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Chapel of Saint Casimir

The Chapel of Saint Casimir is a chapel dedicated to Saint Casimir in Vilnius Cathedral. The chapel was built in 1623–36 after Prince Casimir (1458–1484) was canonized as saint. It was built and decorated in the Baroque style by Italian sculptors and architects commissioned by Sigismund III Vasa, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania.[2] The centerpiece of the chapel is a faux marble altar which holds the silver sarcophagus with Casimir's remains and the painting Three-Handed St. Casimir.

Interior of the Chapel of Saint Casimir
General information
Architectural styleBaroque architecture
LocationVilnius Cathedral
Town or cityVilnius
CountryLithuania
Coordinates54°40′39.54252″N 25°17′17.41344″E / 54.6776507000°N 25.2881704000°E / 54.6776507000; 25.2881704000
Named forSaint Casimir
Construction started1624
Inaugurated14 August 1634
Dimensions
Other dimensions17.5 by 17.5 metres (57 ft × 57 ft)[1]
Design and construction
Architect(s)Costante Tencalla

History edit

Prince Casimir was the second oldest son of the King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Casimir IV and Queen Elisabeth Habsburg of Hungary. After his elder brother Vladislaus was elected as King of Bohemia in 1471, Casimir became the heir apparent. However, he focused on devotion to God and became known for his piety. He became ill (most likely with tuberculosis) and died at the age of 25. Prince Casimir was buried in a crypt under a chapel that his father reserved for the royal family.[1] He was the first burial in this chapel. It is located to the left of the entrance and is now known as the Wołłowicz Chapel after Bishop Eustachy Wołłowicz. Other family members buried in the chapel were Casimir's brother Alexander Jagiellon and two wives of Casimir's nephew Sigismund II Augustus.[1] As Casimir's cult grew and he was his feast was approved by the pope in 1602, his remains were taken from the crypt and elevated to the altar in May 1604. The old small chapel did not suit the new function to house relics of a saint but no space could be found for a new chapel until Bishop Wołłowicz agreed to swap his chapel with the royal chapel in February 1624.[1] The old Wołłowicz's chapel was demolished and construction started for the new Chapel of Saint Casimir. King Sigismund III Vasa financed the construction and hired Italian architect Costante Tencalla for the chapel's plan. The construction was finished in 1636 and the relics were solemnly translated by four bishops to the new chapel on 14 August 1634.[1]

Three-Handed St. Casimir edit

 
Three-Handed St. Casimir without riza
 
Three-Handed St. Casimir with riza
 
Woodcut of Saint Casimir (1521)

Three-Handed St. Casimir is an anonymous painting of Saint Casmir which hangs under his silver sarcophagus in the chapel. It features Casimir with three hands (he has two right hands that each hold a lily) and is considered miraculous. The legend has it that the painter wanted to alter the composition and painted the second right hand, but he could not cover the first right hand – it kept reappearing. The legend was first recorded by Bernhard Leopold Tanner in 1689.[3] However, a study of the painting under UV light and X-ray during restoration works in 1982–1985 revealed that both hands were painted at the same time and there is no evidence of attempts to cover one of them.[4] Three hands is an unusual motif in religious art. Povilas Rėklaitis cited an example of Trojeručica, an icon of the Eastern Orthodox Church, as a possible inspiration.[5] The three hands are unique to this particular painting of Saint Casimir. While the figure of Saint Casimir was copied numerous times, the copies only have two hands.[5]

It is painted on a thin 45 by 75 centimetres (18 in × 30 in) wooden plank.[6] The overall composition is very similar to the woodcut published by papal legate Zacharias Ferreri in Casimir's first hagiography in 1521. The main differences are the third hand and that the woodcut is set outdoors, while the painting is set indoors.[6] It is believed that the woodcut and the painting were completed around the same time based on a lost original. Possibly this lost original was a portrait completed while Casimir was still alive but lost during a fire in Vilnius Cathedral in 1530.[7] The painting was touched up in 1594 as evidenced by an inscription in a Renaissance cartouche at the bottom which cites a line from Psalm 92: The righteous shall flourish like the palm tree: he shall grow like a cedar in Lebanon.[6][8] Likely at this time, the original pendant which is worn by Casimir and which depicted Madonna with child was replaced by the Order of the Golden Fleece. Saint Casimir did not receive the order and it was likely added to appease King Sigismund III Vasa.[9] The order is also present in the cartouche outside the chapel which records information about its completion in 1636.[10]

Murals edit

 
The Resurrection of Ursula

The chapel has two expressive murals by Florentine artist Michelangelo Palloni completed during the restoration work in 1692.[2]

The Opening of the Coffin of St. Casimir measures 285 by 402 centimetres (112 in × 158 in) and decorates the east wall. It depicts the opening of St. Casimir's coffin on August 16, 1604 during his canonization proceedings. The body in the coffin was found intact, 120 years after the burial. The saint is wearing a long red robe, decorated with stoat fur, and a ducal crown. Bishop Benedykt Woyna [pl], who wrote to Rome of a wonderful smell after the lid was lifted, has his hands raised to heaven in praise of the Lord.[2] Kneeling at the head of the saint is Gregorius Swiecicki, the canon at Vilnius Cathedral chapter, who was entrusted with Casimir's canonization process. Jan Kazimierz Sapieha who commissioned the painting stands on the right; Virgin Mary and Saint Peter, dressed in clothes of the time, stand on the left. Around them are priests with long candles in their hands.[2]

The Resurrection of Ursula measures 295 by 402 centimetres (116 in × 158 in) and decorates the west wall. It depicts the first known miracle of St. Casimir. After the death of a young girl Ursula, her father went to the coffin of the prince to pray for her and the girl miraculously resurrected. The artist skillfully depicts surprise and astonishment of the father, other relatives, and clergy.[2]

Sculptures of rulers edit

 
One of the eight sculptures of rulers traditionally identified as John I Albert

The chapel has eight sculptures of rulers that stand in marble niches in the four corners. At about 2.2 m (7 ft 3 in) in height, the sculptures are taller than life size.[11] They are carved from wood and plated in silver.[12] They were carved with particular attention to individualized details: attributes of power, clothes, facial details, hand gestures, and poses (they are turned a bit to the left or the right so they face the main altar better).[13] The author, date of creation, and identity of the figures are unknown and are subject to speculation by art historians.

The chapel originally had eight pure silver sculptures that measured about 1 m (3 ft 3 in) in height and that were melted during the Deluge (1655–1660), but they stood in the main altar.[12] The marble niches were probably created in 1620s or 1630s[12] but there is no mention that they had any sculptures in them until 1737 when an inventory listed eight wooden sculptures of kings and emperors.[14] According to Marija Matušakaitė, the sculptures are of late Baroque style and should be dated the second quarter of the 18th century.[12] The first claims that the sculptures depict Polish kings were recorded in a 1828 report of canonical visitation and in a 1835 book on the history of Vilnius by Michał Baliński [pt].[15] This theory of the Jagiellonian kings gained popularity and in 1878 the names were written in gilded letters on the postaments: Władysław II Jagiełło (Jogaila) (reigned 1386–1434), Władysław of Varna (1434–1444), Casimir IV Jagiellon (1447–1492), Saint Casimir, John I Albert (1492–1501), Alexander Jagiellon (1501–1506), Sigismund I the Old (1507–1548), and Sigismund II Augustus (1548–1572).[16] At some point, Lithuanian historiography replaced Władysław of Varna with Władysław IV Vasa (1632–1648).[17] The writings since has disappeared, but these names are often cited.[15]

Not all researchers agree with the traditional identification. Already in 1840 Józef Ignacy Kraszewski proposed that the sculptures depict royal saints[15] but the sculptures have no symbols or attributes of sainthood.[18] The sculptures are too detailed and personalized to depict abstract royals or saints.[18] Matušakaitė suggested that one of the sculptures depicts Vytautas, Grand Duke of Lithuania (1392–1430), and not Władysław of Varna or Władysław Vasa.[19] Mindaugas Paknys noted that two sculptures wear imperial crowns (other researchers considered them grand ducal caps as they are visually very similar)[20] and suggested that they depict Camimir's grandfather Albert II of Germany, elected but not crowned King of the Romans, and Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor, who raised orphaned Casimir's mother. According to Paknys, the other six sculptures depict Casimir's immediate family: grandfather Władysław Jagiełło, father Casimir, and brothers Vladislaus, John Albert, Alexander, and Sigismund.[21]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Rėklaitis 1958a.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Mural paintings at the Chapel of Saint Casimir of Vilnius Cathedral, Michelangelo Palloni". Europeana 280. europeana.eu. Retrieved 2016-05-04.
  3. ^ Maslauskaitė 2004, p. 115.
  4. ^ Maslauskaitė 2004, pp. 115–116.
  5. ^ a b Rėklaitis 1958b.
  6. ^ a b c Rėklaitis 1984.
  7. ^ Maslauskaitė 2004, pp. 114–115.
  8. ^ Blažiūnas 2012, p. 218.
  9. ^ Blažiūnas 2012, p. 219.
  10. ^ Maslauskaitė 2004, p. 116.
  11. ^ Bielinis 1988, p. 167.
  12. ^ a b c d Paknys 2012, p. 154.
  13. ^ Paknys 2012, pp. 153–154.
  14. ^ Paknys 2012, p. 156.
  15. ^ a b c Paknys 2012, p. 159.
  16. ^ Paknys 2012, p. 160.
  17. ^ Paknys 2012, p. 163.
  18. ^ a b Paknys 2012, p. 167.
  19. ^ Širmulis 2006, p. 190.
  20. ^ Paknys 2012, p. 170.
  21. ^ Paknys 2012, pp. 172–173.

Bibliography edit

  • Blažiūnas, Juozapas (2012). "Vilniaus miesto bažnyčių ir vienuolynų paveikslų tvarkyba nuo XVI a. antros pusės iki XVIII a. pabaigos" (PDF). Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis (in Lithuanian). 64. ISSN 1392-0316.
  • Bielinis, Jonas; et al., eds. (1988). Lietuvos TSR istorijos ir kultūros paminklų sąvadas (in Lithuanian). Vol. 1. Vilnius: Vyriausioji enciklopedijų redakcija. OCLC 21449203.
  • Maslauskaitė, Sigita (2004). "Šv. Kazimiero atvaizdas: pirmavaizdis ir kartotės" (PDF). Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis (in Lithuanian). 35. ISSN 1392-0316.
  • Paknys, Mindaugas (2012). "Šv. Kazimiero koplyčios karalių skulptūros. Ką apie jas žinome?". Lietuvos kultūros karališkasis dėmuo: įvaizdžiai, simboliai, reliktai. Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis (in Lithuanian). Vol. 65–66. Vilniaus dailės akademijos leidykla. ISBN 978-609-447-068-4.
  • Rėklaitis, Povilas (March 1958a). "Šv. Kazimiero koplyčia Vilniuje (I)". Aidai (in Lithuanian). 3 (108). ISSN 0002-208X.
  • Rėklaitis, Povilas (April 1958b). "Šv. Kazimiero koplyčia Vilniuje (II)". Aidai (in Lithuanian). 4 (109). ISSN 0002-208X.
  • Rėklaitis, Povilas (May–June 1984). "Prie šv. Kazimiero ikonografijos". Aidai (in Lithuanian). 3 (346). ISSN 0002-208X.
  • Širmulis, Alfredas (2006). "Vilniaus arkikatedros Šv. Kazimiero koplyčios valdovų statulų identifikavimas". Šventųjų relikvijos Lietuvos kultūroje. Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis (in Lithuanian). Vol. 41. Vilniaus dailės akademijos leidykla. ISBN 995-562-461-2.

chapel, saint, casimir, chapel, dedicated, saint, casimir, vilnius, cathedral, chapel, built, 1623, after, prince, casimir, 1458, 1484, canonized, saint, built, decorated, baroque, style, italian, sculptors, architects, commissioned, sigismund, vasa, king, pol. The Chapel of Saint Casimir is a chapel dedicated to Saint Casimir in Vilnius Cathedral The chapel was built in 1623 36 after Prince Casimir 1458 1484 was canonized as saint It was built and decorated in the Baroque style by Italian sculptors and architects commissioned by Sigismund III Vasa King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania 2 The centerpiece of the chapel is a faux marble altar which holds the silver sarcophagus with Casimir s remains and the painting Three Handed St Casimir Interior of the Chapel of Saint CasimirGeneral informationArchitectural styleBaroque architectureLocationVilnius CathedralTown or cityVilniusCountryLithuaniaCoordinates54 40 39 54252 N 25 17 17 41344 E 54 6776507000 N 25 2881704000 E 54 6776507000 25 2881704000Named forSaint CasimirConstruction started1624Inaugurated14 August 1634DimensionsOther dimensions17 5 by 17 5 metres 57 ft 57 ft 1 Design and constructionArchitect s Costante Tencalla Contents 1 History 2 Three Handed St Casimir 3 Murals 4 Sculptures of rulers 5 Gallery 6 References 7 BibliographyHistory editPrince Casimir was the second oldest son of the King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Casimir IV and Queen Elisabeth Habsburg of Hungary After his elder brother Vladislaus was elected as King of Bohemia in 1471 Casimir became the heir apparent However he focused on devotion to God and became known for his piety He became ill most likely with tuberculosis and died at the age of 25 Prince Casimir was buried in a crypt under a chapel that his father reserved for the royal family 1 He was the first burial in this chapel It is located to the left of the entrance and is now known as the Wollowicz Chapel after Bishop Eustachy Wollowicz Other family members buried in the chapel were Casimir s brother Alexander Jagiellon and two wives of Casimir s nephew Sigismund II Augustus 1 As Casimir s cult grew and he was his feast was approved by the pope in 1602 his remains were taken from the crypt and elevated to the altar in May 1604 The old small chapel did not suit the new function to house relics of a saint but no space could be found for a new chapel until Bishop Wollowicz agreed to swap his chapel with the royal chapel in February 1624 1 The old Wollowicz s chapel was demolished and construction started for the new Chapel of Saint Casimir King Sigismund III Vasa financed the construction and hired Italian architect Costante Tencalla for the chapel s plan The construction was finished in 1636 and the relics were solemnly translated by four bishops to the new chapel on 14 August 1634 1 Three Handed St Casimir edit nbsp Three Handed St Casimir without riza nbsp Three Handed St Casimir with riza nbsp Woodcut of Saint Casimir 1521 Three Handed St Casimir is an anonymous painting of Saint Casmir which hangs under his silver sarcophagus in the chapel It features Casimir with three hands he has two right hands that each hold a lily and is considered miraculous The legend has it that the painter wanted to alter the composition and painted the second right hand but he could not cover the first right hand it kept reappearing The legend was first recorded by Bernhard Leopold Tanner in 1689 3 However a study of the painting under UV light and X ray during restoration works in 1982 1985 revealed that both hands were painted at the same time and there is no evidence of attempts to cover one of them 4 Three hands is an unusual motif in religious art Povilas Reklaitis cited an example of Trojerucica an icon of the Eastern Orthodox Church as a possible inspiration 5 The three hands are unique to this particular painting of Saint Casimir While the figure of Saint Casimir was copied numerous times the copies only have two hands 5 It is painted on a thin 45 by 75 centimetres 18 in 30 in wooden plank 6 The overall composition is very similar to the woodcut published by papal legate Zacharias Ferreri in Casimir s first hagiography in 1521 The main differences are the third hand and that the woodcut is set outdoors while the painting is set indoors 6 It is believed that the woodcut and the painting were completed around the same time based on a lost original Possibly this lost original was a portrait completed while Casimir was still alive but lost during a fire in Vilnius Cathedral in 1530 7 The painting was touched up in 1594 as evidenced by an inscription in a Renaissance cartouche at the bottom which cites a line from Psalm 92 The righteous shall flourish like the palm tree he shall grow like a cedar in Lebanon 6 8 Likely at this time the original pendant which is worn by Casimir and which depicted Madonna with child was replaced by the Order of the Golden Fleece Saint Casimir did not receive the order and it was likely added to appease King Sigismund III Vasa 9 The order is also present in the cartouche outside the chapel which records information about its completion in 1636 10 Murals edit nbsp The Resurrection of UrsulaThe chapel has two expressive murals by Florentine artist Michelangelo Palloni completed during the restoration work in 1692 2 The Opening of the Coffin of St Casimir measures 285 by 402 centimetres 112 in 158 in and decorates the east wall It depicts the opening of St Casimir s coffin on August 16 1604 during his canonization proceedings The body in the coffin was found intact 120 years after the burial The saint is wearing a long red robe decorated with stoat fur and a ducal crown Bishop Benedykt Woyna pl who wrote to Rome of a wonderful smell after the lid was lifted has his hands raised to heaven in praise of the Lord 2 Kneeling at the head of the saint is Gregorius Swiecicki the canon at Vilnius Cathedral chapter who was entrusted with Casimir s canonization process Jan Kazimierz Sapieha who commissioned the painting stands on the right Virgin Mary and Saint Peter dressed in clothes of the time stand on the left Around them are priests with long candles in their hands 2 The Resurrection of Ursula measures 295 by 402 centimetres 116 in 158 in and decorates the west wall It depicts the first known miracle of St Casimir After the death of a young girl Ursula her father went to the coffin of the prince to pray for her and the girl miraculously resurrected The artist skillfully depicts surprise and astonishment of the father other relatives and clergy 2 Sculptures of rulers edit nbsp One of the eight sculptures of rulers traditionally identified as John I AlbertThe chapel has eight sculptures of rulers that stand in marble niches in the four corners At about 2 2 m 7 ft 3 in in height the sculptures are taller than life size 11 They are carved from wood and plated in silver 12 They were carved with particular attention to individualized details attributes of power clothes facial details hand gestures and poses they are turned a bit to the left or the right so they face the main altar better 13 The author date of creation and identity of the figures are unknown and are subject to speculation by art historians The chapel originally had eight pure silver sculptures that measured about 1 m 3 ft 3 in in height and that were melted during the Deluge 1655 1660 but they stood in the main altar 12 The marble niches were probably created in 1620s or 1630s 12 but there is no mention that they had any sculptures in them until 1737 when an inventory listed eight wooden sculptures of kings and emperors 14 According to Marija Matusakaite the sculptures are of late Baroque style and should be dated the second quarter of the 18th century 12 The first claims that the sculptures depict Polish kings were recorded in a 1828 report of canonical visitation and in a 1835 book on the history of Vilnius by Michal Balinski pt 15 This theory of the Jagiellonian kings gained popularity and in 1878 the names were written in gilded letters on the postaments Wladyslaw II Jagiello Jogaila reigned 1386 1434 Wladyslaw of Varna 1434 1444 Casimir IV Jagiellon 1447 1492 Saint Casimir John I Albert 1492 1501 Alexander Jagiellon 1501 1506 Sigismund I the Old 1507 1548 and Sigismund II Augustus 1548 1572 16 At some point Lithuanian historiography replaced Wladyslaw of Varna with Wladyslaw IV Vasa 1632 1648 17 The writings since has disappeared but these names are often cited 15 Not all researchers agree with the traditional identification Already in 1840 Jozef Ignacy Kraszewski proposed that the sculptures depict royal saints 15 but the sculptures have no symbols or attributes of sainthood 18 The sculptures are too detailed and personalized to depict abstract royals or saints 18 Matusakaite suggested that one of the sculptures depicts Vytautas Grand Duke of Lithuania 1392 1430 and not Wladyslaw of Varna or Wladyslaw Vasa 19 Mindaugas Paknys noted that two sculptures wear imperial crowns other researchers considered them grand ducal caps as they are visually very similar 20 and suggested that they depict Camimir s grandfather Albert II of Germany elected but not crowned King of the Romans and Frederick III Holy Roman Emperor who raised orphaned Casimir s mother According to Paknys the other six sculptures depict Casimir s immediate family grandfather Wladyslaw Jagiello father Casimir and brothers Vladislaus John Albert Alexander and Sigismund 21 Gallery edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chapel of St Casimir in Vilnius Cathedral nbsp Chapel from the outside nbsp Gates to the chapel from inside the cathedral in 1912 by Jozef BalzukiewiczReferences edit a b c d e Reklaitis 1958a a b c d e Mural paintings at the Chapel of Saint Casimir of Vilnius Cathedral Michelangelo Palloni Europeana 280 europeana eu Retrieved 2016 05 04 Maslauskaite 2004 p 115 Maslauskaite 2004 pp 115 116 a b Reklaitis 1958b a b c Reklaitis 1984 Maslauskaite 2004 pp 114 115 Blaziunas 2012 p 218 Blaziunas 2012 p 219 Maslauskaite 2004 p 116 Bielinis 1988 p 167 a b c d Paknys 2012 p 154 Paknys 2012 pp 153 154 Paknys 2012 p 156 a b c Paknys 2012 p 159 Paknys 2012 p 160 Paknys 2012 p 163 a b Paknys 2012 p 167 Sirmulis 2006 p 190 Paknys 2012 p 170 Paknys 2012 pp 172 173 Bibliography editBlaziunas Juozapas 2012 Vilniaus miesto baznyciu ir vienuolynu paveikslu tvarkyba nuo XVI a antros puses iki XVIII a pabaigos PDF Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis in Lithuanian 64 ISSN 1392 0316 Bielinis Jonas et al eds 1988 Lietuvos TSR istorijos ir kulturos paminklu savadas in Lithuanian Vol 1 Vilnius Vyriausioji enciklopediju redakcija OCLC 21449203 Maslauskaite Sigita 2004 Sv Kazimiero atvaizdas pirmavaizdis ir kartotes PDF Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis in Lithuanian 35 ISSN 1392 0316 Paknys Mindaugas 2012 Sv Kazimiero koplycios karaliu skulpturos Ka apie jas zinome Lietuvos kulturos karaliskasis demuo įvaizdziai simboliai reliktai Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis in Lithuanian Vol 65 66 Vilniaus dailes akademijos leidykla ISBN 978 609 447 068 4 Reklaitis Povilas March 1958a Sv Kazimiero koplycia Vilniuje I Aidai in Lithuanian 3 108 ISSN 0002 208X Reklaitis Povilas April 1958b Sv Kazimiero koplycia Vilniuje II Aidai in Lithuanian 4 109 ISSN 0002 208X Reklaitis Povilas May June 1984 Prie sv Kazimiero ikonografijos Aidai in Lithuanian 3 346 ISSN 0002 208X Sirmulis Alfredas 2006 Vilniaus arkikatedros Sv Kazimiero koplycios valdovu statulu identifikavimas Sventuju relikvijos Lietuvos kulturoje Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis in Lithuanian Vol 41 Vilniaus dailes akademijos leidykla ISBN 995 562 461 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chapel of Saint Casimir amp oldid 1168248879, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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