Images Borne on Dewy Lightning: Byzantine παρθένογένεσις as Hierotopy of Fluid Brilliance

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Images Borne on Dewy Lightning : Byzantine παρθένογένεσις as Hierotopy of Fluid Brilliance . / Isar, Nicoletta.

Holy Water in the Hierotopy and Iconography of the Christian World. red. / Alexei Lidov. Moscow : Theoria: Moscow UNESCO, 2017. s. 184-209.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Isar, N 2017, Images Borne on Dewy Lightning: Byzantine παρθένογένεσις as Hierotopy of Fluid Brilliance . i A Lidov (red.), Holy Water in the Hierotopy and Iconography of the Christian World. Theoria: Moscow UNESCO, Moscow, s. 184-209.

APA

Isar, N. (2017). Images Borne on Dewy Lightning: Byzantine παρθένογένεσις as Hierotopy of Fluid Brilliance . I A. Lidov (red.), Holy Water in the Hierotopy and Iconography of the Christian World (s. 184-209). Theoria: Moscow UNESCO.

Vancouver

Isar N. Images Borne on Dewy Lightning: Byzantine παρθένογένεσις as Hierotopy of Fluid Brilliance . I Lidov A, red., Holy Water in the Hierotopy and Iconography of the Christian World. Moscow: Theoria: Moscow UNESCO. 2017. s. 184-209

Author

Isar, Nicoletta. / Images Borne on Dewy Lightning : Byzantine παρθένογένεσις as Hierotopy of Fluid Brilliance . Holy Water in the Hierotopy and Iconography of the Christian World. red. / Alexei Lidov. Moscow : Theoria: Moscow UNESCO, 2017. s. 184-209

Bibtex

@inbook{5c94138f52c44a82960e27cb91cc28cc,
title = "Images Borne on Dewy Lightning: Byzantine παρθένογένεσις as Hierotopy of Fluid Brilliance ",
abstract = "The Silent Book (Mutus Liber) printed in 1677 opens with an unusual picture for a 21st century viewer showing a male figure and a female alchemist wringing out the dew they have collected in sheets exposed to the air. One wonders why on earth one may try to squeeze and then store dew, and how it might be possible? Yet the morning dew has been conceived from immemorial time as celestial moisture, a heavenly gift (Pliny the Elder), the philosopher{\textquoteright}s stone in embryo (for alchemist), the manna (for Zohar the Cabbalistic mysticism). The “collectors” or carriers of such ineffable things, as dew, have been known since ancient times. The ἀρρηφορεῖν, in translation 'dew carriers', are one of them. They are young virgins (παρθένοι), named after the “dew,” performing the sacred rite consisting in carrying on their heads the unspeakable mystery, hidden in baskets and then covered by sacred veils. This paper follows this tradition up to Byzantium and examines the Byzantine variant of the old myth of παρθένογένεσις, the celebration of the impalpable element for which a whole new theological corpus is shaped around the cult of the Virgin Mary.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, byzantine culture, hierotopy, Sacred space, the elementals, Byzantium, hierotopy, Sacred space, The Elements, Sacred Water",
author = "Nicoletta Isar",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
day = "12",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-5-91796-061-6",
pages = "184--209",
editor = "Alexei Lidov",
booktitle = "Holy Water in the Hierotopy and Iconography of the Christian World",
publisher = "Theoria: Moscow UNESCO",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Images Borne on Dewy Lightning

T2 - Byzantine παρθένογένεσις as Hierotopy of Fluid Brilliance

AU - Isar, Nicoletta

PY - 2017/8/12

Y1 - 2017/8/12

N2 - The Silent Book (Mutus Liber) printed in 1677 opens with an unusual picture for a 21st century viewer showing a male figure and a female alchemist wringing out the dew they have collected in sheets exposed to the air. One wonders why on earth one may try to squeeze and then store dew, and how it might be possible? Yet the morning dew has been conceived from immemorial time as celestial moisture, a heavenly gift (Pliny the Elder), the philosopher’s stone in embryo (for alchemist), the manna (for Zohar the Cabbalistic mysticism). The “collectors” or carriers of such ineffable things, as dew, have been known since ancient times. The ἀρρηφορεῖν, in translation 'dew carriers', are one of them. They are young virgins (παρθένοι), named after the “dew,” performing the sacred rite consisting in carrying on their heads the unspeakable mystery, hidden in baskets and then covered by sacred veils. This paper follows this tradition up to Byzantium and examines the Byzantine variant of the old myth of παρθένογένεσις, the celebration of the impalpable element for which a whole new theological corpus is shaped around the cult of the Virgin Mary.

AB - The Silent Book (Mutus Liber) printed in 1677 opens with an unusual picture for a 21st century viewer showing a male figure and a female alchemist wringing out the dew they have collected in sheets exposed to the air. One wonders why on earth one may try to squeeze and then store dew, and how it might be possible? Yet the morning dew has been conceived from immemorial time as celestial moisture, a heavenly gift (Pliny the Elder), the philosopher’s stone in embryo (for alchemist), the manna (for Zohar the Cabbalistic mysticism). The “collectors” or carriers of such ineffable things, as dew, have been known since ancient times. The ἀρρηφορεῖν, in translation 'dew carriers', are one of them. They are young virgins (παρθένοι), named after the “dew,” performing the sacred rite consisting in carrying on their heads the unspeakable mystery, hidden in baskets and then covered by sacred veils. This paper follows this tradition up to Byzantium and examines the Byzantine variant of the old myth of παρθένογένεσις, the celebration of the impalpable element for which a whole new theological corpus is shaped around the cult of the Virgin Mary.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - byzantine culture

KW - hierotopy

KW - Sacred space

KW - the elementals

KW - Byzantium

KW - hierotopy

KW - Sacred space

KW - The Elements

KW - Sacred Water

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-5-91796-061-6

SP - 184

EP - 209

BT - Holy Water in the Hierotopy and Iconography of the Christian World

A2 - Lidov, Alexei

PB - Theoria: Moscow UNESCO

CY - Moscow

ER -

ID: 183727819