Global Information Lookup Global Information

Crucifix of Ferdinand and Sancha information


Obverse.
Reverse.

The crucifix of Ferdinand and Sancha (Spanish: crucifijo de don Fernando y doña Sancha) is an ivory carving from circa 1063, today in the National Archaeological Museum of Spain, in Madrid. It was part of an offering by King Ferdinand I of León and Queen Sancha to furnish the basilica of San Isidoro de León. It is the earliest known crucifix from Spain depicting the body of Christ. Although earlier Spanish crucifixes of gold, ivory and wood are known, they are all without images. The official inventory of the royal gift describes the crucifix as "a cross of ivory with the image of our crucified Redeemer".[1] It measures 52 cm high, 34.5 cm wide, and 1 cm thick, with the width of the cross beams being 7 cm. The image of Christ is 305 mm tall.

The figure of Christ is shown with its heading reclining to the left, its large eyes wide open and encrusted with jet, and sporting a beard and moustache. (Jet eyes were common at the time in ivory sculptures of the region.) Each foot is shown nailed individually to the cross. The fingers of Christ's right hand are missing. His perizonium (loin cloth) covers him to the knees and is tied at his waist. The legs and torso are perfectly vertical. There is a small space behind the body so the piece could serve as a reliquary, as was typical.

On the obverse of the cross are intertwined images of plants and animals, and of humans either ascending to paradise or descending to hell. Above the image of Christ is the inscription:

IHSNAZA
RENUSREX
IUDEORU

which translates "Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews", the citation placed on the cross according to the Four Gospels. Above the inscription on the ivory is a representation of the resurrected Christ carrying a cross. At the base of the cross, below the crucified figure, is a figure of Adam, and below that the inscription:

FREDINANDUSREX
SANCIAREGINA

indicating the commissioners of the work, King Ferdinand and Queen Sancha. The reverse of the cross bears plant figures, in the centre the Agnus Dei, and at the four extremities of the arms the symbols of the Four Evangelists.

  1. ^ Gómez-Moreno (1947), 162.

and 25 Related for: Crucifix of Ferdinand and Sancha information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8668 seconds.)

Crucifix of Ferdinand and Sancha

Last Update:

The crucifix of Ferdinand and Sancha (Spanish: crucifijo de don Fernando y doña Sancha) is an ivory carving from circa 1063, today in the National Archaeological...

Word Count : 452

Lady of Elche

Last Update:

Iberian culture are the Lady of Guardamar—which has similar wheel-like rodetes and necklaces—and the Lady of Baza. While the Lady of Elche is a bust, there...

Word Count : 2192

Lady of Baza

Last Update:

tableland in the northeast of the province of Granada. The town of Baza was the site of the Ibero-Roman city of Basti and, in one of its two necropoleis, the...

Word Count : 252

Carrizo Christ

Last Update:

of the body. Crucifix of Ferdinand and Sancha VV.AA. 1993, p. 114 VV.AA. (1993). The Art of Medieval Spain, A.D. 500-1200. The Metropolitan Museum of...

Word Count : 115

Treasure of Guarrazar

Last Update:

Treasure of Guarrazar, Guadamur, Province of Toledo, Castile-La Mancha, Spain, is an archeological find composed of twenty-six votive crowns and gold crosses...

Word Count : 1059

Guanche mummy of Madrid

Last Update:

Museum of Spain in Madrid, Spain. The mummy is a male Guanche in an excellent state of preservation. Is believed to date from the twelfth and thirteenth...

Word Count : 420

Lady of Cerro de los Santos

Last Update:

Lady of Cerro de los Santos (Dama del Cerro de los Santos), also known as Gran Dama Oferente, is an Iberian sculpture from the 2nd century BCE, that is...

Word Count : 210

Mausoleum of Pozo Moro

Last Update:

Spanish community of Chinchilla de Monte-Aragón, lies about 840 m above sea level and 125 km from the Mediterranean coast at the intersection of important ancient...

Word Count : 549

Phoenician Harpocrates statues

Last Update:

statues of the Greco-Egyptian god Harpocrates, with Phoenician inscriptions on their bases. The first statue was found in Madrid in the 18th century and is...

Word Count : 671

Bacchus of Aldaia

Last Update:

the image of a saint and sold it to a Valencian scholar. In 1931 it was already part of the catalogue of the National Archaeological Museum of Spain, where...

Word Count : 610

Lady of Galera

Last Update:

Archaeological Museum of Spain, in Madrid. The Lady of Galera is most likely of Phoenician manufacture. She sits between two sphinxes and holds a bowl for...

Word Count : 251

Bicha of Balazote

Last Update:

it the "Beast of Balazote." The sculpture has been dated to the 6th century BCE, and has been in the National Archaeological Museum of Spain in Madrid...

Word Count : 552

Bear of Porcuna

Last Update:

The Bear of Porcuna is a sculpture dated from the 1st century BC depicting a bear or a lioness leaning on a herma. It is exhibited at the National Archaeological...

Word Count : 225

Lex Malacitana

Last Update:

Malaca (modern Málaga) with the lex Salpensana, and it was dated from AD 81–84, i.e. the early reign of Domitian. Malaca was governed under this law, which...

Word Count : 1375

Pyxis of Zamora

Last Update:

for Subh, his concubine, and the mother of the princes Abd al-Rahman and Hishâm and is linked to the palatine ivory workshops of Madinat al-Zahra. It was...

Word Count : 1425

Priest of Cadiz

Last Update:

Priest of Cadiz is a gold and bronze figure, 12.9 cm high, that dates from the 8th century BC. It is on display in the National Archaeological Museum of Spain...

Word Count : 234

Lady of Ibiza

Last Update:

was found in the necropolis of Puig des Molins on the island of Ibiza in the Mediterranean. It was made using a mold and has a cavity in the back, perhaps...

Word Count : 136

Lex Ursonensis

Last Update:

Flavians, portions of which were discovered in 1870/71. The original law spanned nine tablets with three or five columns of text each and comprised over 140...

Word Count : 531

Abydos Aramaic papyrus

Last Update:

National Archaeological Museum of Madrid in 1964. It was first published in 1964 by Javier Teixidor. The papyrus tells the story of two brothers who made a pilgrimage...

Word Count : 204

Bull of Osuna

Last Update:

Museum of Spain in Madrid. It was found in the archeological site of the ancient Iberian city of Urso (Osuna) in Seville, Spain. The bull is ashlar and was...

Word Count : 91

Magacela stele

Last Update:

The Magacela stele is a stele found in southwestern Iberia, made of slate and dated from the Late Bronze Age. It is exhibited at the National Archaeological...

Word Count : 288

Sphinx of Agost

Last Update:

badly damaged statue is 82 cm high and represents a sphinx with the head of a woman, body of a winged lion and tail of a snake. This particular sphinx may...

Word Count : 123

Treasure of Gazteluberri

Last Update:

Treasure of Gazteluberri is a set of coins, of different materials gold, silver and iron, buried at the end of the 16th century CE or the beginning of the...

Word Count : 155

Toledo Cathedral

Last Update:

the opinion of some authorities, to be the magnum opus of the Gothic style in Spain. It was begun in 1226 under the rule of Ferdinand III, and the last Gothic...

Word Count : 15436

General Roman Calendar of 1960

Last Update:

Com. of St. Margaret Queen, Widow 13 June: St. Anthony of Lisbon Confessor, Patron of Portugal, I class 20 June: Bb. Sancha and Mafalda Princesses of Portugal...

Word Count : 8853

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net