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Vézelay Abbey

Vézelay Abbey (French: Abbaye Sainte-Marie-Madeleine de Vézelay) is a Benedictine and Cluniac monastery in Vézelay in the east-central French department of Yonne. It was constructed between 1120 and 1150. The Benedictine abbey church, now the Basilica of Sainte-Marie-Madeleine (Saint Mary Magdalene), with its complex program of imagery in sculpted capitals and portals, is one of the great masterpieces of Burgundian Romanesque art and architecture.[1] Sacked by the Huguenots in 1569, the building suffered neglect in the 17th and the 18th centuries and some further damage during the period of the French Revolution.[2]

Vézelay, Church and Hill
UNESCO World Heritage Site
The abbey church in Vézelay
LocationBurgundy, France
CriteriaCultural: i, vi
Reference84
Inscription1979 (3rd Session)
Area183 ha
Buffer zone18,373 ha
Websitewww.basiliquedevezelay.org
Coordinates47°27′59″N 3°44′55″E / 47.46639°N 3.74861°E / 47.46639; 3.74861
Location of Vézelay
Vézelay Abbey (France)

The church and hill at Vézelay were added to the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites in 1979 because of their importance in medieval Christianity and outstanding architecture.[1]

Relics of Mary Magdalene can be seen inside the Basilica.

History edit

The Benedictine abbey of Vézelay was founded,[3] as many abbeys were, on land that had been a late Roman villa, of Vercellus (Vercelle becoming Vézelay). The villa had passed into the hands of the Carolingians and devolved to a Carolingian count, Girart, of Roussillon. The two convents he founded there were looted and dispersed by Moorish raiding parties in the 8th century, and a hilltop convent was burnt by Norman raiders. In the 9th century, the abbey was refounded under the guidance of Badilo, who became an affiliate of the reformed Benedictine order of Cluny. Vézelay also stood at the beginning of one of the four major routes through France for pilgrims going to Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, in the north-western corner of Spain.

About 1050 the monks of Vézelay began to claim to hold the relics of Mary Magdalene, brought, they said, from the Holy Land either by their 9th-century founder-saint, Badilo, or by envoys despatched by him.[4] A little later a monk of Vézelay declared that he had detected in a crypt at St-Maximin in Provence, carved on an empty sarcophagus, a representation of the Unction at Bethany, when Jesus' head was anointed by Mary of Bethany, who was assumed in the Middle Ages to be Mary Magdalene. The monks of Vézelay pronounced this to be Mary Magdalene's tomb, from which her relics had been translated to their abbey. Freed captives then brought their chains as votive objects to the abbey, and it was the newly elected Abbot Geoffroy in 1037 who had the ironwork melted down and reforged as wrought iron railings surrounding the Magdalene's altar.[4] Thus the erection of one of the finest examples of Romanesque architecture which followed was made possible by pilgrims to the declared relics and these tactile examples demonstrating the efficacy of prayers. Mary Magdalene is the prototype of the penitent, and Vézelay has remained an important place of pilgrimage for the Catholic faithful, though the actual claimed relics were torched by Huguenots in the 16th century.

 
Floorplan of Vézelay shows the adjustment in vaulting between the choir and the new nave.

To accommodate the influx of pilgrims a new abbey church was begun, dedicated on April 21, 1104, but the expense of building so increased the tax burden on the abbey's lands that the peasants rose up and killed the abbot. The crush of pilgrims was such that an extended narthex (an enclosed porch) was built, inaugurated by Pope Innocent II in 1132, to help accommodate the pilgrim throng.

Saint Bernard of Clairvaux preached at Vézelay in favor of a second crusade at Easter 1146, in front of King Louis VII. Richard I of England and Philip II of France met there and spent three months at the Abbey in 1190 before leaving for the Third Crusade. Thomas Becket, in exile, chose Vézelay for his Whitsunday sermon in 1166, announcing the excommunication of the main supporters of his English King, Henry II, and threatening the King with excommunication too. The nave, which had been burnt once, with great loss of life, burned again in 1165, after which it was rebuilt in its present form.

The abbey's self-assured monastic community was prepared to defend its liberties and privileges against all comers:[5] the bishops of Autun, who challenged its claims to exemption; the counts of Nevers, who claimed jurisdiction in their court and rights of hospitality at Vézelay; the abbey of Cluny, which had reformed its rule and sought to maintain control of the abbot within its hierarchy; the townsmen of Vézelay, who demanded a modicum of communal self-government.

The beginning of Vézelay's decline coincided with the well-publicized discovery in 1279 of the body of Mary Magdalene at Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume in Provence, given regal patronage by Charles II, the Angevin king of Sicily. When Charles erected a Dominican convent at La Sainte-Baume, the shrine was found intact, with an explanatory inscription stating why the relics had been hidden. The local Dominican friars compiled an account of miracles that these relics had wrought. This discovery undermined Vézelay's position as the principal shrine of the Magdalene in Europe.

After the Revolution, Vézelay stood in danger of collapse. In 1834 the newly appointed French inspector of historical monuments, Prosper Mérimée (more familiar as the author of Carmen), warned that it was about to collapse, and on his recommendation the young architect Eugène Viollet-le-Duc was appointed to supervise a massive and successful restoration, undertaken in several stages between 1840 and 1861, during which his team replaced a great deal of the weathered and vandalized sculpture. The flying buttresses that support the nave are his.[6]

Interpretation of the tympanum edit

The tympanum of the central portal of the Madeleine de Vézelay is different from its counterparts across Europe. From the beginning, its tympanum was specifically designed to function as a spiritual defense of the Crusades and to portray a Christian allegory to the Crusaders' mission. When compared to contemporary churches such as St. Lazare d'Autun and St. Pierre de Moissac, the distinctiveness of Vézelay becomes apparent.

The art historian George Zarnecki wrote, "To most people the term Romanesque sculpture brings to mind a large church portal, dominated by a tympanum carved with an apocalyptic vision, usually the Last Judgment."[7] This is true in most cases, but Vézelay is an exception. In a 1944 article, Adolf Katzenellenbogen interpreted Vézelay's tympanum as referring to the First Crusade and depicting the Pentecostal mission of the Apostles.[8]

Thirty years before the Vézelay tympanum was carved, Pope Urban II planned on announcing his call for a crusade at La Madeleine[citation needed]. In 1095, Urban altered his plans and preached for the First Crusade at the Council of Clermont, but Vézelay remained a central figure in the history of the crusades. The tympanum was completed in 1130. Fifteen years after its completion, Bernard of Clairvaux chose Vézelay as the place from which he would call for a Second Crusade. Vézelay was even the staging point for the Third Crusade. It is there that King Richard the Lionheart of England and King Philip Augustus of France met and joined their armies for a combined western invasion of the holy land. It is appropriate, therefore, that Vézelay's portal reflect its place in the history of the crusades.

The art historian Peter Low argues for the central tympanum as a visualization of both the Pentecost and a passage from book of Ephesians chapter 2—proclaiming to the visiting laity the tenets of Benedictine monasticism and to visiting pilgrims the extent and reach of a universalizing church that welcomes "the full, even monstrous range of the globe's inhabitants."[9]

Lintel edit

 
Detail of right side

The lintel of the Vézelay portal portrays the "ungodly" people of the world. It is a depiction of the first Pentecostal Mission to spread the word of God to all the people of the world. The figures in the tympanum who have not received the Word of God are depicted as not fully human. Some are shown with pig snouts, others are misshapen, and several are depicted as dwarves. One pygmy in particular is depicted as mounting a horse with the assistance of a ladder. On the far right, there is a man with elephantine ears, while in the center we see a man covered in feathers. The architects and artisans depicted the unbelievers as physically grotesque in order to provide a visual image of what they saw as the non-believers' moral turpitude. This is a direct reflection of Western perceptions of foreigners such as the Moors, who were being specifically targeted by the Crusaders. Even Pope Urban II, in his call for a crusade, helped promote this ethnocentric perception of the Turks by calling on westerners to, "exterminate this vile race."[10] Most Westerners had absolutely no idea what the Turks and Muslims looked like, and they assumed that an absence of Christianity must coincide with repulsive physical attributes. It has also been argued that the disbelievers were carved as deformed monsters in an effort to dehumanize them. By dehumanizing their enemies in art, the Crusaders' mission to capture the holy land and convert or kill the Muslims was glorified and sanctified. The Vézelay lintel is, therefore, a political statement as well as a religious one.

Comparison with other contemporary portals edit

Vézelay's political motivation becomes all the more apparent when compared with contemporary portal designs from other churches around France. The Vézelay lintel is distinct, but some comparisons can be made between it and other Romanesque portal sculptures of the time. Vézelay's lintel is comparable to the St. Lazare lintel in Autun in that both show humans who have sinned. While the Vézelay lintel is devoted to the depiction of "heathens," the Autun lintel shows the damned souls on Judgment Day. The similarity between both lintels is due in large part to the fact that the same master artisan, Master Gislebertus, was the primary architect on both sites. "Gislebertus ... began his career at Cluny, then worked on the original west facade at Vézelay, and c. 1120 moved to Autun."[11] In addition, the two tympana are similar in that they follow the tradition of placing the exaggerated Christ in the center of the image. Here is where the similarity stops, however. Autun is more traditional and typical of the Romanesque portal carvings. It depicts the Second Coming, which is a popular and typical depiction in Romanesque art. Frightful images of demons abound. The goals of the two different tympana are reflected in their design; Autun is designed to frighten people back to church while Vézelay is designed as a political statement to support the crusades.

Lower compartments edit

 
Detail of centre

The lower four compartments of the Vézelay tympanum show the nations that had already received the Gospels. They include the Byzantines, Armenians, and Ethiopians. The inclusion of the Byzantines is particularly important because it was the Byzantines who initially requested a Crusade to the holy land. The Byzantines had lost Jerusalem to the Seljuk Turks through warfare, and they were eager to seek western military support to reclaim that territory.

The characters in the lower Vézelay compartments are regal and well proportioned. They are a direct contrast to their "heathen" counterparts in the lintel. They are human as opposed to monstrous. In the eyes of the designers, they had received God's grace and are thus pictured as fully human in every detail. These compartments can, therefore, can be seen as an allegory for the crusading nations. The Crusader armies were made up of many different nationalities bound only by faith in the same God. Nations that had previously warred with one another were suddenly united for a common goal. The lower tympanum compartments are an expression of this newfound solidarity.

Upper compartments edit

While the lower four compartments represent the Christian nations, the upper four compartments are a representation of the second mission of the Apostles. According to the Bible, "many wonders and signs were done by the apostles."[12] These wonders included the healing of the sick and the casting out of demons and devils. These acts are represented in the upper four compartments of the Vézelay tympanum. In one compartment, a pair of lepers is shown with looks of astonishment as they compare limbs that have been miraculously healed. The demons are analogous to the non-Christians inhabiting the holy land. In reference to the Turkish take-over of the holy lands, Pope Urban said, "What a disgrace that a race so despicable, degenerate, and enslaved by demons should thus overcome a people endowed with faith in Almighty God!"[10] It is not difficult to see the parallel between the Apostles' mission of casting out demons, and the designer's view of the crusaders' mission of casting out "a race ... enslaved by demons." It is further evidence of the Vézelay portal's peculiar political motives.

Central portal edit

 
The central portal

The central portion of the Vézelay tympanum continues this process of politicizing religion. The central tympanum shows a benevolent Christ conveying his message to the Apostles, who flank him on either side. This Christ is distinct in Romanesque architecture. He is a stark contrast to the angry Christ of the St. Pierre de Moissac tympanum. The Moissac Christ is a forbidding figure that sits upon the throne of judgment. It is another example of the typical Romanesque Christ. His face is without caring or emotion. He holds the scrolls containing the deeds of mankind, and he stands ready to execute punishment on the damned. The Vézelay Christ, however, is pictured contraposto with arms wide. He is delivering a message, not exacting punishment. The Vézelay tympanum is remarkable because it is so different. The Vézelay Christ is sending the Crusaders out—he is not judging them. Indeed, the Crusaders were guaranteed remission of all sins if they participated in the Crusades. A forbidding Christ placed upon the throne of judgment would have been out of place at Vézelay. That is why the traditional Romanesque Christ, with its angry stare, was replaced at Vézelay by a kind and welcoming Christ with arms wide open.

Astronomical alignment edit

 
Looking east through nave on 23 June 1976, two days after the summer solstice
 
Mary Magdalene's relics in the crypt

In 1976, Hugues Delautre, one of the Franciscan fathers charged with stewardship of the Vézelay sanctuary, discovered that beyond the customary east-west orientation of the structure, the architecture of La Madeleine incorporates the relative positions of the Earth and the Sun into its design. Every June, just before the feast day of Saint John the Baptist, the astronomical dimensions of the church are revealed as the sun reaches its highest point of the year, at local noon on the summer solstice, when the sunlight coming through the southern clerestory windows casts a series of illuminated spots precisely along the longitudinal center of the nave floor.[13][14][15][16][17]

See also edit

  • Commons:Great Romanesque tympanums in France

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "Vézelay, Church and Hill". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
  2. ^ Charles Porée, L’abbaye de Vézelay, Paris 1930, pp. 18-19.
  3. ^ The primary source for the history of Vézelay is a codex compiled in the twelfth century, containing the abbey's annals, a cartulary, a history of the early counts of Nevers, and much besides, in the Bibliothèque municipale, Auxerre, MS 227; it was edited by R. B. C. Huygens, in his magisterial Monumenta Vizeliacensia: Textes relatifs à l'histoire de l'abbaye de Vézelay (Corpus Christianorum) Turnhout, Belgium, 1976.
  4. ^ a b Susan Haskins (30 September 2011). Mary Magdalen: Truth and Myth. Random House. pp. 115–118. ISBN 978-1-4464-9942-9.
  5. ^ This occasioned the compiling of the codex now at Auxerre.
  6. ^ The intervention of Viollet-le-Duc is briefly told in Kevin D. Murphy, Memory and Modernity: Viollet-le-Duc at Vézelay, 2000.
  7. ^ Zarnecki, George. Romanesque Art. New York: University Books, 1971. Pg. 57
  8. ^ Kline, Naomi Reed (2003). Maps of Medieval Thought: The Hereford Paradigm. see footnote on cited page for Katzenellenbogen article citation; (access is restricted on JSTOR). Boydell Press. p. 207. ISBN 9780851159379. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  9. ^ Low, Peter (2003). ""You Who Once Were Far Off": Enlivening Scripture in the Main Portal at Vézelay". The Art Bulletin. 85 (3): 469–489. doi:10.2307/3177383. ISSN 0004-3079 – via Jstor.
  10. ^ a b Geary, Patrick. Readings in Medieval History. Canada: Broadview Press, 1997. Pg. 388
  11. ^ Marilyn Sostad. Medieval Art
  12. ^ The Acts. 2.43
  13. ^ Delautre, Hugues (October 1979). "Regard renouvelé sur l'église de la Madeleine" [Fresh look at the church of La Madeleine]. Zodiaque. Solstices à Vézelay (in French). Vol. 122. Les ateliers de la Pierre-qui-Vire. pp. 1–6.
  14. ^ Delautre, Hugues (October 1979). "Entretien au sujet des éclairages des solstices à Vézelay" [Discussion of solstice illuminations at Vézelay]. Zodiaque. Solstices à Vézelay (in French). Vol. 122. Les ateliers de la Pierre-qui-Vire. pp. 7–16.
  15. ^ Delautre, Hugue; Gréal, Jacqueline (1981). "Architecture cosmique et mystique de la lumière" [Cosmic and mystical architecture of light]. La Madeleine de Vézelay, Guide et plans (in French). Lescuyer, Lyon: Editions Franciscaines. pp. 27–29. ISBN 2-85020-001-8.
  16. ^ Oursel, Raymond (1993). "Les taches solaires" [Sunspots]. Lumières de Vézelay [Lights of Vézelay] (in French). Abbaye Sainte-Marie de la Pierre-qui-Vire (Yonne): Editions Zodiaque. pp. 21, 105–109. ISBN 2-7369-0203-3.
  17. ^ Voreux, Damien (1994). "Les jeux de la pierre et du soleil" [Games of sun and stone]. Vézelay (in French). Edilarge: Editions Ouest-France. pp. 15–18. ISBN 2-7373-1608-1.

External links edit

  • Jerusalem monastic community Vézelay - present state
  • Maison du visiteur, Vezelay
  • Vézelay page on the site Bourgogne Romane
  • Gallery of detailed images

vézelay, abbey, french, abbaye, sainte, marie, madeleine, vézelay, benedictine, cluniac, monastery, vézelay, east, central, french, department, yonne, constructed, between, 1120, 1150, benedictine, abbey, church, basilica, sainte, marie, madeleine, saint, mary. Vezelay Abbey French Abbaye Sainte Marie Madeleine de Vezelay is a Benedictine and Cluniac monastery in Vezelay in the east central French department of Yonne It was constructed between 1120 and 1150 The Benedictine abbey church now the Basilica of Sainte Marie Madeleine Saint Mary Magdalene with its complex program of imagery in sculpted capitals and portals is one of the great masterpieces of Burgundian Romanesque art and architecture 1 Sacked by the Huguenots in 1569 the building suffered neglect in the 17th and the 18th centuries and some further damage during the period of the French Revolution 2 Vezelay Church and HillUNESCO World Heritage SiteThe abbey church in VezelayLocationBurgundy FranceCriteriaCultural i viReference84Inscription1979 3rd Session Area183 haBuffer zone18 373 haWebsitewww wbr basiliquedevezelay wbr orgCoordinates47 27 59 N 3 44 55 E 47 46639 N 3 74861 E 47 46639 3 74861Location of VezelayShow map of BurgundyVezelay Abbey France Show map of FranceThe church and hill at Vezelay were added to the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites in 1979 because of their importance in medieval Christianity and outstanding architecture 1 Relics of Mary Magdalene can be seen inside the Basilica Contents 1 History 2 Interpretation of the tympanum 2 1 Lintel 2 2 Comparison with other contemporary portals 2 3 Lower compartments 2 4 Upper compartments 2 5 Central portal 3 Astronomical alignment 4 See also 5 Notes 6 External linksHistory editThe Benedictine abbey of Vezelay was founded 3 as many abbeys were on land that had been a late Roman villa of Vercellus Vercelle becoming Vezelay The villa had passed into the hands of the Carolingians and devolved to a Carolingian count Girart of Roussillon The two convents he founded there were looted and dispersed by Moorish raiding parties in the 8th century and a hilltop convent was burnt by Norman raiders In the 9th century the abbey was refounded under the guidance of Badilo who became an affiliate of the reformed Benedictine order of Cluny Vezelay also stood at the beginning of one of the four major routes through France for pilgrims going to Santiago de Compostela in Galicia in the north western corner of Spain About 1050 the monks of Vezelay began to claim to hold the relics of Mary Magdalene brought they said from the Holy Land either by their 9th century founder saint Badilo or by envoys despatched by him 4 A little later a monk of Vezelay declared that he had detected in a crypt at St Maximin in Provence carved on an empty sarcophagus a representation of the Unction at Bethany when Jesus head was anointed by Mary of Bethany who was assumed in the Middle Ages to be Mary Magdalene The monks of Vezelay pronounced this to be Mary Magdalene s tomb from which her relics had been translated to their abbey Freed captives then brought their chains as votive objects to the abbey and it was the newly elected Abbot Geoffroy in 1037 who had the ironwork melted down and reforged as wrought iron railings surrounding the Magdalene s altar 4 Thus the erection of one of the finest examples of Romanesque architecture which followed was made possible by pilgrims to the declared relics and these tactile examples demonstrating the efficacy of prayers Mary Magdalene is the prototype of the penitent and Vezelay has remained an important place of pilgrimage for the Catholic faithful though the actual claimed relics were torched by Huguenots in the 16th century nbsp Floorplan of Vezelay shows the adjustment in vaulting between the choir and the new nave To accommodate the influx of pilgrims a new abbey church was begun dedicated on April 21 1104 but the expense of building so increased the tax burden on the abbey s lands that the peasants rose up and killed the abbot The crush of pilgrims was such that an extended narthex an enclosed porch was built inaugurated by Pope Innocent II in 1132 to help accommodate the pilgrim throng Saint Bernard of Clairvaux preached at Vezelay in favor of a second crusade at Easter 1146 in front of King Louis VII Richard I of England and Philip II of France met there and spent three months at the Abbey in 1190 before leaving for the Third Crusade Thomas Becket in exile chose Vezelay for his Whitsunday sermon in 1166 announcing the excommunication of the main supporters of his English King Henry II and threatening the King with excommunication too The nave which had been burnt once with great loss of life burned again in 1165 after which it was rebuilt in its present form The abbey s self assured monastic community was prepared to defend its liberties and privileges against all comers 5 the bishops of Autun who challenged its claims to exemption the counts of Nevers who claimed jurisdiction in their court and rights of hospitality at Vezelay the abbey of Cluny which had reformed its rule and sought to maintain control of the abbot within its hierarchy the townsmen of Vezelay who demanded a modicum of communal self government The beginning of Vezelay s decline coincided with the well publicized discovery in 1279 of the body of Mary Magdalene at Saint Maximin la Sainte Baume in Provence given regal patronage by Charles II the Angevin king of Sicily When Charles erected a Dominican convent at La Sainte Baume the shrine was found intact with an explanatory inscription stating why the relics had been hidden The local Dominican friars compiled an account of miracles that these relics had wrought This discovery undermined Vezelay s position as the principal shrine of the Magdalene in Europe After the Revolution Vezelay stood in danger of collapse In 1834 the newly appointed French inspector of historical monuments Prosper Merimee more familiar as the author of Carmen warned that it was about to collapse and on his recommendation the young architect Eugene Viollet le Duc was appointed to supervise a massive and successful restoration undertaken in several stages between 1840 and 1861 during which his team replaced a great deal of the weathered and vandalized sculpture The flying buttresses that support the nave are his 6 Interpretation of the tympanum editThe tympanum of the central portal of the Madeleine de Vezelay is different from its counterparts across Europe From the beginning its tympanum was specifically designed to function as a spiritual defense of the Crusades and to portray a Christian allegory to the Crusaders mission When compared to contemporary churches such as St Lazare d Autun and St Pierre de Moissac the distinctiveness of Vezelay becomes apparent The art historian George Zarnecki wrote To most people the term Romanesque sculpture brings to mind a large church portal dominated by a tympanum carved with an apocalyptic vision usually the Last Judgment 7 This is true in most cases but Vezelay is an exception In a 1944 article Adolf Katzenellenbogen interpreted Vezelay s tympanum as referring to the First Crusade and depicting the Pentecostal mission of the Apostles 8 Thirty years before the Vezelay tympanum was carved Pope Urban II planned on announcing his call for a crusade at La Madeleine citation needed In 1095 Urban altered his plans and preached for the First Crusade at the Council of Clermont but Vezelay remained a central figure in the history of the crusades The tympanum was completed in 1130 Fifteen years after its completion Bernard of Clairvaux chose Vezelay as the place from which he would call for a Second Crusade Vezelay was even the staging point for the Third Crusade It is there that King Richard the Lionheart of England and King Philip Augustus of France met and joined their armies for a combined western invasion of the holy land It is appropriate therefore that Vezelay s portal reflect its place in the history of the crusades The art historian Peter Low argues for the central tympanum as a visualization of both the Pentecost and a passage from book of Ephesians chapter 2 proclaiming to the visiting laity the tenets of Benedictine monasticism and to visiting pilgrims the extent and reach of a universalizing church that welcomes the full even monstrous range of the globe s inhabitants 9 Lintel edit nbsp Detail of right sideThe lintel of the Vezelay portal portrays the ungodly people of the world It is a depiction of the first Pentecostal Mission to spread the word of God to all the people of the world The figures in the tympanum who have not received the Word of God are depicted as not fully human Some are shown with pig snouts others are misshapen and several are depicted as dwarves One pygmy in particular is depicted as mounting a horse with the assistance of a ladder On the far right there is a man with elephantine ears while in the center we see a man covered in feathers The architects and artisans depicted the unbelievers as physically grotesque in order to provide a visual image of what they saw as the non believers moral turpitude This is a direct reflection of Western perceptions of foreigners such as the Moors who were being specifically targeted by the Crusaders Even Pope Urban II in his call for a crusade helped promote this ethnocentric perception of the Turks by calling on westerners to exterminate this vile race 10 Most Westerners had absolutely no idea what the Turks and Muslims looked like and they assumed that an absence of Christianity must coincide with repulsive physical attributes It has also been argued that the disbelievers were carved as deformed monsters in an effort to dehumanize them By dehumanizing their enemies in art the Crusaders mission to capture the holy land and convert or kill the Muslims was glorified and sanctified The Vezelay lintel is therefore a political statement as well as a religious one Comparison with other contemporary portals edit Vezelay s political motivation becomes all the more apparent when compared with contemporary portal designs from other churches around France The Vezelay lintel is distinct but some comparisons can be made between it and other Romanesque portal sculptures of the time Vezelay s lintel is comparable to the St Lazare lintel in Autun in that both show humans who have sinned While the Vezelay lintel is devoted to the depiction of heathens the Autun lintel shows the damned souls on Judgment Day The similarity between both lintels is due in large part to the fact that the same master artisan Master Gislebertus was the primary architect on both sites Gislebertus began his career at Cluny then worked on the original west facade at Vezelay and c 1120 moved to Autun 11 In addition the two tympana are similar in that they follow the tradition of placing the exaggerated Christ in the center of the image Here is where the similarity stops however Autun is more traditional and typical of the Romanesque portal carvings It depicts the Second Coming which is a popular and typical depiction in Romanesque art Frightful images of demons abound The goals of the two different tympana are reflected in their design Autun is designed to frighten people back to church while Vezelay is designed as a political statement to support the crusades Lower compartments edit nbsp Detail of centreThe lower four compartments of the Vezelay tympanum show the nations that had already received the Gospels They include the Byzantines Armenians and Ethiopians The inclusion of the Byzantines is particularly important because it was the Byzantines who initially requested a Crusade to the holy land The Byzantines had lost Jerusalem to the Seljuk Turks through warfare and they were eager to seek western military support to reclaim that territory The characters in the lower Vezelay compartments are regal and well proportioned They are a direct contrast to their heathen counterparts in the lintel They are human as opposed to monstrous In the eyes of the designers they had received God s grace and are thus pictured as fully human in every detail These compartments can therefore can be seen as an allegory for the crusading nations The Crusader armies were made up of many different nationalities bound only by faith in the same God Nations that had previously warred with one another were suddenly united for a common goal The lower tympanum compartments are an expression of this newfound solidarity Upper compartments edit While the lower four compartments represent the Christian nations the upper four compartments are a representation of the second mission of the Apostles According to the Bible many wonders and signs were done by the apostles 12 These wonders included the healing of the sick and the casting out of demons and devils These acts are represented in the upper four compartments of the Vezelay tympanum In one compartment a pair of lepers is shown with looks of astonishment as they compare limbs that have been miraculously healed The demons are analogous to the non Christians inhabiting the holy land In reference to the Turkish take over of the holy lands Pope Urban said What a disgrace that a race so despicable degenerate and enslaved by demons should thus overcome a people endowed with faith in Almighty God 10 It is not difficult to see the parallel between the Apostles mission of casting out demons and the designer s view of the crusaders mission of casting out a race enslaved by demons It is further evidence of the Vezelay portal s peculiar political motives Central portal edit nbsp The central portalThe central portion of the Vezelay tympanum continues this process of politicizing religion The central tympanum shows a benevolent Christ conveying his message to the Apostles who flank him on either side This Christ is distinct in Romanesque architecture He is a stark contrast to the angry Christ of the St Pierre de Moissac tympanum The Moissac Christ is a forbidding figure that sits upon the throne of judgment It is another example of the typical Romanesque Christ His face is without caring or emotion He holds the scrolls containing the deeds of mankind and he stands ready to execute punishment on the damned The Vezelay Christ however is pictured contraposto with arms wide He is delivering a message not exacting punishment The Vezelay tympanum is remarkable because it is so different The Vezelay Christ is sending the Crusaders out he is not judging them Indeed the Crusaders were guaranteed remission of all sins if they participated in the Crusades A forbidding Christ placed upon the throne of judgment would have been out of place at Vezelay That is why the traditional Romanesque Christ with its angry stare was replaced at Vezelay by a kind and welcoming Christ with arms wide open Astronomical alignment edit nbsp Looking east through nave on 23 June 1976 two days after the summer solstice nbsp Mary Magdalene s relics in the cryptIn 1976 Hugues Delautre one of the Franciscan fathers charged with stewardship of the Vezelay sanctuary discovered that beyond the customary east west orientation of the structure the architecture of La Madeleine incorporates the relative positions of the Earth and the Sun into its design Every June just before the feast day of Saint John the Baptist the astronomical dimensions of the church are revealed as the sun reaches its highest point of the year at local noon on the summer solstice when the sunlight coming through the southern clerestory windows casts a series of illuminated spots precisely along the longitudinal center of the nave floor 13 14 15 16 17 See also editCommons Great Romanesque tympanums in FranceNotes edit a b Vezelay Church and Hill UNESCO World Heritage Centre United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 9 October 2021 Charles Poree L abbaye de Vezelay Paris 1930 pp 18 19 The primary source for the history of Vezelay is a codex compiled in the twelfth century containing the abbey s annals a cartulary a history of the early counts of Nevers and much besides in the Bibliotheque municipale Auxerre MS 227 it was edited by R B C Huygens in his magisterial Monumenta Vizeliacensia Textes relatifs a l histoire de l abbaye de Vezelay Corpus Christianorum Turnhout Belgium 1976 a b Susan Haskins 30 September 2011 Mary Magdalen Truth and Myth Random House pp 115 118 ISBN 978 1 4464 9942 9 This occasioned the compiling of the codex now at Auxerre The intervention of Viollet le Duc is briefly told in Kevin D Murphy Memory and Modernity Viollet le Duc at Vezelay 2000 Zarnecki George Romanesque Art New York University Books 1971 Pg 57 Kline Naomi Reed 2003 Maps of Medieval Thought The Hereford Paradigm see footnote on cited page for Katzenellenbogen article citation access is restricted on JSTOR Boydell Press p 207 ISBN 9780851159379 Retrieved 6 August 2019 Low Peter 2003 You Who Once Were Far Off Enlivening Scripture in the Main Portal at Vezelay The Art Bulletin 85 3 469 489 doi 10 2307 3177383 ISSN 0004 3079 via Jstor a b Geary Patrick Readings in Medieval History Canada Broadview Press 1997 Pg 388 Marilyn Sostad Medieval Art The Acts 2 43 Delautre Hugues October 1979 Regard renouvele sur l eglise de la Madeleine Fresh look at the church of La Madeleine Zodiaque Solstices a Vezelay in French Vol 122 Les ateliers de la Pierre qui Vire pp 1 6 Delautre Hugues October 1979 Entretien au sujet des eclairages des solstices a Vezelay Discussion of solstice illuminations at Vezelay Zodiaque Solstices a Vezelay in French Vol 122 Les ateliers de la Pierre qui Vire pp 7 16 Delautre Hugue Greal Jacqueline 1981 Architecture cosmique et mystique de la lumiere Cosmic and mystical architecture of light La Madeleine de Vezelay Guide et plans in French Lescuyer Lyon Editions Franciscaines pp 27 29 ISBN 2 85020 001 8 Oursel Raymond 1993 Les taches solaires Sunspots Lumieres de Vezelay Lights of Vezelay in French Abbaye Sainte Marie de la Pierre qui Vire Yonne Editions Zodiaque pp 21 105 109 ISBN 2 7369 0203 3 Voreux Damien 1994 Les jeux de la pierre et du soleil Games of sun and stone Vezelay in French Edilarge Editions Ouest France pp 15 18 ISBN 2 7373 1608 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basilique Sainte Marie Madeleine de Vezelay Jerusalem monastic community Vezelay present state Maison du visiteur Vezelay Vezelay page on the site Bourgogne Romane Gallery of detailed images Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vezelay Abbey amp oldid 1208520735, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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