date from before 450 13 The depiction of the flames may be very formalized as in the regular little flames on the ring aureole surrounding many Chola bronzes and other classic Hindu sculptures of divinities or very prominent as with the more realistic flames and sometimes smoke shown rising to a peak behind many Tibetan Buddhist depictions of the wrathful aspect of divinities and also in Persian miniatures of the classic period Sometimes a thin line of flames rise up from the edges of a circular halo in Buddhist examples 14 In Tibetan paintings the flames are often shown as blown by a wind usually from left to right 15 This type is also very rarely found and on a smaller scale in medieval Christian art 16 page needed Halos are found in Islamic art from various places and periods especially in Persian miniatures and Moghul and Ottoman art influenced by them Flaming halos derived from Buddhist art surround angels and similar ones are often seen around Muhammad and other sacred human figures From the early 17th century plainer round haloes appear in portraits of Mughal Emperors and subsequently Rajput and Sikh rulers 9 despite the more local precedents art historians believe the Mughals took the motif from European religious art though it expresses a Persian idea of the God given charisma of kingship that is far older 17 The Ottomans avoided using halos for the sultans despite their title as Caliph and they are only seen on Chinese emperors if they are posing as Buddhist religious figures as some felt entitled to do 18 Egypt and Asia Edit Ra with solar disc before 1235 BC The Kushan Kanishka casket of 127 with left to right Brahma the Buddha and Indra Northern Wei Buddhist bronze 524 with two ringed halo within a flaming mandorla Chola Nataraja with an aureole of flames 11th century 19 Hindu figure 11th century Modern murti of Vishnu with halo created by lighting The Mughal emperor Jahangir often had himself depicted with a halo of unprecedented size c 1620 A multi limbed Tibetan deity surrounded by an aureole of billowing fire and a pillar of smoke which signifies the wrathful nature of the deity 19th century Thangka of the Hayagriva Modern Hindu devotional images of Durga and other haloed deitiesRoman art Edit Apollo with a radiant halo in a Roman floor mosaic late 2nd century El Djem Tunisia The halo represents an aura or the glow of sanctity which was conventionally drawn encircling the head It first appeared in the culture of Hellenistic Greece and Rome possibly related to the Zoroastrian hvarena glory or divine lustre which marked the Persian kings and may have been imported with Mithraism 20 Though Roman paintings have largely disappeared save some fresco decorations the haloed figure remains fresh in Roman mosaics In a 2nd century AD Roman floor mosaic preserved at Bardo Tunisia 21 a haloed Poseidon appears in his chariot drawn by hippocamps Significantly the triton and nereid who accompany the sea god are not haloed In a late 2nd century AD floor mosaic from Thysdrus El Djem illustration Apollo Helios is identified by his effulgent halo Another haloed Apollo in mosaic from Hadrumentum is in the museum at Sousse 22 The conventions of this representation head tilted lips slightly parted large eyed curling hair cut in locks grazing the neck were developed in the 3rd century BC to depict Alexander the Great Bieber 1964 Yalouris 1980 Sometime after this mosaic was executed the Emperor began to be depicted with a halo 23 which was not abandoned when they became Christian initially Christ only had one when shown on a throne as Christ in Majesty 24 Christian art Edit Early pre 4th century Mosaic of Sol Invictus 25 in Mausoleum M in the pre 4th century necropolis beneath St Peter s Basilica interpreted by many as representing Christ The halo was incorporated into Early Christian art sometime in the 4th century with the earliest iconic images of Christ initially the only figure shown with one together with his symbol the Lamb of God Initially the halo was regarded by many as a representation of the Logos of Christ his divine nature and therefore in very early before 500 depictions of Christ before his Baptism by John he tends not to be shown with a halo it being a matter of debate whether his Logos was innate from conception the Orthodox view or acquired at Baptism the Adoptionist view At this period he is also shown as a child or youth in Baptisms though this may be a hieratic rather than an age related representation 26 Nativity and Transfiguration of Christ with cross haloes the apostles angels and prophets have plain ones 1025 50 Cologne A cruciform halo that is to say a halo with a cross within or extending beyond the circle is used to represent the persons of the Holy Trinity especially Jesus and especially in medieval art In Byzantine and Orthodox images inside each of the bars of the cross in Christ s halo is one of the Greek letters O W N making up ὁ ὢn ho ōn literally the Existing One indicating the divinity of Jesus 27 At least in later Orthodox images each bar of this cross is composed of three lines symbolising the dogmas of the Trinity the oneness of God and the two natures of Christ In mosaics in Santa Maria Maggiore 432 40 the juvenile Christ has a four armed cross either on top of his head in the radius of the nimbus or placed above the radius but this is unusual In the same mosaics the accompanying angels have haloes as in a continuation of the Imperial tradition does King Herod but not Mary and Joseph Occasionally other figures have crossed haloes such as the seven doves representing the Seven gifts of the Holy Spirit in the 11th century Codex Vyssegradensis Tree of Jesse where Jesse and Isaiah also have plain haloes as do the Ancestors of Christ in other miniatures 28 Later triangular haloes are sometimes given to God the Father to represent the Trinity 29 When he is represented by a hand emerging from a cloud this may be given a halo Plain round haloes are typically used to signify saints the Virgin Mary Old Testament prophets angels symbols of the Four Evangelists and some other figures Byzantine emperors and empresses were often shown with them in compositions including saints or Christ however the haloes were outlined only This was copied by Ottonian and later Russian rulers Old Testament figures become less likely to have haloes in the West as the Middle Ages go on 30 Pope Paschal I is depicted during his lifetime so with a square halo c 820 Santa Prassede Rome Beatified figures not yet canonised as saints are sometimes shown in medieval Italian art with linear rays radiating out from the head but no circular edge of the nimbus defined later this became a less obtrusive form of halo that could be used for all figures 31 Mary has especially from the Baroque period onwards a special form of halo in a circle of twelve stars derived from her identification as the Woman of the Apocalypse Square haloes were sometimes used for the living in donor portraits of about 500 1100 in Italy 32 Most surviving ones are of Popes and others in mosaics in Rome including the Episcopa Theodora head of the mother of the Pope of the day They seem merely an indication of a contemporary figure as opposed to the saints usually accompanying them with no real implication of future canonization A late example is of Desiderius Abbot of Monte Cassino later Pope from a manuscript of 1056 86 33 Pope Gregory the Great had himself depicted with one according to the 9th century writer of his vita John deacon of Rome 34 A figure who may represent Moses in the 3rd century Dura Europos Synagogue has one where no round halos are found 35 Personifications of the Virtues are sometimes given hexagonal haloes 36 Scalloped haloes sometimes just appearing as made of radiating bars are found in the manuscripts of the Carolingian Ada School such as the Ada Gospels The whole body image of radiance is sometimes called the aureole or glory it is shown radiating from all round the body most often of Christ or Mary occasionally of saints especially those reported to have been seen surrounded by one Such an aureola is often a mandorla almond shaped vesica piscis especially around Christ in Majesty who may well have a halo as well In depictions of the Transfiguration of Jesus a more complicated shape is often seen especially in the Eastern Orthodox tradition as in the famous 15th century icon in the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow 37 Where gold is used as a background in miniatures mosaics and panel paintings the halo is often formed by inscribing lines in the gold leaf and may be decorated in patterns diapering within the outer radius and thus becomes much less prominent The gold leaf inside the halo may also be burnished in a circular manner so as to produce the effect of light radiating out from the subject s head In the early centuries of its use the Christian halo may be in most colours though black is reserved for Judas Satan and other evil figures or multicoloured later gold becomes standard and if the entire background is not gold leaf the halo itself usually will be 38 Decline of the halo Edit Fra Angelico Coronation of the Virgin Note the haloes of the kneeling figures at the front seen from behind With increasing realism in painting the halo came to be a problem for artists So long as they continued to use the old compositional formulae which had been worked out to accommodate haloes the problems were manageable but as Western artists sought more flexibility in composition this ceased to be the case In free standing medieval sculpture the halo was already shown as a flat disk above or behind the head When perspective came to be considered essential painters also changed the halo from an aura surrounding the head always depicted as though seen full on to a flat golden disk or ring that appeared in perspective floating above the heads of the saints or vertically behind sometimes transparent This can be seen first in Giotto who still gives Christ the cruciform halo which began to be phased out by his successors In northern Europe the radiant halo made up of rays like a sunburst came into fashion in French painting around the end of the 14th century 39 In the early 15th century Jan van Eyck and Robert Campin largely abandoned their use although some other Early Netherlandish artists continued to use them 40 In Italy at around the same time Pisanello used them if they did not clash with one of the enormous hats he liked to paint Generally they lasted longer in Italy although often reduced to a thin gold band depicting the outer edge of the nimbus usual for example in Giovanni Bellini Christ began to be shown with a plain halo Leonardo da Vinci attributed Benois Madonna Floating semi transparent haloes in perspective Fra Angelico himself a monk was a conservative as far as haloes are concerned and some of his paintings demonstrate the problems well as in several of his more crowded compositions where they are shown as solid gold disks on the same plane as the picture surface it becomes difficult to prevent them obstructing other figures At the same time they were useful in crowded narrative scenes for distinguishing the main identifiable figures from the mass of a crowd Giotto s Lamentation of Christ from the Scrovegni Chapel has eight figures with haloes and ten without to whom the viewer knows they are not meant to attach a specific identity In the same way a Baptism of Christ by Perugino in Vienna gives neither Christ nor John the Baptist haloes as sufficiently recognisable without them but a saint in the background not usually present in this scene has a ring halo to denote his status 41 In the High Renaissance even most Italian painters dispensed with haloes altogether but in the Church s reaction to the Protestant Reformation that culminated in the decrees on images of the Council of Trent of 1563 their use was mandated by clerical writers on religious art such as Molanus and Saint Carlo Borromeo Figures were placed where natural light sources would highlight their heads or instead more discreet quasi naturalistic flickering or glowing light was shown around the head of Christ and other figures perhaps pioneered by Titian in his late period Rembrandt s etchings for example show a variety of solutions of all of these types as well as a majority with no halo effect at all The disk halo was rarely used for figures from classical mythology in the Renaissance although they are sometimes seen especially in the classical radiant form in Mannerist and Baroque art By the 19th century haloes had become unusual in Western mainstream art although retained in iconic and popular images and sometimes as a medievalising effect When John Millais gives his otherwise realist St Stephen 1895 a ring halo it seems rather surprising 42 In popular graphic culture a simple ring has become the predominant representation of a halo since at least the late 19th century as seen for example in the logo for the Simon Templar The Saint series of novels and other adaptations Spiritual significance in Christianity Edit Eastern Orthodox icon of Christ Not Made by Hand with the Greek letters O ὤ N Simon Ushakov 17th century The early Church Fathers expended much rhetorical energy on conceptions of God as a source of light among other things this was because in the controversies in the 4th century over the consubstantiality of the Father and the Son the relation of the ray to the source was the most cogent example of emanation and of distinct forms with a common substance key concepts in the theological thought of the time 43 A more Catholic interpretation is that the halo represents the light of divine grace suffusing the soul which is perfectly united and in harmony with the physical body In the theology of the Eastern Orthodox Church an icon is a window into heaven through which Christ and the Saints in heaven can be seen and communicated with The gold ground of the icon indicates that what is depicted is in heaven The halo is a symbol of the Uncreated Light Greek Ἄktiston Fῶs or grace of God shining forth through the icon Pseudo Dionysius the Areopagite in his Celestial Hierarchies speaks of the angels and saints being illuminated by the grace of God and in turn illumining others Gallery Christian art Edit The Emperor Justinian and the Empress Theodora are haloed in mosaics at the Basilica of San Vitale Ravenna 548 See here for earlier and here for later examples Gospels of Tsar Ivan Alexander of Bulgaria 1355 56 the whole royal family have haloes Giotto Scrovegni Chapel 1305 with flat perspectival haloes the view from behind causes difficulties and John s halo has to be reduced in size The risen Christ appearing to the Eleven Luke 24 36 49 from Duccio s Maesta Christ has a plain halo the Apostles only have them where they will not seriously interfere with the composition Netherlandish before 1430 A religious scene where objects in a realistic domestic setting contain symbolism A wicker firescreen serves as a halo Mary above has a large aureole St Anthony has a disk halo in perspective but this would spoil the appearance of St George s hat Pisanello 1430s Fra Angelico 1450 Mary s halo is in perspective Joseph s is not Jesus still has a cruciform halo The Lutheran Hans Leonhard Schaufelein shows only Christ with a halo in this Last Supper of 1515 In Simon Ushakov s icon of The Last Supper 1685 eleven of the twelve apostles have haloes only Judas Iscariot does not Salvator Mundi 1570 by Titian From the late Renaissance a more naturalistic form of halo was often preferred William Blake uses the hats of the two girls to suggest haloes in the frontispiece to Mary Wollstonecraft s Original Stories from Real Life 1791 Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld was a member of the Nazarene movement that looked back to medieval art However in The Three Marys at the Tomb 1835 only the angel has a halo Origins and usage of the different terms Edit Late Byzantine Russian icon of the Transfiguration Christ is shown surrounded by a light blue aureole with white flashes of lightning 15th century attributed to Theophanes the Greek Tretyakov Gallery Moscow The distinction between the alternative terms used in English for various types of halo is rather unclear The oldest term in English is glory the only one available in the Middle Ages but now largely obsolete It came from the French gloire which has much the same range of meanings as glory Gloriole does not appear in this sense until 1844 being a modern invention as a diminutive in French also Halo is first found in English in this sense in 1646 nearly a century after the optical or astronomical sense Both halos and haloes may be used as plural forms and halo may be used as a verb 44 Halo comes originally from the Greek for threshing floor a circular slightly sloping area kept very clean around which slaves or oxen walked to thresh the grain In Greek this came to mean a divine bright disk Nimbus means a cloud in Latin and is found as a divine cloud in 1616 whereas as a bright or golden disk surrounding the head it does not appear until 1727 The plural nimbi is correct but rare nimbuses is not in the OED but sometimes used Nimb is an obsolete form of the noun but not a verb except that the obsolete nimbated like the commoner nimbate means furnished with a nimbus It is sometimes preferred by art historians as sounding more technical than halo 45 Aureole from the Latin for golden has been used in English as a term for a gold crown especially that traditionally considered the reward of martyrs since the Middle Ages OED 1220 However the first use recorded as a term for a halo is in 1848 very shortly after which matters were greatly complicated by the publication in 1851 of the English translation of Adolphe Napoleon Didron s important Christian Iconography Or The History of Christian Art in the Middle Ages This by what the OED calls a strange blunder derived the word from the Latin aura as a diminutive and also defined it as meaning a halo or glory covering the whole body whilst saying that nimbus referred only to a halo around the head This according to the OED reversed the historical usage of both words but whilst Didron s diktat was not accepted in France the OED noted it had already been picked up by several English dictionaries and influenced usage in English which still seems to be the case as the word nimbus is mostly found describing whole body haloes and seems to have also influenced gloriole in the same direction 46 The only English term that unequivocally means a full body halo and cannot be used for a circular disk around the head is mandorla first occurring in 1883 However this term which is the Italian word for almond is usually reserved for the vesica piscis shape at least in describing Christian art In discussing Asian art it is used more widely 47 Otherwise there could be said to be an excess of words that could refer to either a head disk or a full body halo and no word that clearly denotes a full body halo that is not vesica piscis shaped Halo by itself according to recent dictionaries 48 means only a circle around the head although Rhie and Thurman use the word also for circular full body aureoles 49 See also EditAura paranormal Aureola Crown of Immortality Glory optical phenomenon Glory in art Lesya VelificatioNotes Edit Harper Douglas halo Online Etymology Dictionary ἅlws Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project halo art Encyclopedia Britannica J Black and A Green Gods Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotmia Austin 1992 p 130 Iliad v 4ff xviii 203ff Marjorie J Milne Perseus and Medusa on an Attic Vase The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin New Series 4 5 January 1946 pp 126 130 126 p JSTOR 3257993 L Stephani Nimbus und Strahlenkranz in den Werken der Alten Kunst in Memoires de l Academie des Sciences de Saint Petersbourg series vi vol vol ix noted in Milne 1946 130 Stevenson Gregory M 1995 Conceptual Background to Golden Crown Imagery in the Apocalypse of John 4 4 10 14 14 Journal of Biblical Literature 114 2 257 272 doi 10 2307 3266939 ISSN 0021 9231 JSTOR 3266939 Sali S A Daimabad 1976 79 INDIAN CULTURE p 499 Retrieved 12 August 2020 a b c Metropolitan Museum of Art Art of South Asia PDF metmuseum org including the Qianlong Emperor see note below Rhie Marylin and Thurman Robert eds Wisdom And Compassion The Sacred Art of Tibet p 99 amp passim 2000 1991 ISBN 0 8109 2526 5 Rhie and Thurman pp 77 176 197 etc Gopinatha Rao T A 1985 Elements of Hindu Iconography pp 31 32 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9788120808782 No doubt as later the same motif appeared in paintings but none survive from this early L Sickman amp A Soper The Art and Architecture of China Pelican History of Art 3rd ed 1971 pp 86 7 Penguin now Yale History of Art LOC 70 125675 Often in paintings from the Dunhuang caves see Anne Farrer ed Caves of the Thousand Buddhas 1990 British Museum publications nos 42 53 54 etc ISBN 0 7141 1447 2 Rhie and Thurman p 161 See Didron Crill amp Jariwala 29 and note Such as the Qianlong Emperor the Qianlong Emperor in Buddhist Dress and his father The ring of fire is ascribed other meanings in many accounts of the iconography of the Nataraja but many other types of statue have similar aureoles and their origin as such is clear Ramsden E H 1941 The Halo A Further Enquiry into Its Origin The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 78 457 123 131 JSTOR 868232 Illustrated Illustration Archived from the original on 8 July 2008 Initially only dead and therefore deified Emperors were haloed later the living Catholic Encyclopedia CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Nimbus www newadvent org According to the 1967 New Catholic Encyclopedia a standard library reference in an article on Constantine the Great Besides the Sol Invictus had been adopted by the Christians in a Christian sense as demonstrated in the Christ as Apollo Helios in a mausoleum c 250 discovered beneath St Peter s in the Vatican G Schiller Iconography of Christian Art Vol I 1971 English trans from German Lund Humphries London p 135 figs 150 53 346 54 ISBN 0 85331 270 2 Early Christian Symbols PDF Catholic Biblical Association of Canada Archived from the original PDF on 23 December 2011 Retrieved 20 September 2011 G Schiller Iconography of Christian Art Vol I 1971 English trans from German Lund Humphries London figs 20 22 ISBN 0 85331 270 2 Nationalgallery org uk Archived 23 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine Late 15th century reliefs by Jacopo della Quercia on the portal of San Petronio Bologna are an early example of the triangular halo According to Didron Adolphe Napoleon Christian Iconography Or The History of Christian Art in the Middle Ages London 1851 Vol 2 p30 this is extremely rare in France but common enough in Italy and Greece Didron Vol 2 pp 68 71 The distinction is observed in the Christ Glorified in the Court of Heaven 1423 4 by Fra Angelico National Gallery London where only the beatified saints at the edges have radiating linear haloes only in Italy according to Didron Vol 2 p 79 see Didron Vol 2 p 79 and Dodwell C R The Pictorial arts of the West 800 1200 1993 Yale UP ISBN 0 300 06493 4 p 170 Johannes Diaconus gives the reason circa verticem tabulae similitudinem quod viventis insigne est preferens non coronam bearing around his head the likeness of a square which is the sign for a living person and not a crown Migne Pat Lat 75 231 The deacon of Rome was unaware of the Eastern tradition of depicting the emperor with a halo Surviving examples are rare and seem to be becoming rarer Bishop Ecclesius has a clear one in older photos of the mosaics in San Vitale Ravenna which appears to have been removed in recent restoration Cupola of the choir see James Hall A History of Ideas and Images in Italian Art p100 amp photo p 93 1983 John Murray London ISBN 0 7195 3971 4 Other surviving examples are Pope Hadrian I in a mural formerly in Santa Prassede Rome donor figures in the church at Saint Catherine s Monastery and two more Roman examples items 3 and 5 Archived 30 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine one of Paschal s mother the rather mysterious Episcopa Theodora see also Fisher Sally The Square Halo and Other Mysteries of Western Art Images and the Stories that Inspired Them Edited by Harriet Whelchel Harry N Abrams Inc 1995 Becklectic made by photographer Joshua Fresco from the Dura Europos synagogue Jewish Art ed Cecil Roth Tel Aviv Massadah Press 1961 cols 203 204 Joshua via Wikimedia Commons As in the frescoes by the workshop of Giotto in the lower church at Assisi James Hall A History of Ideas and Images in Italian Art p202 1983 John Murray London ISBN 0 7195 3971 4 Didron Vol 2 pp 107 126 Robin Margaret Jensen Understanding Early Christian Art p 112 2000 Routledge ISBN 0 415 20454 2 Tait Hugh Catalogue of the Waddesdon Bequest in the British Museum p 43 1986 British Museum Press ISBN 978 0 7141 0525 3 Haloes were also often added by later dealers and restorers to such works and indeed sometimes used to convert portraits into saints Intentional Alterations of Early Netherlandish Painting Metropolitan Museum If not their identity The painting has been partly repainted and the current appearance may not be the original one Vienna Perugino Tate Saint Stephen Sir John Everett Millais Bt 1895 Tate tate org uk Notes on Castelseprio 1957 in Meyer Schapiro Selected Papers volume 3 p117 Late Antique Early Christian and Mediaeval Art 1980 Chatto amp Windus London ISBN 0 7011 2514 4 OED original edition for glory gloriole and halo OED original edition for nimbus etc OED original edition for aureole For example by Sickman and Soper op cit Concise Oxford Dictionary 1995 and Collins English Dictionary op amp pages cit The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1911 link above has a further set of meanings for these terms including glory References EditAster Shawn Zelig The Unbeatable Light Melammu and Its Biblical Parallels Alter Orient und Altes Testament vol 384 Munster 2012 ISBN 978 3 86835 051 7 Crill Rosemary and Jariwala Kapil The Indian Portrait 1560 1860 National Portrait Gallery London 2010 ISBN 978 1 85514 409 5 Didron Adolphe Napoleon Christian Iconography Or The History of Christian Art in the Middle Ages Translated by Ellen J Millington H G Bohn Original from Harvard University Digitized for Google Books Volume I Part I pp 25 165 is concerned with the halo in its different forms though the book is not up to date Dodwell C R The Pictorial arts of the West 800 1200 1993 Yale UP ISBN 0 300 06493 4 Rhie Marylin and Thurman Robert eds Wisdom And Compassion The Sacred Art of Tibet 1991 ISBN 0 8109 2526 5 Schiller Gertrud Iconography of Christian Art Vol I 1971 English trans from German Lund Humphries London ISBN 0 85331 270 2Further reading EditAinsworth Maryan W Intentional Alterations of Early Netherlandish Paintings Metropolitan Museum Journal Vol 40 Essays in Memory of John M Brealey 2005 pp 51 65 10 University of Chicago Press on behalf of The Metropolitan Museum of Art JSTOR 20320643 on the later addition and removal of halosExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Halo religious iconography Article on some early Japanese Buddhist haloes The Halos in Taoist Buddhist Christian Hindu Islam Greek and Roman images Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Halo religious iconography amp oldid 1146961331, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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