Aureola

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Images of Mary, mother of Jesus are often surrounded by an aureole, as in this image of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Images of Mary, mother of Jesus are often surrounded by an aureole, as in this image of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
The Buddha (with the legend "BODDO" in Greek script) with an aureole envelopping the whole body, on a coin of the Kushan king Kanishka, 2nd century AD.
The Buddha (with the legend "BODDO" in Greek script) with an aureole envelopping the whole body, on a coin of the Kushan king Kanishka, 2nd century AD.

An aureola or aureole (diminutive of Latin aura, "air") is the radiance of luminous cloud which, in paintings of sacred personages, surrounds the whole figure. In the earliest periods of Christian art this splendour was confined to the figures of the persons of the Christian Godhead, but it was afterwards extended to the Virgin Mary and to several of the saints.

The aureola, when enveloping the whole body, generally appears oval or elliptical in form, but occasionally circular or quatrefoil. When it appears merely as a luminous disk round the head, it is called specifically a halo or nimbus, while the combination of nimbus and aureole is called a glory. The strict distinction between nimbus and aureole is not commonly maintained, and the latter term is most frequently used to denote the radiance round the heads of saints, angels or persons of the Christian Godhead.

This is not to be confused with the specific motif in art of the Infant Jesus appearing to be a source of light in a Nativity scene. These depictions derive directly from the accounts given by Saint Bridget of Sweden of her visions, in which she describes seeing this.

The nimbus in Christian art first appeared in the 5th century, but practically the same device was known several centuries earlier, in non-Christian art. It is found in some Persian representations of kings and gods, and appears on coins of the Kushan kings Kanishka, Huvishka and Vasudeva, as well as on most representations of the Buddha in Greco-Buddhist art from the 1st century AD. Its use has also been traced through the Egyptians to the Greeks and Romans, representations of Trajan (arch of Constantine) and Antoninus Pius (reverse of a medal) being found with it.

In the circular form the nimbus constitutes a natural and even primitive use of the idea of a crown, modified by an equally simple idea of the emanation of light from the head of a superior being, or by the meteorological phenomenon of a halo. The probability is that all later associations with the symbol refer back to an early astrological origin (compare Mithras), the person so glorified being identified with the sun and represented in the sun's image; so the aureole is the Hvareno of Mazdaism.[citation needed] From this early astrological use, the form of "glory" or "nimbus" has been adapted or inherited under new beliefs.

A Mandorla is an almond-shaped aureola which surrounds the figure of Christ in traditional Christian art. Examples may be seen in icons of the transfiguration and other imagery. The symbol is also used in non-Christian contexts.

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