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Iconoclasm

Iconoclasm (from Greek: εἰκών, eikṓn, 'figure, icon' + κλάω, kláō, 'to break')[i] is the social belief in the importance of the destruction of icons and other images or monuments, most frequently for religious or political reasons. People who engage in or support iconoclasm are called iconoclasts, a term that has come to be figuratively applied to any individual who challenges "cherished beliefs or venerated institutions on the grounds that they are erroneous or pernicious."[1]

"Triumph of Orthodoxy" over iconoclasm under the Byzantine Empress Theodora and her son Michael III. Late 14th – early 15th-century icon.

Conversely, one who reveres or venerates religious images is called (by iconoclasts) an iconolater; in a Byzantine context, such a person is called an iconodule or iconophile.[2] Iconoclasm does not generally encompass the destruction of the images of a specific ruler after his or her death or overthrow, a practice better known as damnatio memoriae.

While iconoclasm may be carried out by adherents of a different religion, it is more commonly the result of sectarian disputes between factions of the same religion. The term originates from the Byzantine Iconoclasm, the struggles between proponents and opponents of religious icons in the Byzantine Empire from 726 to 842 AD. Degrees of iconoclasm vary greatly among religions and their branches, but are strongest in religions which oppose idolatry, including the Abrahamic religions.[3] Outside of the religious context, iconoclasm can refer to movements for widespread destruction in symbols of an ideology or cause, such as the destruction of monarchist symbols during the French Revolution.

Early religious iconoclasm edit

Ancient era edit

 
Defaced relief of Horus and Isis in the Temple of Edfu, Egypt. Local Christians engaged in campaigns of proselytism and iconoclasm.

In the Bronze Age, the most significant episode of iconoclasm occurred in Egypt during the Amarna Period, when Akhenaten, based in his new capital of Akhetaten, instituted a significant shift in Egyptian artistic styles alongside a campaign of intolerance towards the traditional gods and a new emphasis on a state monolatristic tradition focused on the god Aten, the Sun disk—many temples and monuments were destroyed as a result:[4][5]

In rebellion against the old religion and the powerful priests of Amun, Akhenaten ordered the eradication of all of Egypt's traditional gods. He sent royal officials to chisel out and destroy every reference to Amun and the names of other deities on tombs, temple walls, and cartouches to instill in the people that the Aten was the one true god.

Public references to Akhenaten were destroyed soon after his death. Comparing the ancient Egyptians with the Israelites, Jan Assmann writes:[6]

For Egypt, the greatest horror was the destruction or abduction of the cult images. In the eyes of the Israelites, the erection of images meant the destruction of divine presence; in the eyes of the Egyptians, this same effect was attained by the destruction of images. In Egypt, iconoclasm was the most terrible religious crime; in Israel, the most terrible religious crime was idolatry. In this respect Osarseph alias Akhenaten, the iconoclast, and the Golden Calf, the paragon of idolatry, correspond to each other inversely, and it is strange that Aaron could so easily avoid the role of the religious criminal. It is more than probable that these traditions evolved under mutual influence. In this respect, Moses and Akhenaten became, after all, closely related.

Judaism edit

According to the Hebrew Bible, God instructed the Israelites to "destroy all [the] engraved stones, destroy all [the] molded images, and demolish all [the] high places" of the indigenous Canaanite population as soon as they entered the Promised Land.[7]

In Judaism, King Hezekiah purged Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem and all figures were also destroyed in the Land of Israel, including the Nehushtan, as recorded in the Second Book of Kings. His reforms were reversed in the reign of his son Manasseh.[8]

Iconoclasm in Christian history edit

 
Saint Benedict's monks destroy an image of Apollo, worshiped in the Roman Empire

Scattered expressions of opposition to the use of images have been reported: the Synod of Elvira appeared to endorse iconoclasm; Canon 36 states, "Pictures are not to be placed in churches, so that they do not become objects of worship and adoration."[9][10] A possible translation is also: "There shall be no pictures in the church, lest what is worshipped and adored should be depicted on the walls."[11] The date of this canon is disputed.[12] Proscription ceased after the destruction of pagan temples. However, widespread use of Christian iconography only began as Christianity increasingly spread among Gentiles after the legalization of Christianity by Roman Emperor Constantine (c. 312 AD). During the process of Christianisation under Constantine, Christian groups destroyed the images and sculptures expressive of the Roman Empire's polytheist state religion.

Among early church theologians, iconoclastic tendencies were supported by theologians such as: Tertullian,[13][14][15] Clement of Alexandria,[14] Origen,[16][15] Lactantius,[17] Justin Martyr,[15] Eusebius and Epiphanius.[14][18]

Byzantine era edit

 
Byzantine Iconoclasm, Chludov Psalter, 9th century[19]

The period after the reign of Byzantine Emperor Justinian (527–565) evidently saw a huge increase in the use of images, both in volume and quality, and a gathering aniconic reaction.

One notable change within the Byzantine Empire came in 695, when Justinian II's government added a full-face image of Christ on the obverse of imperial gold coins. The change caused the Caliph Abd al-Malik to stop his earlier adoption of Byzantine coin types. He started a purely Islamic coinage with lettering only.[20] A letter by the Patriarch Germanus, written before 726 to two iconoclast bishops, says that "now whole towns and multitudes of people are in considerable agitation over this matter," but there is little written evidence of the debate.[21]

Government-led iconoclasm began with Byzantine Emperor Leo III, who issued a series of edicts between 726 and 730 against the veneration of images.[22] The religious conflict created political and economic divisions in Byzantine society; iconoclasm was generally supported by the Eastern, poorer, non-Greek peoples of the Empire who had to frequently deal with raids from the new Muslim Empire.[23] On the other hand, the wealthier Greeks of Constantinople and the peoples of the Balkan and Italian provinces strongly opposed iconoclasm.[23]

Pre-Reformation edit

Peter of Bruys opposed the usage of religious images,[24] the Strigolniki were also possibly iconoclastic.[25] Claudius of Turin was the bishop of Turin from 817 until his death.[26] He is most noted for teaching iconoclasm.[26]

Reformation era edit

 
Extent (in blue) of the Beeldenstorm through the Spanish Netherlands

The first iconoclastic wave happened in Wittenberg in the early 1520s under reformers Thomas Müntzer and Andreas Karlstadt, in the absence of Martin Luther, who then, concealed under the pen-name of 'Junker Jörg', intervened to calm things down. Luther argued that the mental picturing of Christ when reading the Scriptures was similar in character to artistic renderings of Christ.[27]

In contrast to the Lutherans who favoured certain types of sacred art in their churches and homes,[28][29] the Reformed (Calvinist) leaders, in particular Andreas Karlstadt, Huldrych Zwingli and John Calvin, encouraged the removal of religious images by invoking the Decalogue's prohibition of idolatry and the manufacture of graven (sculpted) images of God.[29] As a result, individuals attacked statues and images, most famously in the beeldenstorm across the Low Countries in 1566. However, in most cases, civil authorities removed images in an orderly manner in the newly Reformed Protestant cities and territories of Europe.

The belief of iconoclasm caused havoc throughout Europe. In 1523, specifically due to the Swiss reformer Huldrych Zwingli, a vast number of his followers viewed themselves as being involved in a spiritual community that in matters of faith should obey neither the visible Church nor lay authorities. According to Peter George Wallace "Zwingli's attack on images, at the first debate, triggered iconoclastic incidents in Zurich and the villages under civic jurisdiction that the reformer was unwilling to condone." Due to this action of protest against authority, "Zwingli responded with a carefully reasoned treatise that men could not live in society without laws and constraint".[30]

Significant iconoclastic riots took place in Basel (in 1529), Zurich (1523), Copenhagen (1530), Münster (1534), Geneva (1535), Augsburg (1537), Scotland (1559), Rouen (1560), and Saintes and La Rochelle (1562).[31][32] Calvinist iconoclasm in Europe "provoked reactive riots by Lutheran mobs" in Germany and "antagonized the neighbouring Eastern Orthodox" in the Baltic region.[33]

The Seventeen Provinces (now the Netherlands, Belgium, and parts of Northern France) were disrupted by widespread Calvinist iconoclasm in the summer of 1566.[34] This period, known as the Beeldenstorm, began with the destruction of the statuary of the Monastery of Saint Lawrence in Steenvoorde after a "Hagenpreek," or field sermon, by Sebastiaan Matte on 10 August 1566; by October the wave of furor had gone all through the Spanish Netherlands up to Groningen. Hundreds of other attacks included the sacking of the Monastery of Saint Anthony after a sermon by Jacob de Buysere. The Beeldenstorm marked the start of the revolution against the Spanish forces and the Catholic Church.

 
In this Elizabethan work of propaganda, the top right depicts men pulling down and smashing icons, while power is shifting from the dying King Henry VIII at left, pointing to his staunchly Protestant son, the boy-king Edward VI at centre.[37][38][39]

During the Reformation in England, which started during the reign of Anglican monarch Henry VIII, and was urged on by reformers such as Hugh Latimer and Thomas Cranmer, limited official action was taken against religious images in churches in the late 1530s. Henry's young son, Edward VI, came to the throne in 1547 and, under Cranmer's guidance, issued injunctions for Religious Reforms in the same year and in 1550, an Act of Parliament "for the abolition and putting away of divers books and images."[40]

During the English Civil War, the Parliamentarians reorganised the administration of East Anglia into the Eastern Association of counties. This covered some of the wealthiest counties in England, which in turn financed a substantial and significant military force. After Earl of Manchester was appointed the commanding officer of these forces, and in turn he appointed Smasher Dowsing as Provost Marshal, with a warrant to demolish religious images which were considered to be superstitious or linked with popism.[41] Bishop Joseph Hall of Norwich described the events of 1643 when troops and citizens, encouraged by a Parliamentary ordinance against superstition and idolatry, behaved thus:

Lord what work was here! What clattering of glasses! What beating down of walls! What tearing up of monuments! What pulling down of seats! What wresting out of irons and brass from the windows! What defacing of arms! What demolishing of curious stonework! What tooting and piping upon organ pipes! And what a hideous triumph in the market-place before all the country, when all the mangled organ pipes, vestments, both copes and surplices, together with the leaden cross which had newly been sawn down from the Green-yard pulpit and the service-books and singing books that could be carried to the fire in the public market-place were heaped together.

Protestant Christianity was not uniformly hostile to the use of religious images. Martin Luther taught the "importance of images as tools for instruction and aids to devotion,"[42] stating: "If it is not a sin but good to have the image of Christ in my heart, why should it be a sin to have it in my eyes?"[43] Lutheran churches retained ornate church interiors with a prominent crucifix, reflecting their high view of the real presence of Christ in Eucharist.[44][28] As such, "Lutheran worship became a complex ritual choreography set in a richly furnished church interior."[44] For Lutherans, "the Reformation renewed rather than removed the religious image."[45]

Lutheran scholar Jeremiah Ohl writes:[46]: 88–89 

Zwingli and others for the sake of saving the Word rejected all plastic art; Luther, with an equal concern for the Word, but far more conservative, would have all the arts to be the servants of the Gospel. "I am not of the opinion" said [Luther], "that through the Gospel all the arts should be banished and driven away, as some zealots want to make us believe; but I wish to see them all, especially music, in the service of Him Who gave and created them." Again he says: "I have myself heard those who oppose pictures, read from my German Bible.... But this contains many pictures of God, of the angels, of men, and of animals, especially in the Revelation of St. John, in the books of Moses, and in the book of Joshua. We therefore kindly beg these fanatics to permit us also to paint these pictures on the wall that they may be remembered and better understood, inasmuch as they can harm as little on the walls as in books. Would to God that I could persuade those who can afford it to paint the whole Bible on their houses, inside and outside, so that all might see; this would indeed be a Christian work. For I am convinced that it is God's will that we should hear and learn what He has done, especially what Christ suffered. But when I hear these things and meditate upon them, I find it impossible not to picture them in my heart. Whether I want to or not, when I hear, of Christ, a human form hanging upon a cross rises up in my heart: just as I see my natural face reflected when I look into water. Now if it is not sinful for me to have Christ's picture in my heart, why should it be sinful to have it before my eyes?

The Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, who had pragmatic reasons to support the Dutch Revolt (the rebels, like himself, were fighting against Spain) also completely approved of their act of "destroying idols," which accorded well with Muslim teachings.[47][48]

A bit later in Dutch history, in 1627 the artist Johannes van der Beeck was arrested and tortured, charged with being a religious non-conformist and a blasphemer, heretic, atheist, and Satanist. The 25 January 1628 judgment from five noted advocates of The Hague pronounced him guilty of "blasphemy against God and avowed atheism, at the same time as leading a frightful and pernicious lifestyle. At the court's order his paintings were burned, and only a few of them survive."[49]

Other instances edit

From the 16th through the 19th centuries, many of the polytheistic religious deities and texts of pre-colonial Americas, Oceania, and Africa were destroyed by Christian missionaries and their converts, such as during the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire and the Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire.

In Japan during the early modern age, the spread of Catholicism also involved the repulsion of non-Christian religious structures, including Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines and figures. At times of conflict with rivals or some time after the conversion of several daimyos, Christian converts would often destroy Buddhist and Shinto religious structures.[50]

Many of the moai of Easter Island were toppled during the 18th century in the iconoclasm of civil wars before any European encounter.[51] Other instances of iconoclasm may have occurred throughout Eastern Polynesia during its conversion to Christianity in the 19th century.[52]

After the Second Vatican Council in the late 20th century, some Roman Catholic parish churches discarded much of their traditional imagery, art, and architecture.[53]

Muslim iconoclasm edit

Islam has a much stronger tradition of forbidding the depiction of figures, especially religious figures,[3] with Sunni Islam forbidding it more than Shia Islam. In the history of Islam, the act of removing idols from the Ka'ba in Mecca has great symbolic and historic importance for all believers.

In general, Muslim societies have avoided the depiction of living beings (both animals and humans) within such sacred spaces as mosques and madrasahs. This ban on figural representation is not based on the Qur'an, instead, it is based on traditions which are described within the Hadith. The prohibition of figuration has not always been extended to the secular sphere, and a robust tradition of figural representation exists within Muslim art.[54] However, Western authors have tended to perceive "a long, culturally determined, and unchanging tradition of violent iconoclastic acts" within Islamic society.[54]

Early Islam in Arabia edit

The first act of Muslim iconoclasm dates to the beginning of Islam, in 630, when the various statues of Arabian deities housed in the Kaaba in Mecca were destroyed. There is a tradition that Muhammad spared a fresco of Mary and Jesus.[55] This act was intended to bring an end to the idolatry which, in the Muslim view, characterized Jahiliyyah.

The destruction of the idols of Mecca did not, however, determine the treatment of other religious communities living under Muslim rule after the expansion of the caliphate. Most Christians under Muslim rule, for example, continued to produce icons and to decorate their churches as they wished. A major exception to this pattern of tolerance in early Islamic history was the "Edict of Yazīd", issued by the Umayyad caliph Yazīd II in 722–723.[56] This edict ordered the destruction of crosses and Christian images within the territory of the caliphate. Researchers have discovered evidence that the order was followed, particularly in present-day Jordan, where archaeological evidence shows the removal of images from the mosaic floors of some, although not all, of the churches that stood at this time. But Yazīd's iconoclastic policies were not continued by his successors, and Christian communities of the Levant continued to make icons without significant interruption from the sixth century to the ninth.[57]

Egypt edit

 
The Great Sphinx of Giza's profile in 2010, without its nose

Al-Maqrīzī, writing in the 15th century, attributes the missing nose on the Great Sphinx of Giza to iconoclasm by Muhammad Sa'im al-Dahr, a Sufi Muslim in the mid-1300s. He was reportedly outraged by local Muslims making offerings to the Great Sphinx in the hope of controlling the flood cycle, and he was later executed for vandalism. However, whether this was actually the cause of the missing nose has been debated by historians.[58] Mark Lehner, having performed an archaeological study, concluded that it was broken with instruments at an earlier unknown time between the 3rd and 10th centuries.[59]

Ottoman conquests edit

Certain conquering Muslim armies have used local temples or houses of worship as mosques. An example is Hagia Sophia in Istanbul (formerly Constantinople), which was converted into a mosque in 1453. Most icons were desecrated and the rest were covered with plaster. In 1934 the government of Turkey decided to convert the Hagia Sophia into a museum and the restoration of the mosaics was undertaken by the American Byzantine Institute beginning in 1932.

Contemporary events edit

Certain Muslim denominations continue to pursue iconoclastic agendas. There has been much controversy within Islam over the recent and apparently on-going destruction of historic sites by Saudi Arabian authorities, prompted by the fear they could become the subject of "idolatry."[60][61]

A recent act of iconoclasm was the 2001 destruction of the giant Buddhas of Bamyan by the then-Taliban government of Afghanistan.[62] The act generated worldwide protests and was not supported by other Muslim governments and organizations. It was widely perceived in the Western media as a result of the Muslim prohibition against figural decoration. Such an account overlooks "the coexistence between the Buddhas and the Muslim population that marveled at them for over a millennium" before their destruction.[54] According to art historian F. B. Flood, analysis of the Taliban's statements regarding the Buddhas suggest that their destruction was motivated more by political than by theological concerns.[54] Taliban spokesmen have given many different explanations of the motives for the destruction.

During the Tuareg rebellion of 2012, the radical Islamist militia Ansar Dine destroyed various Sufi shrines from the 15th and 16th centuries in the city of Timbuktu, Mali.[63] In 2016, the International Criminal Court (ICC) sentenced Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi, a former member of Ansar Dine, to nine years in prison for this destruction of cultural world heritage. This was the first time that the ICC convicted a person for such a crime.[64]

The short-lived Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant carried out iconoclastic attacks such as the destruction of Shia mosques and shrines. Notable incidents include blowing up the Mosque of the Prophet Yunus (Jonah)[65] and destroying the Shrine to Seth in Mosul.[66]

Iconoclasm in India edit

In early Medieval India, there were numerous recorded instances of temple desecration by Indian kings against rival Indian kingdoms, which involved conflicts between devotees of different Hindu deities, as well as conflicts between Hindus, Buddhists, and Jains.[67][68][69]


In the 8th century, Bengali troops from the Buddhist Pala Empire desecrated temples of Vishnu, the state deity of Lalitaditya's kingdom in Kashmir. In the early 9th century, Indian Hindu kings from Kanchipuram and the Pandyan king Srimara Srivallabha looted Buddhist temples in Sri Lanka. In the early 10th century, the Pratihara king Herambapala looted an image from a temple in the Sahi kingdom of Kangra, which was later looted by the Pratihara king Yashovarman.[67][68][69]

During the Muslim conquest of Sindh edit

Records from the campaign recorded in the Chach Nama record the destruction of temples during the early 8th century when the Umayyad governor of Damascus, al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf,[70] mobilized an expedition of 6000 cavalry under Muhammad bin Qasim in 712.

Historian Upendra Thakur records the persecution of Hindus and Buddhists:

Muhammad triumphantly marched into the country, conquering Debal, Sehwan, Nerun, Brahmanadabad, Alor and Multan one after the other in quick succession, and in less than a year and a half, the far-flung Hindu kingdom was crushed ... There was a fearful outbreak of religious bigotry in several places and temples were wantonly desecrated. At Debal, the Nairun and Aror temples were demolished and converted into mosques.[71]

The Somnath temple and Mahmud of Ghazni edit

Perhaps the most notorious episode of iconoclasm in India was Mahmud of Ghazni's attack on the Somnath Temple from across the Thar Desert.[76][77][78] The temple was first raided in 725, when Junayad, the governor of Sind, sent his armies to destroy it.[79] In 1024, during the reign of Bhima I, the prominent Turkic-Muslim ruler Mahmud of Ghazni raided Gujarat, plundering the Somnath Temple and breaking its jyotirlinga despite pleas by Brahmins not to break it. He took away a booty of 20 million dinars.[80][78]: 39  The attack may have been inspired by the belief that an idol of the goddess Manat had been secretly transferred to the temple.[81] According to the Ghaznavid court-poet Farrukhi Sistani, who claimed to have accompanied Mahmud on his raid, Somnat (as rendered in Persian) was a garbled version of su-manat referring to the goddess Manat. According to him, as well as a later Ghaznavid historian Abu Sa'id Gardezi, the images of the other goddesses were destroyed in Arabia but the one of Manat was secretly sent away to Kathiawar (in modern Gujarat) for safekeeping. Since the idol of Manat was an aniconic image of black stone, it could have been easily confused with a lingam at Somnath. Mahmud is said to have broken the idol and taken away parts of it as loot and placed so that people would walk on it. In his letters to the Caliphate, Mahmud exaggerated the size, wealth and religious significance of the Somnath temple, receiving grandiose titles from the Caliph in return.[80]: 45–51 

The wooden structure was replaced by Kumarapala (r. 1143–72), who rebuilt the temple out of stone.[82]

From the Mamluk dynasty onward edit

Historical records which were compiled by the Muslim historian Maulana Hakim Saiyid Abdul Hai attest to the religious violence which occurred during the Mamluk dynasty under Qutb-ud-din Aybak. The first mosque built in Delhi, the "Quwwat al-Islam" was built with demolished parts of 20 Hindu and Jain temples.[83][84] This pattern of iconoclasm was common during his reign.[85]

During the Delhi Sultanate, a Muslim army led by Malik Kafur, a general of Alauddin Khalji, pursued four violent campaigns into south India, between 1309 and 1311, against the Hindu kingdoms of Devgiri (Maharashtra), Warangal (Telangana), Dwarasamudra (Karnataka) and Madurai (Tamil Nadu). Many Temples were plundered; Hoysaleswara Temple and others were ruthlessly destroyed.[86][87]

In Kashmir, Sikandar Shah Miri (1389–1413) began expanding, and unleashed religious violence that earned him the name but-shikan, or 'idol-breaker'.[88] He earned this sobriquet because of the sheer scale of desecration and destruction of Hindu and Buddhist temples, shrines, ashrams, hermitages, and other holy places in what is now known as Kashmir and its neighboring territories. Firishta states, "After the emigration of the Brahmins, Sikundur ordered all the temples in Kashmeer to be thrown down."[89] He destroyed vast majority of Hindu and Buddhist temples in his reach in Kashmir region (north and northwest India).[90]

In the 1460s, Kapilendra, founder of the Suryavamsi Gajapati dynasty, sacked the Shaiva and Vaishnava temples in the Cauvery delta in the course of wars of conquest in the Tamil country. Vijayanagara king Krishnadevaraya looted a Bala Krishna temple in Udayagiri in 1514, and looted a Vitthala temple in Pandharpur in 1520.[67][68][69]

A regional tradition, along with the Hindu text Madala Panji, states that Kalapahar attacked and damaged the Konark Sun Temple in 1568, as well as many others in Orissa.[91][92]

Some of the most dramatic cases of iconoclasm by Muslims are found in parts of India where Hindu and Buddhist temples were razed and mosques erected in their place. Aurangzeb, the 6th Mughal Emperor, destroyed the famous Hindu temples at Varanasi and Mathura, turning back on his ancestor Akbar's policy of religious freedom and establishing Sharia across his empire.[93]

During the Goa Inquisition edit

Exact data on the nature and number of Hindu temples destroyed by the Christian missionaries and Portuguese government are unavailable. Some 160 temples were allegedly razed to the ground in Tiswadi (Ilhas de Goa) by 1566. Between 1566 and 1567, a campaign by Franciscan missionaries destroyed another 300 Hindu temples in Bardez (North Goa). In Salcete (South Goa), approximately another 300 Hindu temples were destroyed by the Christian officials of the Inquisition. Numerous Hindu temples were destroyed elsewhere at Assolna and Cuncolim by Portuguese authorities.[94] A 1569 royal letter in Portuguese archives records that all Hindu temples in its colonies in India had been burnt and razed to the ground.[95] The English traveller Sir Thomas Herbert, 1st Baronet who visited Goa in the 1600s writes:

... as also the ruins of 200 Idol Temples which the Vice-Roy Antonio Norogna totally demolisht, that no memory might remain, or monuments continue, of such gross Idolatry. For not only there, but at Salsette also were two Temples or places of prophane Worship; one of them (by incredible toil cut out of the hard Rock) was divided into three Iles or Galleries, in which were figured many of their deformed Pagotha's, and of which an Indian (if to be credited) reports that there were in that Temple 300 of those narrow Galleries, and the Idols so exceeding ugly as would affright an European Spectator; nevertheless this was a celebrated place, and so abundantly frequented by Idolaters, as induced the Portuguise in zeal with a considerable force to master the Town and to demolish the Temples, breaking in pieces all that monstrous brood of mishapen Pagods. In Goa nothing is more observable now than the fortifications, the Vice-Roy and Arch-bishops Palaces, and the Churches. ...[96]

In modern India edit

Dr. Ambedkar and his supporters on 25 December 1927 in the Mahad Satyagraha strongly criticised, condemned and then burned copies of Manusmriti on a pyre in a specially dug pit. Manusmriti, one of the sacred Hindu texts, is the religious basis of casteist laws and values of Hinduism and hence was/is the reason of social and economic plight of crores of untouchables and lower caste Hindus. One of the greatest iconoclasts for all time, this explosive incident rocked the Hindu society. Ambedkarites continue to observe 25 December as "Manusmriti Dahan Divas" (Manusmriti Burning Day) and burn copies of Manusmriti on this day.

The most high-profile case of Independent India was in 1992. Hindu mob, led by the Vishva Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal, destroyed the 430-year-old Islamic Babri Masjid in Ayodhya which is claimed to be built after destroying the Ram Mandir.[97][98]

Iconoclasm in East Asia edit

China edit

There have been a number of anti-Buddhist campaigns in Chinese history that led to the destruction of Buddhist temples and images. One of the most notable of these campaigns was the Great Anti-Buddhist Persecution of the Tang dynasty.

During and after the 1911 Xinhai Revolution, there was widespread destruction of religious and secular images in China.

During the Northern Expedition in Guangxi in 1926, Kuomintang General Bai Chongxi led his troops in destroying Buddhist temples and smashing Buddhist images, turning the temples into schools and Kuomintang party headquarters.[99] It was reported that almost all of the viharas in Guangxi were destroyed and the monks were removed.[100] Bai also led a wave of anti-foreignism in Guangxi, attacking Americans, Europeans, and other foreigners, and generally making the province unsafe for foreigners and missionaries. Westerners fled from the province and some Chinese Christians were also attacked as imperialist agents.[101] The three goals of the movement were anti-foreignism, anti-imperialism and anti-religion. Bai led the anti-religious movement against superstition. Huang Shaohong, also a Kuomintang member of the New Guangxi clique, supported Bai's campaign. The anti-religious campaign was agreed upon by all Guangxi Kuomintang members.[101]

There was extensive destruction of religious and secular imagery in Tibet after it was invaded and occupied by China.[102]

Many religious and secular images were destroyed during the Cultural Revolution of 1966–1976, ostensibly because they were a holdover from China's traditional past (which the Communist regime led by Mao Zedong reviled). The Cultural Revolution included widespread destruction of historic artworks in public places and private collections, whether religious or secular. Objects in state museums were mostly left intact.

South Korea edit

According to an article in Buddhist-Christian Studies:[103]

Over the course of the last decade [1990s] a fairly large number of Buddhist temples in South Korea have been destroyed or damaged by fire by Christian fundamentalists. More recently, Buddhist statues have been identified as idols, and attacked and decapitated in the name of Jesus. Arrests are hard to effect, as the arsonists and vandals work by stealth of night.

Angkor edit

Beginning c. 1243 AD with the death of Indravarman II, the Khmer Empire went through a period of iconoclasm. At the beginning of the reign of the next king, Jayavarman VIII, the Kingdom went back to Hinduism and the worship of Shiva. Many of the Buddhist images were destroyed by Jayavarman VIII, who reestablished previously Hindu shrines that had been converted to Buddhism by his predecessor. Carvings of the Buddha at temples such as Preah Khan were destroyed, and during this period the Bayon Temple was made a temple to Shiva, with the central 3.6 meter tall statue of the Buddha cast to the bottom of a nearby well.[104]

Political iconoclasm edit

Damnatio memoriae edit

Revolutions and changes of regime, whether through uprising of the local population, foreign invasion, or a combination of both, are often accompanied by the public destruction of statues and monuments identified with the previous regime. This may also be known as damnatio memoriae, the ancient Roman practice of official obliteration of the memory of a specific individual. Stricter definitions of "iconoclasm" exclude both types of action, reserving the term for religious or more widely cultural destruction.[citation needed] In many cases, such as Revolutionary Russia or Ancient Egypt, this distinction can be hard to make.

Among Roman emperors and other political figures subject to decrees of damnatio memoriae were Sejanus, Publius Septimius Geta, and Domitian. Several Emperors, such as Domitian and Commodus had during their reigns erected numerous statues of themselves, which were pulled down and destroyed when they were overthrown.

The perception of damnatio memoriae in the Classical world was an act of erasing memory has been challenged by scholars who have argued that it "did not negate historical traces, but created gestures which served to dishonor the record of the person and so, in an oblique way, to confirm memory,"[105] and was in effect a spectacular display of "pantomime forgetfulness."[106] Examining cases of political monument destruction in modern Irish history, Guy Beiner has demonstrated that iconoclastic vandalism often entails subtle expressions of ambiguous remembrance and that, rather than effacing memory, such acts of de-commemorating effectively preserve memory in obscure forms.[107][108][109]

During the French Revolution edit

Throughout the radical phase of the French Revolution, iconoclasm was supported by members of the government as well as the citizenry. Numerous monuments, religious works, and other historically significant pieces were destroyed in an attempt to eradicate any memory of the Old Regime. A statue of King Louis XV in the Paris square which until then bore his name, was pulled down and destroyed. This was a prelude to the guillotining of his successor Louis XVI in the same site, renamed "Place de la Révolution" (at present Place de la Concorde).[110] Later that year, the bodies of many French kings were exhumed from the Basilica of Saint-Denis and dumped in a mass grave.[111]

Some episodes of iconoclasm were carried out spontaneously by crowds of citizens, including the destruction of statues of kings during the insurrection of 10 August 1792 in Paris.[112] Some were directly sanctioned by the Republican government, including the Saint-Denis exhumations.[111] Nonetheless, the Republican government also took steps to preserve historic artworks,[113] notably by founding the Louvre museum to house and display the former royal art collection. This allowed the physical objects and national heritage to be preserved while stripping them of their association with the monarchy.[114][115][116] Alexandre Lenoir saved many royal monuments by diverting them to preservation in a museum.[117]

The statue of Napoleon on the column at Place Vendôme, Paris was also the target of iconoclasm several times: destroyed after the Bourbon Restoration, restored by Louis-Philippe, destroyed during the Paris Commune and restored by Adolphe Thiers.

After Napoleon conquered the Italian city of Pavia, local Pavia Jacobins destroyed the Regisole, a bronze classical equestrian monument dating back to Classical times. The Jacobins considered it a symbol of Royal authority, but it had been a prominent Pavia landmark for nearly a thousand years and its destruction aroused much indignation and precipitated a revolt by inhabitants of Pavia against the French, which was quelled by Napoleon after a furious urban fight.

Other examples edit

 
St. Helen's Gate in Cospicua, Malta, which had its marble coat of arms defaced during the French occupation of Malta
 
Statue of William of Orange formerly located on College Green, in Dublin. Erected in 1701, it was destroyed in 1929—one of several memorials installed during British rule which were destroyed after Ireland became independent.

Other examples of political destruction of images include:

  • There have been several cases of removing symbols of past rulers in Malta's history. Many Hospitaller coats of arms on buildings were defaced during the French occupation of Malta in 1798–1800; a few of these were subsequently replaced by British coats of arms in the early 19th century.[118] Some British symbols were also removed by the government after Malta became a republic in 1974. These include royal cyphers being ground off from post boxes,[119] and British coats of arms such as that on the Main Guard building being temporarily obscured (but not destroyed).[120]
  • With the entry of the Ottoman Empire to the First World War, the Ottoman Army destroyed the Russian victory monument erected in San Stefano (the modern Yeşilköy quarter of Istanbul, Turkey) to commemorate the Russian victory in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878. The demolition was filmed by former army officer Fuat Uzkınay, producing Ayastefanos'taki Rus Abidesinin Yıkılışı—the oldest known Turkish-made film.
  • In the late 18th century, French revolutionaries known as the sans-culottes sacked Brussels' Grand-Place, destroying statues of nobility and symbols of Christianity.[121][122] In the 19th century, the place was renovated and many new statues added. In 1911, a marble commemoration for the Spanish freethinker and educator Francisco Ferrer, executed two years earlier and widely considered a martyr, was erected in the Grand-Place. The statue depicted a nude man holding the Torch of Enlightenment. The Imperial German military, which occupied Belgium during the First World War, disliked the monument and destroyed it in 1915. It was restored in 1926 by the International Free Thought Movement.[123]
  • In 1942, the pro-Nazi Vichy Government of France took down and melted Clothilde Roch's statue of the 16th-century dissident intellectual Michael Servetus, who had been burned at the stake in Geneva at the instigation of Calvin. The Vichy authorities disliked the statue, as it was a celebration of freedom of conscience. In 1960, having found the original molds, the municipality of Annemasse had it recast and returned the statue to its previous place.[124]
  • A sculpture of the head of Spanish intellectual Miguel de Unamuno by Victorio Macho was installed in the City Hall of Bilbao, Spain. It was withdrawn in 1936 when Unamuno showed temporary support for the Nationalist side. During the Spanish Civil War, it was thrown into the estuary. It was later recovered. In 1984 the head was installed in Plaza Unamuno. In 1999, it was again thrown into the estuary after a political meeting of Euskal Herritarrok. It was substituted by a copy in 2000 after the original was located in the water.[125][126][127]
  • The Battle of Baghdad and the regime of Saddam Hussein symbolically ended with the Firdos Square statue destruction, a U.S. military-staged event on 9 April 2003 where a prominent statue of Saddam Hussein was pulled down. Subsequently, statues and murals of Saddam Hussein all over Iraq were destroyed by US occupation forces as well as Iraqi citizens.[128]
 
United States Marines destroy a statue of Saddam Hussein on Firdos Square, in Baghdad, Iraq, 9 April 2003.

In the Soviet Union edit

 
Demolition of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, in Moscow, Russia, 5 December 1931

During and after the October Revolution, widespread destruction of religious and secular imagery in Russia took place, as well as the destruction of imagery related to the Imperial family. The Revolution was accompanied by destruction of monuments of tsars, as well as the destruction of imperial eagles at various locations throughout Russia. According to Christopher Wharton:[139]

In front of a Moscow Cathedral, crowds cheered as the enormous statue of Tsar Alexander III was bound with ropes and gradually beaten to the ground. After a considerable amount of time, the statue was decapitated and its remaining parts were broken into rubble.

The Soviet Union actively destroyed religious sites, including Russian Orthodox churches and Jewish cemeteries, in order to discourage religious practice and curb the activities of religious groups.

During the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and during the Revolutions of 1989, protesters often attacked and took down sculptures and images of Joseph Stalin, such as the Stalin Monument in Budapest.[140]

The fall of Communism in 1989–1991 was also followed by the destruction or removal of statues of Vladimir Lenin and other Communist leaders in the former Soviet Union and in other Eastern Bloc countries. Particularly well-known was the destruction of "Iron Felix", the statue of Felix Dzerzhinsky outside the KGB's headquarters. Another statue of Dzerzhinsky was destroyed in a Warsaw square that was named after him during communist rule, but which is now called Bank Square.

In the United States edit

 
The Sons of Liberty pulling down the statue of George III of the United Kingdom on Bowling Green (New York City), 1776

During the American Revolution, the Sons of Liberty pulled down and destroyed the gilded lead statue of George III of the United Kingdom on Bowling Green (New York City), melting it down to be recast as ammunition. Similar acts have accompanied the independence of most ex-colonial territories. Sometimes relatively intact monuments are moved to a collected display in a less prominent place, as in India and also post-Communist countries.

In August 2017, a statue of a Confederate soldier dedicated to "the boys who wore the gray" was pulled down from its pedestal in front of Durham County Courthouse in North Carolina by protesters. This followed the events at the 2017 Unite the Right rally in response to growing calls to remove Confederate monuments and memorials across the U.S.[141][142][143][144]

2020 demonstrations edit

During the George Floyd protests of 2020, demonstrators pulled down dozens of statues which they considered symbols of the Confederacy, slavery, segregation, or racism, including the statue of Williams Carter Wickham in Richmond, Virginia.[145][146]

Further demonstrations in the wake of the George Floyd protests have resulted in the removal of:[147]

Multiple statues of early European explorers and founders were also vandalized, including those of Christopher Columbus, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson.[150][151]

A statue of the African-American abolitionist statesman Frederick Douglass was vandalised in Rochester, New York, by being torn from its base and left close to a nearby river gorge. Donald Trump attributed the act to anarchists,[152] but he did not substantiate his claim nor did he offer a theory on motive. Cornell William Brooks, former president of the NAACP, theorised that this was an act of revenge from white supremacists.[153] Carvin Eison, who led the project that brought the Douglass statues to Rochester, thought it was unlikely that the Douglass statue was toppled by someone who was upset about monuments honoring Confederate figures, and added that "it's only logical that it was some kind of retaliation event in someone's mind". Police did not find evidence that supported or refuted either claim, and the vandalism case remains unsolved.[154]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ From Ancient Greek: εἰκών + κλάω, lit.'image-breaking'. Iconoclasm may also be considered as a back-formation from iconoclast (Greek: εἰκοκλάστης). The corresponding Greek word for iconoclasm is εἰκονοκλασία, eikonoklasia.

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Alloa, Emmanuel (2013). "Visual Studies in Byzantium: A Pictorial Turnavant la lettre". Journal of Visual Culture. Sage. 12 (1): 3–29. doi:10.1177/1470412912468704. ISSN 1470-4129. S2CID 191395643. (On the conceptual background of Byzantine iconoclasm)
  • Aston, Margaret (1988). England's Iconoclasts: Laws against images. Vol. 1. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-822438-9.
  • —— 2016. Broken Idols of the English Reformation. Cambridge University Press.
  • Balafrej, Lamia (2 September 2015). "Islamic iconoclasm, visual communication and the persistence of the image". Interiors. Informa UK. 6 (3): 351–366. doi:10.1080/20419112.2015.1125659. ISSN 2041-9112. S2CID 131284640.
  • Barasch, Moshe. 1992. Icon: Studies in the History of an Idea. New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-1172-9.
  • Beiner, Guy (2021). "When Monuments Fall: The Significance of Decommemorating". Éire-Ireland. 56 (1): 33–61. doi:10.1353/eir.2021.0001. S2CID 240526743.
  • Besançon, Alain. 2000. The Forbidden Image: An Intellectual History of Iconoclasm. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-04414-9.
  • Bevan, Robert. 2006. The Destruction of Memory: Architecture at War. Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1-86189-319-2.
  • Boldrick, Stacy, Leslie Brubaker, and Richard Clay, eds. 2014. Striking Images, Iconoclasms Past and Present. Ashgate. (Scholarly studies of the destruction of images from prehistory to the Taliban.)
  • Calisi, Antonio. 2017. I Difensori Dell'icona: La Partecipazione Dei Vescovi Dell'Italia Meridionale Al Concilio Di Nicea II 787. CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1978401099.
  • Freedberg, David. 1977. "The Structure of Byzantine and European Iconoclasm." Pp. 165–77 in Iconoclasm: Papers Given at the Ninth Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies, edited by A. Bryer and J. Herrin. University of Birmingham, Centre for Byzantine Studies. ISBN 978-0-7044-0226-3.
  • —— [1985] 1993. "Iconoclasts and their Motives," (Second Horst Gerson Memorial Lecture, University of Groningen). Public 8(Fall).
  • Gamboni, Dario (1997). The Destruction of Art: Iconoclasm and Vandalism since the French Revolution. Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1-86189-316-1.
  • Gwynn, David M (2007). (PDF). Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 47: 225–251. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-09-16. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
  • Hennaut, Eric (2000). La Grand-Place de Bruxelles. Bruxelles, ville d'Art et d'Histoire (in French). Vol. 3. Brussels: Éditions de la Région de Bruxelles-Capitale.
  • Ivanovic, Filip (2010). Symbol and Icon: Dionysius the Areopagite and the Iconoclastic Crisis. Pickwick. ISBN 978-1-60899-335-2.
  • Karahan, Anne (2014). "Byzantine Iconoclasm: Ideology and Quest for Power". In Kolrud, Kristine; Prusac, M. (eds.). Iconoclasm from antiquity to modernity. Burlington, VT: Ashgate. pp. 75–94. ISBN 978-1-4094-7033-5. OCLC 841051222.
  • Lambourne, Nicola (2001). War Damage in Western Europe: The Destruction of Historic Monuments During the Second World War. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-1285-7.
  • Narain, Harsh (1993). The Ayodhya Temple Mosque Dispute: Focus on Muslim Sources. Delhi: Penman Publishers.
  • Shourie, Arun, Sita Ram Goel, Harsh Narain, Jay Dubashi, and Ram Swarup. 1990. Hindu Temples – What Happened to Them Vol. I, (A Preliminary Survey). ISBN 81-85990-49-2
  • Spicer, Andrew (2017). "Iconoclasm". Renaissance Quarterly. Cambridge University Press. 70 (3): 1007–1022. doi:10.1086/693887. ISSN 0034-4338. S2CID 233344068.
  • Topper, David R. Idolatry & Infinity: Of Art, Math & God. BrownWalker. ISBN 978-1-62734-506-4.
  • Velikov, Yuliyan (2011). Obrazŭt na Nevidimii︠a︡ : ikonopochitanieto i ikonootrit︠s︡anieto prez osmi vek [Image of the Invisible. Image Veneration and Iconoclasm in the Eighth Century] (in Bosnian). Veliko Tarnovo: Veliko Tarnovo University. ISBN 978-954-524-779-8. OCLC 823743049.
  • Weeraratna, Senaka ' Repression of Buddhism in Sri Lanka by the Portuguese' (1505 -1658)
  • Teodoro Studita, Contro gli avversari delle icone, Emanuela Fogliadini (Prefazione), Antonio Calisi (Traduttore), Jaca Book, 2022, ISBN 978-8816417557
  • Le Patrimoine monumental de la Belgique: Bruxelles (PDF) (in French). Vol. 1B: Pentagone E-M. Liège: Pierre Mardaga. 1993.

External links edit

iconoclasm, absence, representations, natural, world, certain, religious, figures, aniconism, iconoclast, redirects, here, other, uses, iconoclast, disambiguation, from, greek, εἰκών, eikṓn, figure, icon, κλάω, kláō, break, social, belief, importance, destruct. For the absence of representations of the natural world or certain religious figures see Aniconism Iconoclast redirects here For other uses see Iconoclast disambiguation Iconoclasm from Greek eἰkwn eikṓn figure icon klaw klaō to break i is the social belief in the importance of the destruction of icons and other images or monuments most frequently for religious or political reasons People who engage in or support iconoclasm are called iconoclasts a term that has come to be figuratively applied to any individual who challenges cherished beliefs or venerated institutions on the grounds that they are erroneous or pernicious 1 Triumph of Orthodoxy over iconoclasm under the Byzantine Empress Theodora and her son Michael III Late 14th early 15th century icon Conversely one who reveres or venerates religious images is called by iconoclasts an iconolater in a Byzantine context such a person is called an iconodule or iconophile 2 Iconoclasm does not generally encompass the destruction of the images of a specific ruler after his or her death or overthrow a practice better known as damnatio memoriae While iconoclasm may be carried out by adherents of a different religion it is more commonly the result of sectarian disputes between factions of the same religion The term originates from the Byzantine Iconoclasm the struggles between proponents and opponents of religious icons in the Byzantine Empire from 726 to 842 AD Degrees of iconoclasm vary greatly among religions and their branches but are strongest in religions which oppose idolatry including the Abrahamic religions 3 Outside of the religious context iconoclasm can refer to movements for widespread destruction in symbols of an ideology or cause such as the destruction of monarchist symbols during the French Revolution Contents 1 Early religious iconoclasm 1 1 Ancient era 1 2 Judaism 2 Iconoclasm in Christian history 2 1 Byzantine era 2 2 Pre Reformation 2 3 Reformation era 2 4 Other instances 3 Muslim iconoclasm 3 1 Early Islam in Arabia 3 2 Egypt 3 3 Ottoman conquests 3 4 Contemporary events 4 Iconoclasm in India 4 1 During the Muslim conquest of Sindh 4 2 The Somnath temple and Mahmud of Ghazni 4 3 From the Mamluk dynasty onward 4 4 During the Goa Inquisition 4 5 In modern India 5 Iconoclasm in East Asia 5 1 China 5 2 South Korea 5 3 Angkor 6 Political iconoclasm 6 1 Damnatio memoriae 6 2 During the French Revolution 6 3 Other examples 6 4 In the Soviet Union 6 5 In the United States 6 5 1 2020 demonstrations 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly religious iconoclasm editAncient era edit Main article Akhenaten nbsp Defaced relief of Horus and Isis in the Temple of Edfu Egypt Local Christians engaged in campaigns of proselytism and iconoclasm In the Bronze Age the most significant episode of iconoclasm occurred in Egypt during the Amarna Period when Akhenaten based in his new capital of Akhetaten instituted a significant shift in Egyptian artistic styles alongside a campaign of intolerance towards the traditional gods and a new emphasis on a state monolatristic tradition focused on the god Aten the Sun disk many temples and monuments were destroyed as a result 4 5 In rebellion against the old religion and the powerful priests of Amun Akhenaten ordered the eradication of all of Egypt s traditional gods He sent royal officials to chisel out and destroy every reference to Amun and the names of other deities on tombs temple walls and cartouches to instill in the people that the Aten was the one true god Public references to Akhenaten were destroyed soon after his death Comparing the ancient Egyptians with the Israelites Jan Assmann writes 6 For Egypt the greatest horror was the destruction or abduction of the cult images In the eyes of the Israelites the erection of images meant the destruction of divine presence in the eyes of the Egyptians this same effect was attained by the destruction of images In Egypt iconoclasm was the most terrible religious crime in Israel the most terrible religious crime was idolatry In this respect Osarseph alias Akhenaten the iconoclast and the Golden Calf the paragon of idolatry correspond to each other inversely and it is strange that Aaron could so easily avoid the role of the religious criminal It is more than probable that these traditions evolved under mutual influence In this respect Moses and Akhenaten became after all closely related Judaism edit According to the Hebrew Bible God instructed the Israelites to destroy all the engraved stones destroy all the molded images and demolish all the high places of the indigenous Canaanite population as soon as they entered the Promised Land 7 In Judaism King Hezekiah purged Solomon s Temple in Jerusalem and all figures were also destroyed in the Land of Israel including the Nehushtan as recorded in the Second Book of Kings His reforms were reversed in the reign of his son Manasseh 8 Iconoclasm in Christian history edit nbsp Saint Benedict s monks destroy an image of Apollo worshiped in the Roman EmpireScattered expressions of opposition to the use of images have been reported the Synod of Elvira appeared to endorse iconoclasm Canon 36 states Pictures are not to be placed in churches so that they do not become objects of worship and adoration 9 10 A possible translation is also There shall be no pictures in the church lest what is worshipped and adored should be depicted on the walls 11 The date of this canon is disputed 12 Proscription ceased after the destruction of pagan temples However widespread use of Christian iconography only began as Christianity increasingly spread among Gentiles after the legalization of Christianity by Roman Emperor Constantine c 312 AD During the process of Christianisation under Constantine Christian groups destroyed the images and sculptures expressive of the Roman Empire s polytheist state religion Among early church theologians iconoclastic tendencies were supported by theologians such as Tertullian 13 14 15 Clement of Alexandria 14 Origen 16 15 Lactantius 17 Justin Martyr 15 Eusebius and Epiphanius 14 18 Byzantine era edit Further information Council of Constantinople 843 and Byzantine Iconoclasm nbsp Byzantine Iconoclasm Chludov Psalter 9th century 19 The period after the reign of Byzantine Emperor Justinian 527 565 evidently saw a huge increase in the use of images both in volume and quality and a gathering aniconic reaction One notable change within the Byzantine Empire came in 695 when Justinian II s government added a full face image of Christ on the obverse of imperial gold coins The change caused the Caliph Abd al Malik to stop his earlier adoption of Byzantine coin types He started a purely Islamic coinage with lettering only 20 A letter by the Patriarch Germanus written before 726 to two iconoclast bishops says that now whole towns and multitudes of people are in considerable agitation over this matter but there is little written evidence of the debate 21 Government led iconoclasm began with Byzantine Emperor Leo III who issued a series of edicts between 726 and 730 against the veneration of images 22 The religious conflict created political and economic divisions in Byzantine society iconoclasm was generally supported by the Eastern poorer non Greek peoples of the Empire who had to frequently deal with raids from the new Muslim Empire 23 On the other hand the wealthier Greeks of Constantinople and the peoples of the Balkan and Italian provinces strongly opposed iconoclasm 23 Pre Reformation edit Peter of Bruys opposed the usage of religious images 24 the Strigolniki were also possibly iconoclastic 25 Claudius of Turin was the bishop of Turin from 817 until his death 26 He is most noted for teaching iconoclasm 26 Reformation era edit Further information Beeldenstorm and Iconophobia Iconophobia and the English Reformation nbsp Extent in blue of the Beeldenstorm through the Spanish NetherlandsThe first iconoclastic wave happened in Wittenberg in the early 1520s under reformers Thomas Muntzer and Andreas Karlstadt in the absence of Martin Luther who then concealed under the pen name of Junker Jorg intervened to calm things down Luther argued that the mental picturing of Christ when reading the Scriptures was similar in character to artistic renderings of Christ 27 In contrast to the Lutherans who favoured certain types of sacred art in their churches and homes 28 29 the Reformed Calvinist leaders in particular Andreas Karlstadt Huldrych Zwingli and John Calvin encouraged the removal of religious images by invoking the Decalogue s prohibition of idolatry and the manufacture of graven sculpted images of God 29 As a result individuals attacked statues and images most famously in the beeldenstorm across the Low Countries in 1566 However in most cases civil authorities removed images in an orderly manner in the newly Reformed Protestant cities and territories of Europe The belief of iconoclasm caused havoc throughout Europe In 1523 specifically due to the Swiss reformer Huldrych Zwingli a vast number of his followers viewed themselves as being involved in a spiritual community that in matters of faith should obey neither the visible Church nor lay authorities According to Peter George Wallace Zwingli s attack on images at the first debate triggered iconoclastic incidents in Zurich and the villages under civic jurisdiction that the reformer was unwilling to condone Due to this action of protest against authority Zwingli responded with a carefully reasoned treatise that men could not live in society without laws and constraint 30 Significant iconoclastic riots took place in Basel in 1529 Zurich 1523 Copenhagen 1530 Munster 1534 Geneva 1535 Augsburg 1537 Scotland 1559 Rouen 1560 and Saintes and La Rochelle 1562 31 32 Calvinist iconoclasm in Europe provoked reactive riots by Lutheran mobs in Germany and antagonized the neighbouring Eastern Orthodox in the Baltic region 33 The Seventeen Provinces now the Netherlands Belgium and parts of Northern France were disrupted by widespread Calvinist iconoclasm in the summer of 1566 34 This period known as the Beeldenstorm began with the destruction of the statuary of the Monastery of Saint Lawrence in Steenvoorde after a Hagenpreek or field sermon by Sebastiaan Matte on 10 August 1566 by October the wave of furor had gone all through the Spanish Netherlands up to Groningen Hundreds of other attacks included the sacking of the Monastery of Saint Anthony after a sermon by Jacob de Buysere The Beeldenstorm marked the start of the revolution against the Spanish forces and the Catholic Church Calvinist iconoclasm during the Reformation nbsp Destruction of religious images by the Reformed in Zurich Switzerland 1524 nbsp Looting of the Churches of Lyon by the Calvinists in 1562 by Antoine Caron nbsp Remains of Calvinist iconoclasm Clocher Saint Barthelemy La Rochelle France nbsp 16th century iconoclasm in the Protestant Reformation Relief statues in St Stevenskerk in Nijmegen Netherlands were attacked and defaced by Calvinists in the Beeldenstorm 35 36 nbsp In this Elizabethan work of propaganda the top right depicts men pulling down and smashing icons while power is shifting from the dying King Henry VIII at left pointing to his staunchly Protestant son the boy king Edward VI at centre 37 38 39 During the Reformation in England which started during the reign of Anglican monarch Henry VIII and was urged on by reformers such as Hugh Latimer and Thomas Cranmer limited official action was taken against religious images in churches in the late 1530s Henry s young son Edward VI came to the throne in 1547 and under Cranmer s guidance issued injunctions for Religious Reforms in the same year and in 1550 an Act of Parliament for the abolition and putting away of divers books and images 40 During the English Civil War the Parliamentarians reorganised the administration of East Anglia into the Eastern Association of counties This covered some of the wealthiest counties in England which in turn financed a substantial and significant military force After Earl of Manchester was appointed the commanding officer of these forces and in turn he appointed Smasher Dowsing as Provost Marshal with a warrant to demolish religious images which were considered to be superstitious or linked with popism 41 Bishop Joseph Hall of Norwich described the events of 1643 when troops and citizens encouraged by a Parliamentary ordinance against superstition and idolatry behaved thus Lord what work was here What clattering of glasses What beating down of walls What tearing up of monuments What pulling down of seats What wresting out of irons and brass from the windows What defacing of arms What demolishing of curious stonework What tooting and piping upon organ pipes And what a hideous triumph in the market place before all the country when all the mangled organ pipes vestments both copes and surplices together with the leaden cross which had newly been sawn down from the Green yard pulpit and the service books and singing books that could be carried to the fire in the public market place were heaped together Protestant Christianity was not uniformly hostile to the use of religious images Martin Luther taught the importance of images as tools for instruction and aids to devotion 42 stating If it is not a sin but good to have the image of Christ in my heart why should it be a sin to have it in my eyes 43 Lutheran churches retained ornate church interiors with a prominent crucifix reflecting their high view of the real presence of Christ in Eucharist 44 28 As such Lutheran worship became a complex ritual choreography set in a richly furnished church interior 44 For Lutherans the Reformation renewed rather than removed the religious image 45 Lutheran scholar Jeremiah Ohl writes 46 88 89 Zwingli and others for the sake of saving the Word rejected all plastic art Luther with an equal concern for the Word but far more conservative would have all the arts to be the servants of the Gospel I am not of the opinion said Luther that through the Gospel all the arts should be banished and driven away as some zealots want to make us believe but I wish to see them all especially music in the service of Him Who gave and created them Again he says I have myself heard those who oppose pictures read from my German Bible But this contains many pictures of God of the angels of men and of animals especially in the Revelation of St John in the books of Moses and in the book of Joshua We therefore kindly beg these fanatics to permit us also to paint these pictures on the wall that they may be remembered and better understood inasmuch as they can harm as little on the walls as in books Would to God that I could persuade those who can afford it to paint the whole Bible on their houses inside and outside so that all might see this would indeed be a Christian work For I am convinced that it is God s will that we should hear and learn what He has done especially what Christ suffered But when I hear these things and meditate upon them I find it impossible not to picture them in my heart Whether I want to or not when I hear of Christ a human form hanging upon a cross rises up in my heart just as I see my natural face reflected when I look into water Now if it is not sinful for me to have Christ s picture in my heart why should it be sinful to have it before my eyes The Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent who had pragmatic reasons to support the Dutch Revolt the rebels like himself were fighting against Spain also completely approved of their act of destroying idols which accorded well with Muslim teachings 47 48 A bit later in Dutch history in 1627 the artist Johannes van der Beeck was arrested and tortured charged with being a religious non conformist and a blasphemer heretic atheist and Satanist The 25 January 1628 judgment from five noted advocates of The Hague pronounced him guilty of blasphemy against God and avowed atheism at the same time as leading a frightful and pernicious lifestyle At the court s order his paintings were burned and only a few of them survive 49 Other instances edit From the 16th through the 19th centuries many of the polytheistic religious deities and texts of pre colonial Americas Oceania and Africa were destroyed by Christian missionaries and their converts such as during the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire and the Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire In Japan during the early modern age the spread of Catholicism also involved the repulsion of non Christian religious structures including Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines and figures At times of conflict with rivals or some time after the conversion of several daimyos Christian converts would often destroy Buddhist and Shinto religious structures 50 Many of the moai of Easter Island were toppled during the 18th century in the iconoclasm of civil wars before any European encounter 51 Other instances of iconoclasm may have occurred throughout Eastern Polynesia during its conversion to Christianity in the 19th century 52 After the Second Vatican Council in the late 20th century some Roman Catholic parish churches discarded much of their traditional imagery art and architecture 53 Muslim iconoclasm editFurther information Aniconism in Islam Islam has a much stronger tradition of forbidding the depiction of figures especially religious figures 3 with Sunni Islam forbidding it more than Shia Islam In the history of Islam the act of removing idols from the Ka ba in Mecca has great symbolic and historic importance for all believers In general Muslim societies have avoided the depiction of living beings both animals and humans within such sacred spaces as mosques and madrasahs This ban on figural representation is not based on the Qur an instead it is based on traditions which are described within the Hadith The prohibition of figuration has not always been extended to the secular sphere and a robust tradition of figural representation exists within Muslim art 54 However Western authors have tended to perceive a long culturally determined and unchanging tradition of violent iconoclastic acts within Islamic society 54 Early Islam in Arabia edit The first act of Muslim iconoclasm dates to the beginning of Islam in 630 when the various statues of Arabian deities housed in the Kaaba in Mecca were destroyed There is a tradition that Muhammad spared a fresco of Mary and Jesus 55 This act was intended to bring an end to the idolatry which in the Muslim view characterized Jahiliyyah The destruction of the idols of Mecca did not however determine the treatment of other religious communities living under Muslim rule after the expansion of the caliphate Most Christians under Muslim rule for example continued to produce icons and to decorate their churches as they wished A major exception to this pattern of tolerance in early Islamic history was the Edict of Yazid issued by the Umayyad caliph Yazid II in 722 723 56 This edict ordered the destruction of crosses and Christian images within the territory of the caliphate Researchers have discovered evidence that the order was followed particularly in present day Jordan where archaeological evidence shows the removal of images from the mosaic floors of some although not all of the churches that stood at this time But Yazid s iconoclastic policies were not continued by his successors and Christian communities of the Levant continued to make icons without significant interruption from the sixth century to the ninth 57 Egypt edit nbsp The Great Sphinx of Giza s profile in 2010 without its noseAl Maqrizi writing in the 15th century attributes the missing nose on the Great Sphinx of Giza to iconoclasm by Muhammad Sa im al Dahr a Sufi Muslim in the mid 1300s He was reportedly outraged by local Muslims making offerings to the Great Sphinx in the hope of controlling the flood cycle and he was later executed for vandalism However whether this was actually the cause of the missing nose has been debated by historians 58 Mark Lehner having performed an archaeological study concluded that it was broken with instruments at an earlier unknown time between the 3rd and 10th centuries 59 Ottoman conquests edit Certain conquering Muslim armies have used local temples or houses of worship as mosques An example is Hagia Sophia in Istanbul formerly Constantinople which was converted into a mosque in 1453 Most icons were desecrated and the rest were covered with plaster In 1934 the government of Turkey decided to convert the Hagia Sophia into a museum and the restoration of the mosaics was undertaken by the American Byzantine Institute beginning in 1932 Contemporary events edit Further information Destruction of early Islamic heritage sites in Saudi Arabia and Destruction of cultural heritage by ISIL Certain Muslim denominations continue to pursue iconoclastic agendas There has been much controversy within Islam over the recent and apparently on going destruction of historic sites by Saudi Arabian authorities prompted by the fear they could become the subject of idolatry 60 61 A recent act of iconoclasm was the 2001 destruction of the giant Buddhas of Bamyan by the then Taliban government of Afghanistan 62 The act generated worldwide protests and was not supported by other Muslim governments and organizations It was widely perceived in the Western media as a result of the Muslim prohibition against figural decoration Such an account overlooks the coexistence between the Buddhas and the Muslim population that marveled at them for over a millennium before their destruction 54 According to art historian F B Flood analysis of the Taliban s statements regarding the Buddhas suggest that their destruction was motivated more by political than by theological concerns 54 Taliban spokesmen have given many different explanations of the motives for the destruction During the Tuareg rebellion of 2012 the radical Islamist militia Ansar Dine destroyed various Sufi shrines from the 15th and 16th centuries in the city of Timbuktu Mali 63 In 2016 the International Criminal Court ICC sentenced Ahmad al Faqi al Mahdi a former member of Ansar Dine to nine years in prison for this destruction of cultural world heritage This was the first time that the ICC convicted a person for such a crime 64 The short lived Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant carried out iconoclastic attacks such as the destruction of Shia mosques and shrines Notable incidents include blowing up the Mosque of the Prophet Yunus Jonah 65 and destroying the Shrine to Seth in Mosul 66 Iconoclasm in India editFurther information Religious violence in India In early Medieval India there were numerous recorded instances of temple desecration by Indian kings against rival Indian kingdoms which involved conflicts between devotees of different Hindu deities as well as conflicts between Hindus Buddhists and Jains 67 68 69 In the 8th century Bengali troops from the Buddhist Pala Empire desecrated temples of Vishnu the state deity of Lalitaditya s kingdom in Kashmir In the early 9th century Indian Hindu kings from Kanchipuram and the Pandyan king Srimara Srivallabha looted Buddhist temples in Sri Lanka In the early 10th century the Pratihara king Herambapala looted an image from a temple in the Sahi kingdom of Kangra which was later looted by the Pratihara king Yashovarman 67 68 69 During the Muslim conquest of Sindh edit Records from the campaign recorded in the Chach Nama record the destruction of temples during the early 8th century when the Umayyad governor of Damascus al Hajjaj ibn Yusuf 70 mobilized an expedition of 6000 cavalry under Muhammad bin Qasim in 712 Historian Upendra Thakur records the persecution of Hindus and Buddhists Muhammad triumphantly marched into the country conquering Debal Sehwan Nerun Brahmanadabad Alor and Multan one after the other in quick succession and in less than a year and a half the far flung Hindu kingdom was crushed There was a fearful outbreak of religious bigotry in several places and temples were wantonly desecrated At Debal the Nairun and Aror temples were demolished and converted into mosques 71 Iconoclasm during the Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent nbsp The Somnath Temple in Gujarat was repeatedly destroyed by Islamic armies and rebuilt by Hindus It was destroyed by Delhi Sultanate s army in 1299 CE 72 The present temple was reconstructed in Chalukyan style of Hindu temple architecture and completed in May 1951 73 74 nbsp The Kashi Vishwanath Temple was repeatedly destroyed by Islamic invaders such as Qutb al Din Aibak nbsp Ruins of the Martand Sun Temple The temple was destroyed on the orders of Muslim Sultan Sikandar Butshikan in the early 15th century with demolition lasting a year nbsp The armies of Delhi Sultanate led by Muslim Commander Malik Kafur plundered the Meenakshi Temple and looted it of its valuables nbsp Kakatiya Kala Thoranam Warangal Gate built by the Kakatiya dynasty in ruins one of the many temple complexes destroyed by the Delhi Sultanate 68 nbsp Rani Ki Vav is a stepwell built by the Chaulukya dynasty located in Patan the city was sacked by Sultan of Delhi Qutb ud din Aybak between 1200 and 1210 and it was destroyed by the Allauddin Khilji in 1298 68 nbsp Artistic rendition of the Kirtistambh at Rudra Mahalaya Temple The temple was destroyed by Alauddin Khalji nbsp Exterior wall reliefs at Hoysaleswara Temple The temple was twice sacked and plundered by the Delhi Sultanate 75 The Somnath temple and Mahmud of Ghazni edit Perhaps the most notorious episode of iconoclasm in India was Mahmud of Ghazni s attack on the Somnath Temple from across the Thar Desert 76 77 78 The temple was first raided in 725 when Junayad the governor of Sind sent his armies to destroy it 79 In 1024 during the reign of Bhima I the prominent Turkic Muslim ruler Mahmud of Ghazni raided Gujarat plundering the Somnath Temple and breaking its jyotirlinga despite pleas by Brahmins not to break it He took away a booty of 20 million dinars 80 78 39 The attack may have been inspired by the belief that an idol of the goddess Manat had been secretly transferred to the temple 81 According to the Ghaznavid court poet Farrukhi Sistani who claimed to have accompanied Mahmud on his raid Somnat as rendered in Persian was a garbled version of su manat referring to the goddess Manat According to him as well as a later Ghaznavid historian Abu Sa id Gardezi the images of the other goddesses were destroyed in Arabia but the one of Manat was secretly sent away to Kathiawar in modern Gujarat for safekeeping Since the idol of Manat was an aniconic image of black stone it could have been easily confused with a lingam at Somnath Mahmud is said to have broken the idol and taken away parts of it as loot and placed so that people would walk on it In his letters to the Caliphate Mahmud exaggerated the size wealth and religious significance of the Somnath temple receiving grandiose titles from the Caliph in return 80 45 51 The wooden structure was replaced by Kumarapala r 1143 72 who rebuilt the temple out of stone 82 From the Mamluk dynasty onward edit Historical records which were compiled by the Muslim historian Maulana Hakim Saiyid Abdul Hai attest to the religious violence which occurred during the Mamluk dynasty under Qutb ud din Aybak The first mosque built in Delhi the Quwwat al Islam was built with demolished parts of 20 Hindu and Jain temples 83 84 This pattern of iconoclasm was common during his reign 85 During the Delhi Sultanate a Muslim army led by Malik Kafur a general of Alauddin Khalji pursued four violent campaigns into south India between 1309 and 1311 against the Hindu kingdoms of Devgiri Maharashtra Warangal Telangana Dwarasamudra Karnataka and Madurai Tamil Nadu Many Temples were plundered Hoysaleswara Temple and others were ruthlessly destroyed 86 87 In Kashmir Sikandar Shah Miri 1389 1413 began expanding and unleashed religious violence that earned him the name but shikan or idol breaker 88 He earned this sobriquet because of the sheer scale of desecration and destruction of Hindu and Buddhist temples shrines ashrams hermitages and other holy places in what is now known as Kashmir and its neighboring territories Firishta states After the emigration of the Brahmins Sikundur ordered all the temples in Kashmeer to be thrown down 89 He destroyed vast majority of Hindu and Buddhist temples in his reach in Kashmir region north and northwest India 90 In the 1460s Kapilendra founder of the Suryavamsi Gajapati dynasty sacked the Shaiva and Vaishnava temples in the Cauvery delta in the course of wars of conquest in the Tamil country Vijayanagara king Krishnadevaraya looted a Bala Krishna temple in Udayagiri in 1514 and looted a Vitthala temple in Pandharpur in 1520 67 68 69 A regional tradition along with the Hindu text Madala Panji states that Kalapahar attacked and damaged the Konark Sun Temple in 1568 as well as many others in Orissa 91 92 Some of the most dramatic cases of iconoclasm by Muslims are found in parts of India where Hindu and Buddhist temples were razed and mosques erected in their place Aurangzeb the 6th Mughal Emperor destroyed the famous Hindu temples at Varanasi and Mathura turning back on his ancestor Akbar s policy of religious freedom and establishing Sharia across his empire 93 During the Goa Inquisition edit Main article Goa Inquisition Exact data on the nature and number of Hindu temples destroyed by the Christian missionaries and Portuguese government are unavailable Some 160 temples were allegedly razed to the ground in Tiswadi Ilhas de Goa by 1566 Between 1566 and 1567 a campaign by Franciscan missionaries destroyed another 300 Hindu temples in Bardez North Goa In Salcete South Goa approximately another 300 Hindu temples were destroyed by the Christian officials of the Inquisition Numerous Hindu temples were destroyed elsewhere at Assolna and Cuncolim by Portuguese authorities 94 A 1569 royal letter in Portuguese archives records that all Hindu temples in its colonies in India had been burnt and razed to the ground 95 The English traveller Sir Thomas Herbert 1st Baronet who visited Goa in the 1600s writes as also the ruins of 200 Idol Temples which the Vice Roy Antonio Norogna totally demolisht that no memory might remain or monuments continue of such gross Idolatry For not only there but at Salsette also were two Temples or places of prophane Worship one of them by incredible toil cut out of the hard Rock was divided into three Iles or Galleries in which were figured many of their deformed Pagotha s and of which an Indian if to be credited reports that there were in that Temple 300 of those narrow Galleries and the Idols so exceeding ugly as would affright an European Spectator nevertheless this was a celebrated place and so abundantly frequented by Idolaters as induced the Portuguise in zeal with a considerable force to master the Town and to demolish the Temples breaking in pieces all that monstrous brood of mishapen Pagods In Goa nothing is more observable now than the fortifications the Vice Roy and Arch bishops Palaces and the Churches 96 In modern India edit Dr Ambedkar and his supporters on 25 December 1927 in the Mahad Satyagraha strongly criticised condemned and then burned copies of Manusmriti on a pyre in a specially dug pit Manusmriti one of the sacred Hindu texts is the religious basis of casteist laws and values of Hinduism and hence was is the reason of social and economic plight of crores of untouchables and lower caste Hindus One of the greatest iconoclasts for all time this explosive incident rocked the Hindu society Ambedkarites continue to observe 25 December as Manusmriti Dahan Divas Manusmriti Burning Day and burn copies of Manusmriti on this day The most high profile case of Independent India was in 1992 Hindu mob led by the Vishva Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal destroyed the 430 year old Islamic Babri Masjid in Ayodhya which is claimed to be built after destroying the Ram Mandir 97 98 Iconoclasm in East Asia editChina edit Further information Four Buddhist Persecutions in China and Anti Western sentiment in China There have been a number of anti Buddhist campaigns in Chinese history that led to the destruction of Buddhist temples and images One of the most notable of these campaigns was the Great Anti Buddhist Persecution of the Tang dynasty During and after the 1911 Xinhai Revolution there was widespread destruction of religious and secular images in China During the Northern Expedition in Guangxi in 1926 Kuomintang General Bai Chongxi led his troops in destroying Buddhist temples and smashing Buddhist images turning the temples into schools and Kuomintang party headquarters 99 It was reported that almost all of the viharas in Guangxi were destroyed and the monks were removed 100 Bai also led a wave of anti foreignism in Guangxi attacking Americans Europeans and other foreigners and generally making the province unsafe for foreigners and missionaries Westerners fled from the province and some Chinese Christians were also attacked as imperialist agents 101 The three goals of the movement were anti foreignism anti imperialism and anti religion Bai led the anti religious movement against superstition Huang Shaohong also a Kuomintang member of the New Guangxi clique supported Bai s campaign The anti religious campaign was agreed upon by all Guangxi Kuomintang members 101 There was extensive destruction of religious and secular imagery in Tibet after it was invaded and occupied by China 102 Many religious and secular images were destroyed during the Cultural Revolution of 1966 1976 ostensibly because they were a holdover from China s traditional past which the Communist regime led by Mao Zedong reviled The Cultural Revolution included widespread destruction of historic artworks in public places and private collections whether religious or secular Objects in state museums were mostly left intact South Korea editAccording to an article in Buddhist Christian Studies 103 Over the course of the last decade 1990s a fairly large number of Buddhist temples in South Korea have been destroyed or damaged by fire by Christian fundamentalists More recently Buddhist statues have been identified as idols and attacked and decapitated in the name of Jesus Arrests are hard to effect as the arsonists and vandals work by stealth of night Angkor edit Further information Angkor Beginning c 1243 AD with the death of Indravarman II the Khmer Empire went through a period of iconoclasm At the beginning of the reign of the next king Jayavarman VIII the Kingdom went back to Hinduism and the worship of Shiva Many of the Buddhist images were destroyed by Jayavarman VIII who reestablished previously Hindu shrines that had been converted to Buddhism by his predecessor Carvings of the Buddha at temples such as Preah Khan were destroyed and during this period the Bayon Temple was made a temple to Shiva with the central 3 6 meter tall statue of the Buddha cast to the bottom of a nearby well 104 Political iconoclasm editDamnatio memoriae edit Main article damnatio memoriae Revolutions and changes of regime whether through uprising of the local population foreign invasion or a combination of both are often accompanied by the public destruction of statues and monuments identified with the previous regime This may also be known as damnatio memoriae the ancient Roman practice of official obliteration of the memory of a specific individual Stricter definitions of iconoclasm exclude both types of action reserving the term for religious or more widely cultural destruction citation needed In many cases such as Revolutionary Russia or Ancient Egypt this distinction can be hard to make Among Roman emperors and other political figures subject to decrees of damnatio memoriae were Sejanus Publius Septimius Geta and Domitian Several Emperors such as Domitian and Commodus had during their reigns erected numerous statues of themselves which were pulled down and destroyed when they were overthrown The perception of damnatio memoriae in the Classical world was an act of erasing memory has been challenged by scholars who have argued that it did not negate historical traces but created gestures which served to dishonor the record of the person and so in an oblique way to confirm memory 105 and was in effect a spectacular display of pantomime forgetfulness 106 Examining cases of political monument destruction in modern Irish history Guy Beiner has demonstrated that iconoclastic vandalism often entails subtle expressions of ambiguous remembrance and that rather than effacing memory such acts of de commemorating effectively preserve memory in obscure forms 107 108 109 During the French Revolution edit Throughout the radical phase of the French Revolution iconoclasm was supported by members of the government as well as the citizenry Numerous monuments religious works and other historically significant pieces were destroyed in an attempt to eradicate any memory of the Old Regime A statue of King Louis XV in the Paris square which until then bore his name was pulled down and destroyed This was a prelude to the guillotining of his successor Louis XVI in the same site renamed Place de la Revolution at present Place de la Concorde 110 Later that year the bodies of many French kings were exhumed from the Basilica of Saint Denis and dumped in a mass grave 111 Some episodes of iconoclasm were carried out spontaneously by crowds of citizens including the destruction of statues of kings during the insurrection of 10 August 1792 in Paris 112 Some were directly sanctioned by the Republican government including the Saint Denis exhumations 111 Nonetheless the Republican government also took steps to preserve historic artworks 113 notably by founding the Louvre museum to house and display the former royal art collection This allowed the physical objects and national heritage to be preserved while stripping them of their association with the monarchy 114 115 116 Alexandre Lenoir saved many royal monuments by diverting them to preservation in a museum 117 The statue of Napoleon on the column at Place Vendome Paris was also the target of iconoclasm several times destroyed after the Bourbon Restoration restored by Louis Philippe destroyed during the Paris Commune and restored by Adolphe Thiers After Napoleon conquered the Italian city of Pavia local Pavia Jacobins destroyed the Regisole a bronze classical equestrian monument dating back to Classical times The Jacobins considered it a symbol of Royal authority but it had been a prominent Pavia landmark for nearly a thousand years and its destruction aroused much indignation and precipitated a revolt by inhabitants of Pavia against the French which was quelled by Napoleon after a furious urban fight Other examples edit nbsp St Helen s Gate in Cospicua Malta which had its marble coat of arms defaced during the French occupation of Malta nbsp Statue of William of Orange formerly located on College Green in Dublin Erected in 1701 it was destroyed in 1929 one of several memorials installed during British rule which were destroyed after Ireland became independent Other examples of political destruction of images include There have been several cases of removing symbols of past rulers in Malta s history Many Hospitaller coats of arms on buildings were defaced during the French occupation of Malta in 1798 1800 a few of these were subsequently replaced by British coats of arms in the early 19th century 118 Some British symbols were also removed by the government after Malta became a republic in 1974 These include royal cyphers being ground off from post boxes 119 and British coats of arms such as that on the Main Guard building being temporarily obscured but not destroyed 120 With the entry of the Ottoman Empire to the First World War the Ottoman Army destroyed the Russian victory monument erected in San Stefano the modern Yesilkoy quarter of Istanbul Turkey to commemorate the Russian victory in the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 The demolition was filmed by former army officer Fuat Uzkinay producing Ayastefanos taki Rus Abidesinin Yikilisi the oldest known Turkish made film In the late 18th century French revolutionaries known as the sans culottes sacked Brussels Grand Place destroying statues of nobility and symbols of Christianity 121 122 In the 19th century the place was renovated and many new statues added In 1911 a marble commemoration for the Spanish freethinker and educator Francisco Ferrer executed two years earlier and widely considered a martyr was erected in the Grand Place The statue depicted a nude man holding the Torch of Enlightenment The Imperial German military which occupied Belgium during the First World War disliked the monument and destroyed it in 1915 It was restored in 1926 by the International Free Thought Movement 123 In 1942 the pro Nazi Vichy Government of France took down and melted Clothilde Roch s statue of the 16th century dissident intellectual Michael Servetus who had been burned at the stake in Geneva at the instigation of Calvin The Vichy authorities disliked the statue as it was a celebration of freedom of conscience In 1960 having found the original molds the municipality of Annemasse had it recast and returned the statue to its previous place 124 A sculpture of the head of Spanish intellectual Miguel de Unamuno by Victorio Macho was installed in the City Hall of Bilbao Spain It was withdrawn in 1936 when Unamuno showed temporary support for the Nationalist side During the Spanish Civil War it was thrown into the estuary It was later recovered In 1984 the head was installed in Plaza Unamuno In 1999 it was again thrown into the estuary after a political meeting of Euskal Herritarrok It was substituted by a copy in 2000 after the original was located in the water 125 126 127 The Battle of Baghdad and the regime of Saddam Hussein symbolically ended with the Firdos Square statue destruction a U S military staged event on 9 April 2003 where a prominent statue of Saddam Hussein was pulled down Subsequently statues and murals of Saddam Hussein all over Iraq were destroyed by US occupation forces as well as Iraqi citizens 128 nbsp United States Marines destroy a statue of Saddam Hussein on Firdos Square in Baghdad Iraq 9 April 2003 In 2016 paintings from the University of Cape Town South Africa were burned in student protests as symbols of colonialism 129 In November 2019 a statue of Swedish footballer Zlatan Ibrahimovic in Malmo Sweden was vandalized by Malmo FF supporters after he announced he had become part owner of Swedish rivals Hammarby White paint was sprayed on it threats and hateful messages towards Zlatan were written on the statue and it was burned 130 131 In a second attack the nose was sawed off and the statue was sprinkled with chrome paint 132 On 5 January 2020 it was finally toppled 133 On 7 June 2020 during the George Floyd protests 134 a statue of merchant and trans Atlantic slave trader Edward Colston in Bristol UK was pulled down by demonstrators who then jumped on it 135 They daubed it in red and blue paint and one protester placed his knee on the statue s neck to allude to Floyd s murder by a white policeman who knelt on Floyd s neck for over nine minutes 134 136 The statue was then rolled down Anchor Road and pushed into Bristol Harbour 135 137 138 In the Soviet Union edit nbsp Demolition of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow Russia 5 December 1931During and after the October Revolution widespread destruction of religious and secular imagery in Russia took place as well as the destruction of imagery related to the Imperial family The Revolution was accompanied by destruction of monuments of tsars as well as the destruction of imperial eagles at various locations throughout Russia According to Christopher Wharton 139 In front of a Moscow Cathedral crowds cheered as the enormous statue of Tsar Alexander III was bound with ropes and gradually beaten to the ground After a considerable amount of time the statue was decapitated and its remaining parts were broken into rubble The Soviet Union actively destroyed religious sites including Russian Orthodox churches and Jewish cemeteries in order to discourage religious practice and curb the activities of religious groups During the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and during the Revolutions of 1989 protesters often attacked and took down sculptures and images of Joseph Stalin such as the Stalin Monument in Budapest 140 The fall of Communism in 1989 1991 was also followed by the destruction or removal of statues of Vladimir Lenin and other Communist leaders in the former Soviet Union and in other Eastern Bloc countries Particularly well known was the destruction of Iron Felix the statue of Felix Dzerzhinsky outside the KGB s headquarters Another statue of Dzerzhinsky was destroyed in a Warsaw square that was named after him during communist rule but which is now called Bank Square In the United States edit nbsp The Sons of Liberty pulling down the statue of George III of the United Kingdom on Bowling Green New York City 1776During the American Revolution the Sons of Liberty pulled down and destroyed the gilded lead statue of George III of the United Kingdom on Bowling Green New York City melting it down to be recast as ammunition Similar acts have accompanied the independence of most ex colonial territories Sometimes relatively intact monuments are moved to a collected display in a less prominent place as in India and also post Communist countries In August 2017 a statue of a Confederate soldier dedicated to the boys who wore the gray was pulled down from its pedestal in front of Durham County Courthouse in North Carolina by protesters This followed the events at the 2017 Unite the Right rally in response to growing calls to remove Confederate monuments and memorials across the U S 141 142 143 144 2020 demonstrations edit Main article List of monuments and memorials removed during the George Floyd protests During the George Floyd protests of 2020 demonstrators pulled down dozens of statues which they considered symbols of the Confederacy slavery segregation or racism including the statue of Williams Carter Wickham in Richmond Virginia 145 146 Further demonstrations in the wake of the George Floyd protests have resulted in the removal of 147 the John Breckenridge Castleman monument in Louisville Kentucky plaques in Jacksonville Florida s Hemming Park renamed in 1899 in honor of Civil War veteran Charles C Hemming which were in remembrance of deceased Confederate soldiers the monumental obelisk of the Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument and a statue of Charles Linn in Linn Park Birmingham Alabama a statue of Junipero Serra in Golden Gate Park San Francisco 148 a statue of Confederate Gen Robert E Lee in Montgomery Alabama the monument to Robert E Lee in Richmond Virginia 149 the Appomattox statue in Alexandria Virginia leaving the monument s base empty but intact Multiple statues of early European explorers and founders were also vandalized including those of Christopher Columbus George Washington and Thomas Jefferson 150 151 Christopher Columbus was removed in Virginia Minnesota Chicago and beheaded in Boston MA 150 George Washington statue was toppled in Portland Oregon 151 A statue of the African American abolitionist statesman Frederick Douglass was vandalised in Rochester New York by being torn from its base and left close to a nearby river gorge Donald Trump attributed the act to anarchists 152 but he did not substantiate his claim nor did he offer a theory on motive Cornell William Brooks former president of the NAACP theorised that this was an act of revenge from white supremacists 153 Carvin Eison who led the project that brought the Douglass statues to Rochester thought it was unlikely that the Douglass statue was toppled by someone who was upset about monuments honoring Confederate figures and added that it s only logical that it was some kind of retaliation event in someone s mind Police did not find evidence that supported or refuted either claim and the vandalism case remains unsolved 154 See also editAniconism Censorship by religion Cult image Cultural Revolution Icon Iconolatry List of destroyed heritage Lost artworks Natural theology Slighting Council of Constantinople 843 Notes edit From Ancient Greek eἰkwn klaw lit image breaking Iconoclasm may also be considered as a back formation from iconoclast Greek eἰkoklasths The corresponding Greek word for iconoclasm is eἰkonoklasia eikonoklasia References edit Iconoclast 2 Oxford English Dictionary see also Iconoclasm and Iconoclastic icono comb form OED Online Oxford University Press Retrieved March 28 2019 a b Crone Patricia 2005 Islam Judeo Christianity and Byzantine Iconoclasm Archived 2018 11 11 at the Wayback Machine pp 59 96 in From Kavad to al Ghazali Religion Law and Political Thought in the Near East c 600 1100 Variorum Ashgate Publishing H James Birx Encyclopedia of Anthropology Volume 1 Sage Publications US 2006 p 802 Akhenaten Encyclopedia of World Biography 20 June 2020 via Encyclopedia com Assmann Jan 2014 From Akhenaten to Moses Ancient Egypt and Religious Change American University in Cairo Press ISBN 977 416 631 0 p 76 Bible Numbers 33 52 and similarly Bible Deuteronomy 7 5 2 Kings 21 Hebrew English Bible Mechon Mamre mechon mamre org Retrieved 2022 02 21 Elvira canons Cua archived from the original on 2012 07 16 Placuit picturas in ecclesia esse non debere ne quod colitur et adoratur in parietibus depingatur The Catholic Encyclopedia This canon has often been urged against the veneration of images as practised in the Catholic Church Binterim De Rossi and Hefele interpret this prohibition as directed against the use of images in overground churches only lest the pagans should caricature sacred scenes and ideas Von Funk Termel and Henri Leclercq opine that the council did not pronounce as to the liceity or non liceity of the use of images but as an administrative measure simply forbade them lest new and weak converts from paganism should incur thereby any danger of relapse into idolatry or be scandalized by certain superstitious excesses in no way approved by the ecclesiastical authority Grigg Robert 1976 12 01 Aniconic Worship and the Apologetic Tradition A Note on Canon 36 of the Council of Elvira Church History 45 4 428 433 doi 10 2307 3164346 ISSN 0009 6407 JSTOR 3164346 S2CID 162369274 The Council of Elvira ca 306 Archived from the original on 2016 02 29 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Dimmick Jeremy Simpson James Zeeman Nicolette 2002 Images Idolatry and Iconoclasm in Late Medieval England Textuality and the Visual Image OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 154196 4 a b c Jensen Robin Margaret 2013 Understanding Early Christian Art Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 95170 2 a b c Strezova Anita 2013 11 25 Overview on Iconophile and Iconoclastic Attitudes toward Images in Early Christianity and Late Antiquity Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies O Gorman Ned 2016 The Iconoclastic Imagination Image Catastrophe and Economy in America from the Kennedy Assassination to September 11 University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 31023 7 Humphreys Mike 2021 A Companion to Byzantine Iconoclasm Brill ISBN 978 90 04 46200 7 Kitzinger 92 93 92 quoted Byzantine iconoclasm Retrieved 2013 04 30 Cormack Robin 1985 Writing in Gold Byzantine Society and its Icons London George Philip ISBN 0 540 01085 5 Mango Cyril 1977 Historical Introduction pp 2 3 in Iconoclasm edited by Bryer amp Herrin Birmingham Centre for Byzantine Studies University of Birmingham ISBN 0 7044 0226 2 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford University Press pp 350 352 353 a b Mango Cyril 2002 The Oxford History of Byzantium Oxford University Press Kim Elijah Jong Fil 2012 The Rise of the Global South The Decline of Western Christendom and the Rise of Majority World Christianity Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 61097 970 2 Michalski Sergiusz 2013 Reformation and the Visual Arts The Protestant Image Question in Western and Eastern Europe Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 92102 7 a b F L Cross E A Livingstone eds 1997 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church 3rd edition US Oxford University Press pp 359 ISBN 0 19 211655 X Dorner Isaak August 1871 History of Protestant Theology Edinburgh p 146 a b Lamport Mark A 2017 Encyclopedia of Martin Luther and the Reformation Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 138 ISBN 978 1442271593 Lutherans continued to worship in pre Reformation churches generally with few alterations to the interior It has even been suggested that in Germany to this day one finds more ancient Marian altarpieces in Lutheran than in Catholic churches Thus in Germany and in Scandinavia many pieces of medieval art and architecture survived Joseph Koerner has noted that Lutherans seeing themselves in the tradition of the ancient apostolic church sought to defend as well as reform the use of images An empty white washed church proclaimed a wholly spiritualized cult at odds with Luther s doctrine of Christ s real presence in the sacraments Koerner 2004 58 In fact in the 16th century some of the strongest opposition to destruction of images came not from Catholics but from Lutherans against Calvinists You black Calvinist you give permission to smash our pictures and hack our crosses we are going to smash you and your Calvinist priests in return Koerner 2004 58 Works of art continued to be displayed in Lutheran churches often including an imposing large crucifix in the sanctuary a clear reference to Luther s theologia crucis In contrast Reformed Calvinist churches are strikingly different Usually unadorned and somewhat lacking in aesthetic appeal pictures sculptures and ornate altar pieces are largely absent there are few or no candles and crucifixes or crosses are also mostly absent a b Felix Steven 2015 Pentecostal Aesthetics Theological Reflections in a Pentecostal Philosophy of Art and Esthetics Brill Academic Publishers p 22 ISBN 978 9004291621 Luther s view was that biblical images could be used as teaching aids and thus had didactic value Hence Luther stood against the destruction of images whereas several other reformers Karlstadt Zwingli Calvin promoted these actions In the following passage Luther harshly rebukes Karlstadt on his stance on iconoclasm and his disorderly conduct in reform Wallace Peter George 2004 The Long European Reformation Religion Political Conflict and the Search for Conformity 1350 1750 Basingstoke UK Palgrave Macmillan p 95 Kamil Neil 2005 Neil Kamil Fortress of the soul violence metaphysics and material life p 148 JHU Press ISBN 978 0801873904 Retrieved 2013 04 30 Wandel Lee Palmer 1995 Voracious Idols and Violent Hands Cambridge UK Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge pp 149 ISBN 978 0 521 47222 7 Marshall Peter 22 October 2009 The Reformation Oxford University Press p 114 ISBN 978 0191578885 Iconoclastic incidents during the Calvinist Second Reformation in Germany provoked reactive riots by Lutheran mobs while Protestant image breaking in the Baltic region deeply antagonized the neighbouring Eastern Orthodox a group with whom reformers might have hoped to make common cause Kleiner Fred S 2010 Gardner s Art through the Ages A Concise History of Western Art Cengage Learning p 254 ISBN 978 1424069224 In an episode known as the Great Iconoclasm bands of Calvinists visited Catholic churches in the Netherlands in 1566 shattering stained glass windows smashing statues and destroying paintings and other artworks they perceived as idolatrous Stark Rodney 2007 The Victory of Reason How Christianity Led to Freedom Capitalism and Western Success Random House Publishing Group p 176 ISBN 978 1588365002 The Beeldenstorm or Iconoclastic Fury involved roving bands of radical Calvinists who were utterly opposed to all religious images and decorations in churches and who acted on their beliefs by storming into Catholic churches and destroying all artwork and finery Byfield Ted 2002 A Century of Giants A D 1500 to 1600 In an Age of Spiritual Genius Western Christendom Shatters Christian History Project p 297 ISBN 978 0968987391 Devoutly Catholic but opposed to Inquisition tactics they backed William of Orange in subduing the Calvinist uprising of the Dutch beeldenstorm on behalf of regent Margaret of Parma and had come willingly to the council at her invitation Aston Margaret 1993 The King s Bedpost Reformation and Iconography in a Tudor Group Portrait Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48457 2 Loach Jennifer 1999 Bernard George Williams Penry eds Edward VI New Haven CT Yale University Press p 187 ISBN 978 0 300 07992 0 Hearn Karen 1995 Dynasties Painting in Tudor and Jacobean England 1530 1630 New York Rizzoli pp 75 76 ISBN 978 0 8478 1940 9 Heal Felicity 2005 Reformation in Britain and Ireland Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 928015 5 pp 263 264 Evelyn White Parliamentary Visitor 1886 The Journal of William Dowsing Parliamentary Visitor PDF Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History VI Part 2 236 to 295 Naaeke Anthony Y 2006 Kaleidoscope Catechesis Missionary Catechesis in Africa Particularly in the Diocese of Wa in Ghana Peter Lang p 114 ISBN 978 0820486857 Although some reformers such as John Calvin and Ulrich Zwingli rejected all images Martin Luther defended the importance of images as tools for instruction and aids to devotion Noble Bonnie 2009 Lucas Cranach the Elder Art and Devotion of the German Reformation University Press of America pp 67 69 ISBN 978 0761843375 a b Spicer Andrew 2016 Lutheran Churches in Early Modern Europe Taylor amp Francis p 237 ISBN 978 1351921169 As it developed in north eastern Germany Lutheran worship became a complex ritual choreography set in a richly furnished church interior This much is evident from the background of an epitaph pained in 1615 by Martin Schulz destined for the Nikolaikirche in Berlin see Figure 5 5 Dixon C Scott 2012 Contesting the Reformation John Wiley amp Sons p 146 ISBN 978 1118272305 According to Koerner who dwells on Lutheran art the Reformation renewed rather than removed the religious image Ohl Jeremiah F 1906 Art in Worship pp 83 99 in Memoirs of the Lutheran Liturgical Association 2 Pittsburgh Lutheran Liturgical Association Inalcik Halil 1974 The Turkish Impact on the Development of Modern Europe In Karpat K H ed The Ottoman State and Its Place in World History Introduction Armenian Research Center collection Leiden Brill p 53 ISBN 978 90 04 03945 2 Miller Roland E 2006 Muslims and the Gospel Bridging the Gap a Reflection on Christian Sharing Kirk House Publishers ISBN 978 1932688078 via Google Books Wittemans Frank 1996 A New and Authentic History of the Rosicrucians Whitefish MT Kessinger Publishing pp 54 55 ISBN 1 56459 972 8 Strathern Alan 2020 The Many Meanings of Iconoclasm Warrior and Christian Temple Shrine Destruction in Late Sixteenth Century Japan Journal of Early Modern History 25 3 163 193 doi 10 1163 15700658 bja10023 ISSN 1385 3783 S2CID 229468278 Fischer Steven Roger 2006 Island at the end of the world The turbulent history of Easter Island London Reaktion p 64 ISBN 1 86189 282 9 OCLC 646808462 Wellington Victoria University of April 4 2014 New view of Polynesian conversion to Christianity Victoria University of Wellington Chessman Stuart Hetzendorf and the Iconoclasm in the Second Half of the 20th Century The Society of St Hugh of Cluny Retrieved 2013 04 30 a b c d Flood Finbarr Barry 2002 Between cult and culture Bamiyan Islamic iconoclasm and the museum The Art Bulletin 84 4 641 659 doi 10 2307 3177288 JSTOR 3177288 Guillaume Alfred 1955 The Life of Muhammad A translation of Ishaq s Sirat Rasul Allah Oxford University Press p 552 ISBN 978 0 19 636033 1 Retrieved 2011 12 08 Quraysh had put pictures in the Ka ba including two of Jesus son of Mary and Mary on both of whom be peace The apostle ordered that the pictures should be erased except those of Jesus and Mary Grabar Andre 1984 1957 L iconoclasme byzantin le dossier archeologique Byzantine iconoclasm The archaeological record Champs in French Flammarion pp 155 156 ISBN 978 2 08 012603 0 King G R D 1985 Islam iconoclasm and the declaration of doctrine Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 48 2 276 277 doi 10 1017 s0041977x00033346 S2CID 162882785 What happened to the Sphinx s nose Smithsonian Journeys Smithsonian Institution December 8 2009 Zivie Coche Christiane 2004 Sphinx history of a monument Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801489549 via Internet Archive Howden Daniel August 6 2005 Independent Newspaper on line London Jan 19 2007 News independent co uk Archived from the original on 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85065 170 1 Bradnock Robert Bradnock Roma 2000 India Handbook McGraw Hill p 959 ISBN 978 0 658 01151 1 Gujarat State Portal All About Gujarat Gujarat Tourism Religious Places Somnath Temple Gujaratindia com Retrieved 2013 04 30 Thapar Romila 2005 Somanatha The Many Voices of a History Verso ISBN 978 1844670208 via Google Books a b Yagnik Achyut and Suchitra Sheth 2005 Shaping of Modern Gujarat Penguin UK ISBN 8184751850 Leaves from the past Archived from the original on 2007 01 10 a b Thapar Romila 2004 Somanatha The Many Voices of a History Penguin Books India ISBN 1 84467 020 1 Akbar M J 2003 The Shade of Swords Jihad and the Conflict between Islam and Christianity Roli Books ISBN 978 9351940944 Somnath Temple British Library Qutb Minar and its Monuments Delhi UNESCO World Heritage Centre Welch Anthony and Howard Crane 1983 The Tughluqs Master Builders of the Delhi Sultanate Muqarnas 1 123 166 JSTOR 1523075 The Quwwatu l Islam was built with the remains of demolished Hindu and Jain 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7 OCLC 52861120 Behera Mahendra Narayan 2003 Brownstudy on heathenland A book on Indology Lanham MD University Press of America pp 146 147 ISBN 978 0 7618 2652 1 OCLC 53385077 Pauwels Heidi Bachrach Emilia 2018 Aurangzeb as Iconoclast Vaishnava Accounts of the Krishna images Exodus from Braj Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 28 3 485 508 doi 10 1017 S1356186318000019 ISSN 1356 1863 S2CID 165273975 Andrew Spicer 2016 Parish Churches in the Early Modern World Taylor amp Francis pp 309 311 ISBN 978 1 351 91276 1 Teotonio R De Souza 2016 The Portuguese in Goa in Acompanhando a Lusofonia em Goa Preocupacoes e experiencias pessoais PDF Lisbon Grupo Lusofona pp 28 30 Herbert Sir Thomas 1677 Some years travels into divers parts of Africa and Asia the Great London R Everingham for R Scot etc p 40 Narula Smita October 1999 India politics by other means Attacks Against Christians in India Report Vol 11 Human Rights Watch The Context of Anti Christian Violence Tully Mark 5 December 2002 Tearing down the Babri Masjid BBC News Retrieved 22 May 2010 Lary Diana 1974 Region and nation the Kwangsi clique in Chinese politics 1925 1937 Cambridge University Press p 98 ISBN 978 0 521 20204 6 Retrieved 2010 06 28 Don Alvin Pittman 2001 Toward a modern Chinese Buddhism Taixu s reforms University of Hawaii Press p 146 ISBN 978 0 8248 2231 6 Retrieved 2010 06 28 a b Lary Diana 1974 Region and nation the Kwangsi clique in Chinese politics 1925 1937 Cambridge University Press p 99 ISBN 978 0 521 20204 6 Retrieved 2010 06 28 Karan P P 2015 Suppression of Tibetan Religious Heritage The Changing World Religion Map Springer Dordrecht pp 461 476 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 9376 6 23 ISBN 978 9401793759 Wells Harry L 2000 Korean Temple Burnings and Vandalism The Response of the Society for Buddhist Christian Studies Buddhist Christian Studies 20 239 240 doi 10 1353 bcs 2000 0035 Higham The Civilization of Angkor p 133 Hedrick Charles W 2000 History and Silence Purge and Rehabilitation of Memory in Late Antiquity University of Texas Press pp 88 130 Stewart Peter 2003 Statues in Roman Society Representation and Response Oxford University Press pp 279 283 Beiner Guy 2007 Remembering the Year of the French Irish Folk History and Social Memory University of Wisconsin Press p 305 Beiner Guy 2018 Forgetful Remembrance Social Forgetting and Vernacular Historiography of a Rebellion in Ulster Oxford University Press pp 369 384 Beiner Guy 2021 When Monuments Fall The Significance of Decommemorating Eire Ireland 56 1 33 61 doi 10 1353 eir 2021 0001 S2CID 240526743 Idzerda Stanley J 1954 Iconoclasm during the French Revolution The American Historical Review 60 1 1 13 26 doi 10 2307 1842743 JSTOR 1842743 a b Lindsay Suzanne Glover 18 October 2014 The Revolutionary Exhumations at St Denis 1793 Center for the Study of Material amp Visual Cultures of Religion Yale University Thompson Victoria E Fall Winter 2012 The Creation Destruction and Recreation of Henri IV Seeing Popular Sovereignty in the Statue of a King History and Memory 24 2 5 40 doi 10 2979 histmemo 24 2 5 JSTOR 10 2979 histmemo 24 2 5 S2CID 159942339 Oliver Bette Wyn 2007 From Royal to National The Louvre Museum and the Bibliotheque Nationale Lexington Books pp 21 22 ISBN 978 0 7391 1861 0 OCLC 70883061 Foucault Michel 1986 Translated by Miskowiec Jay Of Other Spaces Diacritics Johns Hopkins University Press 16 1 22 27 doi 10 2307 464648 ISSN 0300 7162 JSTOR 464648 via JSTOR Translated from Des Espace Autres Architecture Mouvement Continuite in French 5 46 49 October 1984 Alternate translation available in Leach Neil ed 1997 Of Other Spaces Utopias and Heterotopias PDF Rethinking Architecture A Reader in Cultural Theory Routledge pp 330 336 ISBN 978 0 415 12826 1 Stanley J Idzerda Iconoclasm during the French Revolution In The American Historical Review Vol 60 No 1 Oct 1954 p 25 Deleuze Gilles and Felix Guattari A Thousand Plateaus Minneapolis MN University of Minnesota Press 1987 212 213 Greene Christopher M Alexandre Lenoir and the Musee des monuments francais during the French Revolution French Historical Studies 12 no 2 1981 pp 200 222 Ellul Michael 1982 Art and Architecture in Malta in the Early Nineteenth Century PDF Melitensia Historica pp 4 5 Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2016 Westcott Kathryn 18 January 2013 Letter boxes The red heart of the British streetscape BBC Archived from the original on 26 November 2016 Bonello Giovanni 14 January 2018 Mysteries of the Main Guard inscription Times of Malta Archived from the original on 14 January 2018 Mardaga 1993 p 121 Hennaut 2000 p 34 36 Avrich Paul 1980 The Martyrdom of Ferrer The Modern School Movement Anarchism and Education in the United States Princeton Princeton University Press pp 3 33 ISBN 978 0 691 04669 3 OCLC 489692159 p 33 Goldstone Nancy Bazelon Goldstone Lawrence 2003 Out of the Flames The Remarkable Story of a Fearless Scholar a Fatal Heresy and One of the Rarest Books in the World New York Broadway pp 313 316 ISBN 978 0 7679 0837 5 Uriona Alberto 6 March 2000 El Ayuntamiento de Bilbao restituye a su columna el busto de Unamuno nueve meses despues de su robo El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 14 November 2022 Camacho Isabel 9 June 1999 La cabeza perdida de don Miguel El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 14 November 2022 Victorio Macho y Unamuno notas para un centenario PDF in Spanish Real Fundacion Toledo Retrieved 14 November 2022 Gottke Florian Toppled Rotterdam Post Editions 2010 Meintjies Ilze Marie 16 February 2016 Protesting UCT Students Burn Historic Paintings Refuse To Leave Eyewitness News Zlatan Ibrahimovic statue Vandals try to saw through feet BBC Sport 12 December 2019 Retrieved 23 December 2019 via BBC News Daniels Tim Zlatan Ibrahimovic s Malmo Statue Set on Fire After Becoming Hammarby Part Owner Bleacher Report Retrieved 23 December 2019 Erberth Nellie December 22 2019 Zlatans staty vandaliserad igen nasan avsagad SVT Nyheter via www svt se Wiken Johan Erberth Nellie January 5 2020 Zlatanstatyn vandaliserad igen avsagad vid fotterna SVT Nyheter via www svt se a b Protesters in England topple statue of slave trader Edward Colston into harbor CBS News 7 June 2020 Archived from the original on 8 June 2020 Retrieved 8 June 2020 a b Siddique Haroon 7 June 2020 BLM protesters topple statue of Bristol slave trader Edward Colston The Guardian Archived from the original on 7 June 2020 Retrieved 7 June 2020 Zaks Dmitry 8 June 2020 UK slave trader s statue toppled in anti racism protests The Jakarta Post Agence France Presse Archived from the original on 8 June 2020 Retrieved 8 June 2020 George Floyd death Protesters tear down slave trader statue BBC News 7 June 2020 Archived from the original on 7 June 2020 Retrieved 7 June 2020 Sullivan Rory 7 June 2020 Black Lives Matter protesters pull down statue of 17th century UK slave trader The Independent Archived from the original on 7 June 2020 Retrieved 7 June 2020 Christopher Wharton The Hammer and Sickle The Role of Symbolism and Rituals in the Russian Revolution Archived 2010 05 28 at the Wayback Machine Auyezov Olzhas January 5 2011 Ukraine says blowing up Stalin statue was terrorism Reuters Retrieved 9 April 2011 SEE IT Crowd pulls down Confederate statue in North Carolina NY Daily News Retrieved 2017 08 15 Holland Jesse J Deadly rally accelerates ongoing removal of Confederate statues across U S chicagotribune com Retrieved 2017 08 15 War over Confederate statues reveals simple thinking on all sides NY Daily News Retrieved 2017 08 28 Jackson Amanda 15 August 2017 Protesters pull down Confederate statue in North Carolina CNN Retrieved 2017 08 15 Fultz Matthew 7 June 2020 Crew heard cheers as Confederate general s statue toppled in Monroe Park WTVR Taylor Alan Photos The Statues Brought Down Since the George Floyd Protests Began The Atlantic Retrieved 2020 07 29 Ebrahimji Alisha Moshtaghian Artemis These confederate statues have been removed since George Floyd s death CNN Retrieved 2020 06 11 San Francisco Archbishop Outraged Over Toppling Of Golden Gate Park Junipero Serra Statue 2020 06 21 Retrieved 2020 07 29 Schneider Gregory S Vozzella Laura 2021 09 08 Robert E Lee statue is removed in Richmond ex capital of Confederacy after months of protests and legal resistance Washington Post Retrieved 2021 09 08 a b Asmelash Leah 10 June 2020 Statues of Christopher Columbus are being dismounted across the country CNN Retrieved 2020 06 11 a b Williams David 19 June 2020 Protesters tore down a George Washington statue and set a fire on its head CNN Retrieved 2022 03 20 Trump Donald 6 July 2020 Statue of Frederick Douglass Torn Down in Rochester via Breitbart News This shows that these anarchists have no bounds Donald Trump Archived from the original on 10 July 2020 via Twitter Brooks Cornell 6 July 2020 FrederickDouglass s statue was ripped from the ground Some may call this REVENGE remove our WhiteSupremacists and we remove your Abolitionist I call this DESECRATION Listen to his words and know why his truth is admired and feared Cornell William Brooks Retrieved 20 March 2022 via Twitter Gold Michael 7 July 2020 Who Tore Down This Frederick Douglass Statue The New York Times Retrieved 2022 03 20 Further reading editAlloa Emmanuel 2013 Visual Studies in Byzantium A Pictorial Turnavant la lettre Journal of Visual Culture Sage 12 1 3 29 doi 10 1177 1470412912468704 ISSN 1470 4129 S2CID 191395643 On the conceptual background of Byzantine iconoclasm Aston Margaret 1988 England s Iconoclasts Laws against images Vol 1 Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 822438 9 2016 Broken Idols of the English Reformation Cambridge University Press Balafrej Lamia 2 September 2015 Islamic iconoclasm visual communication and the persistence of the image Interiors Informa UK 6 3 351 366 doi 10 1080 20419112 2015 1125659 ISSN 2041 9112 S2CID 131284640 Barasch Moshe 1992 Icon Studies in the History of an Idea New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 1172 9 Beiner Guy 2021 When Monuments Fall The Significance of Decommemorating Eire Ireland 56 1 33 61 doi 10 1353 eir 2021 0001 S2CID 240526743 Besancon Alain 2000 The Forbidden Image An Intellectual History of Iconoclasm University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 04414 9 Bevan Robert 2006 The Destruction of Memory Architecture at War Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 86189 319 2 Boldrick Stacy Leslie Brubaker and Richard Clay eds 2014 Striking Images Iconoclasms Past and Present Ashgate Scholarly studies of the destruction of images from prehistory to the Taliban Calisi Antonio 2017 I Difensori Dell icona La Partecipazione Dei Vescovi Dell Italia Meridionale Al Concilio Di Nicea II 787 CreateSpace ISBN 978 1978401099 Freedberg David 1977 The Structure of Byzantine and European Iconoclasm Pp 165 77 in Iconoclasm Papers Given at the Ninth Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies edited by A Bryer and J Herrin University of Birmingham Centre for Byzantine Studies ISBN 978 0 7044 0226 3 1985 1993 Iconoclasts and their Motives Second Horst Gerson Memorial Lecture University of Groningen Public 8 Fall Original print Maarssen Gary Schwartz 1985 ISBN 978 90 6179 056 3 Gamboni Dario 1997 The Destruction of Art Iconoclasm and Vandalism since the French Revolution Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 86189 316 1 Gwynn David M 2007 From Iconoclasm to Arianism The Construction of Christian Tradition in the Iconoclast Controversy PDF Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 47 225 251 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 09 16 Retrieved 2012 08 06 Hennaut Eric 2000 La Grand Place de Bruxelles Bruxelles ville d Art et d Histoire in French Vol 3 Brussels Editions de la Region de Bruxelles Capitale Ivanovic Filip 2010 Symbol and Icon Dionysius the Areopagite and the Iconoclastic Crisis Pickwick ISBN 978 1 60899 335 2 Karahan Anne 2014 Byzantine Iconoclasm Ideology and Quest for Power In Kolrud Kristine Prusac M eds Iconoclasm from antiquity to modernity Burlington VT Ashgate pp 75 94 ISBN 978 1 4094 7033 5 OCLC 841051222 Lambourne Nicola 2001 War Damage in Western Europe The Destruction of Historic Monuments During the Second World War Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1285 7 Narain Harsh 1993 The Ayodhya Temple Mosque Dispute Focus on Muslim Sources Delhi Penman Publishers Shourie Arun Sita Ram Goel Harsh Narain Jay Dubashi and Ram Swarup 1990 Hindu Temples What Happened to Them Vol I A Preliminary Survey ISBN 81 85990 49 2 Spicer Andrew 2017 Iconoclasm Renaissance Quarterly Cambridge University Press 70 3 1007 1022 doi 10 1086 693887 ISSN 0034 4338 S2CID 233344068 Topper David R Idolatry amp Infinity Of Art Math amp God BrownWalker ISBN 978 1 62734 506 4 Velikov Yuliyan 2011 Obrazŭt na Nevidimii a ikonopochitanieto i ikonootrit s anieto prez osmi vek Image of the Invisible Image Veneration and Iconoclasm in the Eighth Century in Bosnian Veliko Tarnovo Veliko Tarnovo University ISBN 978 954 524 779 8 OCLC 823743049 Weeraratna Senaka Repression of Buddhism in Sri Lanka by the Portuguese 1505 1658 Teodoro Studita Contro gli avversari delle icone Emanuela Fogliadini Prefazione Antonio Calisi Traduttore Jaca Book 2022 ISBN 978 8816417557 Le Patrimoine monumental de la Belgique Bruxelles PDF in French Vol 1B Pentagone E M Liege Pierre Mardaga 1993 External links edit nbsp Look up iconoclasm or iconoclast in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Iconoclasm nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Iconoclasm Iconoclasm in England Holy Cross College UK Design as Social Agent at the ICA by Kerry Skemp April 5 2009 Hindu temples destroyed by Muslim rulers in India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iconoclasm amp oldid 1185991280, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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