Crown of Immortality

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The Crown of Immortality, held by the Allegoric figure Eterna (Eternity) on the Swedish House of Knights Fresco by David Klöcker Ehrenstrahl
The Crown of Immortality, held by the Allegoric figure Eterna (Eternity) on the Swedish House of Knights Fresco by David Klöcker Ehrenstrahl

The Crown of Immortality is a literary and religious metaphor, that developed visual representations, initially as a laurel wreath, and later as a symbolic circle of stars (often a crown, tiara, halo or aureola). The Crown appears in a number of Baroque iconographic and allegoric works of art, and indicates immortality for the wearer.

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[edit] Wreath crowns

A laurel wreath decorating a memorial at the Folketing, the national parliament of Denmark.
A laurel wreath decorating a memorial at the Folketing, the national parliament of Denmark.

The wreath or crown, of laurel or olive, was first awarded to victorious athletes, later poets, and Roman generals, in their formal Roman triumph parades (in the Imperial period restricted to the Imperial family). The placing of the wreath was often called a "crowning", but the immortality conferred was one of reputation only; it was the famously the role of the slave who accompanied the hero of the Triumph in his chariot to repeat continuously Memento mori, or "Remember you are mortal". From the Early Christian era the phrase "crown of immortality" was widely used by the Church Fathers in writing about martyrs; the immortality was now both of reputation on earth, and of eternal life in heaven. The usual visual attribute of a martyr in art, was a palm frond, not a wreath. The phrase may have originated in scriptural references, or from incidents such as this reported by Eusebius (Bk V of History) describing the 2nd century persecutions under Lucius Verus, which refers to literal crowns, and also brings in an athletic metaphor of the "victor's crown" at the end:

"From that time on, their martyrdoms embraced death in all its forms. From flowers of every shape and color they wove a crown to offer to the Father; and so it was fitting that the valiant champions should endure an ever-changing conflict, and having triumphed gloriously should win the mighty crown of immortality. Maturus, Sanctus, Blandina, and Attalus were taken into the amphitheater to face the wild beasts, and to furnish open proof of the inhumanity of the heathen, the day of fighting wild beasts being purposely arranged for our people. There, before the eyes of all, Maturus and Sanctus were again taken through the whole series of punishments, as if they had suffered nothing at all before, or rather as if they had already defeated their opponent in bout after bout and were now battling for the victor's crown." [1]

The first use seems to be that attributed to the martyr Ignatius of Antioch in 107.

[edit] Advent wreath

Danish girls in the Lucia procession at a Helsingør public school, 2001
Danish girls in the Lucia procession at a Helsingør public school, 2001

An Advent wreath is a ring of candles, usually made with evergreen cuttings and used for household devotion by some Christians during the season of Advent. The wreath is meant to represent God's eternity. On Saint Lucy's Day, December 13, it is common to wear crowns of candles in Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Italy, Bosnia, Iceland, and Croatia. Before the reform of the Gregorian calendar in the 16th century, St. Lucy's Day fell on the winter solstice. The representation of Saint Lucy seems to derive from the Roman goddess Lucina, which tightens the traditional relation to the winter solstice[2][3].

[edit] Crown of Martyrdom

Jesus with Crown of Thorns by El Greco, 1580
Jesus with Crown of Thorns by El Greco, 1580

Ignatius of Antioch, condemned to fight beasts in year 107, asked his friends not to try to save him and so rob him of the crown of immortality[4]. Polycarp, Christian bishop of Smyrna was, year 155, stabbed after an attempt to burn him at the stake failed. He was: ...crowned with the wreath of immortality ... having through patience overcome the unjust governor, and thus acquired the crown of immortality...[5]. Martyrs often are idealized as combatants, the spectacle of the arena transposed to the martyr's struggle with Satan, and Eusebius uses this imagery, himself, in speaking of Blandina: “A small, weak, despised woman, who had put on Christ, the great invincible champion, and in bout after bout had defeated her adversary and through conflict had won the crown of immortality[6]. Emblem of Christian martyrs, The Crown or wreath of Immortality, is a reward for those who stayed faithful until death.(1 Corinthians 9:24-27, James 1, 12 and Revelation 2, 10.[7].)

[edit] Crown of stars

The crown of stars, representing immortality, may derive from the story of Ariadne, especially as told by Ovid, in which the unhappy Ariadne is turned into a constellation of stars, the Corona Borealis (Crown of the North), modelled on a jewelled crown she wore, and thus becoming immortal. In Titian's Bacchus and Ariadne (1520-23, National Gallery, London), the constellation is shown above Ariadne's head as a circle of eight stars (though Ovid specifies nine), very similar to what would become the standard depiction of the motif. Although the crown was probably depicted in classical art, and is described in several literary sources, no classical visual depictions have survived.[8] The Titian therefore appears to be the earliest such representation to survive, and it was also at this period that illustrations in prints of the Apocalypse by artists such as Dürer[9] [10] and Jean Duvet were receiving very wide circulation.

In Ariadne, Venus and Bacchus, by Tintoretto (1576, Doge's Palace, Venice), a flying Venus crowns Ariadne with a circle of stars, and many similar compositions exist, such as the ceiling of the Egyptian Hall at Boughton House of 1695.

[edit] Zodiac relation

6th century mosaic from a synagogue, Beit Alpha, Israel
6th century mosaic from a synagogue, Beit Alpha, Israel

The Zodiac is a twelve star circle (Star signs) using metaphorical language. The Zodiac Gospel[11] furthermore links the everlasting dying and resurrecting Sun with Jesus, among other ancient and alike characters, by using the Zodiac. As Jesus is immortality personified, the Zodiac twelve star constellations, in such a relation, metaphorically is the Crown of Immortality.

[edit] Allegorical development

The first use of the crown of stars as an allegorical Crown of Immortality may be the ceiling fresco, Allegory of Divine Providence and Barberini Power (1633-39), in the Palazzo Barberini in Rome by Pietro da Cortona. Here a figure identified as Immortality is flying, with her crown of stars held out in front of her, near the centre of the large ceiling. According to the earliest descriptions she is about to crown the Barberini emblems, representing Pope Urban VIII, who was also a poet.[12][13][14] Immortality seems to have been a preoccupation of Urban; his funeral monument by Bernini in St Peter's Basilica in Rome has Death as a life-size skeleton writing his name on a scroll.

Two further examples of the Crown of Immortality can be found in Sweden, firstly in the great hall ceiling fresco of the Swedish House of Knights by David Klöcker Ehrenstrahl (between 1670-1675) which pictures among many allegoric figures Eterna (eternity) who holds in her hands the Crown of Immortality.[15] The second is in Drottningholm Palace, the home of the Swedish Royal Family, in a ceiling fresco named The Great Deeds of The Swedish Kings, painted in 1695 by David Klöcker Ehrenstrahl.[16] This has the same motif as the fresco in the House of Knights mentioned above. The Drottningholm fresco, was shown in the 1000th stamp[17] by Czesław Słania, the Polish postage stamp and banknote engraver.

The crown was also painted by the French Neoclassical painter Louis-Jean-François Lagrenée, 1725-1805, in his Allegory on the Death of the Dauphin , where the crown was held by a young son who had pre-deceased the father (alternative titles specifically mention the crown of Immortality). [18]

[edit] Poems, texts and writing

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

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