Monza ampullae

A similar style of 6th century pilgrim ampulla, here from the shrine of Saint Sergios in Syria. 5.4 cm (2.1 in) high, 3.81 cm (1.5 in) wide, 1.59 cm (0.6 in) deep

The Monza ampullae form the largest collection of a specific type of Early Medieval pilgrimage ampullae or small flasks designed to hold holy oil from pilgrimage sites in the Holy Land related to the life of Jesus, that were made in Palestine, probably in the fifth to early seventh centuries.[1] They have been in the Treasury of Monza Cathedral north of Milan in Italy since they were donated by Theodelinda, queen of the Lombards, (c. 570-628). Since the great majority of surviving examples of such flasks are those in the Monza group, the term may be used to cover this type of object in general. The second largest group was discovered in a burial at Bobbio Abbey, not far from Monza, and names such as Monza/Bobbio flasks ampullae or flagons are among the many terms by which these objects are described.[2] The few other examples are now scattered across the world; this article deals with the whole group of over fifty known ampullae, wherever located.[3] Examples of comparable ampullae from pilgrimage sites outside the Holy Land have also survived, for example a very similar one from a Syrian site related to Saint Sergius, now in the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore.[4]

The ampullae are cast in various metals, including silver (perhaps "silvered" would be more accurate),[5] tin and lead, and are mainly of interest because of the images they carry, which come from a period which has left very few traces in art, and was of crucial importance in establishing the iconography of many Christian subjects.[6] They are also believed to represent buildings and shrines found in Jerusalem in the sixth and early seventh centuries, giving important evidence as to the early appearance of these.[7] They were brought back from the Holy Land filled with oil which had been used in lamps burning before important pilgrimage shrines.[8] Despite their ending up in the heart of the institutional church under royal patronage, the ampullae were made as mass-produced souvenirs, probably relatively inexpensive, whose designs reflect the experiences and concerns of pilgrims as well as those of the church.

General description

The ampullae are round when seen from the front, with a flattened body giving convex faces and a small neck, often with a fitting round the neck for a chain or cord by which they could be suspended, or perhaps worn. There are records of similar blessed objects, or eulogia, being hung on the bedpost for protection from demons at night,[9] and the oil, or just the relic, was believed to be able to heal the sick when applied to them.[10] Often there is a strip in a different metal running round the edge of the faces and up the sides of the neck, with little rings for a suspension cord. In the Monza examples these strips are secured by wire wound rather untidily round the neck. A diameter for the main body of about 5–7 cm is typical, and in a side view the body swells to a maximum thickness of about 3 cm. Those at Monza are in generally good condition, but those from Bobbio and other examples such as the one at Dumbarton Oaks are flattened and damaged; they are now mostly black in colour.[11]

Despite their small size, the images are typically crowded multi-figure compositions, sometimes with extensive depiction of architectural elements, and somewhat crude in execution. They appear in low relief, typically occupying all the space of the faces on both sides of the ampulla, though some have figureless decoration, usually centred on a cross, on the reverse face. There are often inscriptions and tituli in medieval Greek, many running round the outside of a face, or dividing an upper scene from a lower one. A smaller scene may occupy the lower part of a face, or scenes may appear in small roundels grouped across the overall design.[12]

Subjects

Subjects were linked with the most famous pilgrimage sites of the Holy Land, and especially Jerusalem, where the Church of the Holy Sepulchre contained both the greater part of the True Cross and the Tomb of Christ,[13] as well as an altar dedicated to the Adoration of the Magi.[14] Common subjects, which account for the great majority of the designs, are:

Early 6th century mosaic in San Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna with a depiction of the Women at the empty tomb similar to that on ampullae, though reversed and with no censer.

Fourteen of the Monza and Bobbio ampullae combine on one face Crucifixions above the Women at the empty tomb, which are also on the two faces in other examples.[26] Two of the flasks, one each at Bobbio and Monza, show a large Christ walking on water and rescuing Saint Peter from drowning, as the other apostles watch from a boat, perhaps reflecting the anxieties of the sea voyages many pilgrims faced as they returned home.[27] Another Bobbio scene shows a Virgin Orant flanked by John the Baptist and his father Zacharias.[28] Figures that appear to be images of pilgrims, as a kind of generalised donor portrait, appear in many scenes, usually kneeling,[29] as part of the emphasis on the pilgrim experience noted above in discussing the Doubting Thomas scenes.[30]

Context and style

Modern pilgrims at the aedicule over the tomb of Christ in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

The ampullae join other small-scale Christian works of art from this period, from which almost no major works have survived, and very few manuscript illuminations. These include amulets, devotional medals and other forms of pilgrimage souvenirs. Many of these are in the cheaper material of terracotta, such as the Menas flasks that have been found from Cheshire to the Sudan and come from Abu Mena in Egypt, the exceptionally popular shrine of Saint Menas.[31] Small round terracotta "pilgrimage tokens" or ampullae for oil, water or earth from the Holy Land, are often excavated, and examples of the tokens are also in the Monza treasury; the Piacenza Pilgrim records that in the 570s earth was kept piled up in the tomb of Christ to be taken by pilgrims.[32] Most of these pieces, in the words of John Beckwith, "rate as works of art little more than a hot cross bun".[33] However few of these works have images with the complexity of those on the ampullae. There is a small wooden box in the Vatican Museums containing earth and rocks from the Holy Land, some tied up in cloth and labelled with their site of origin. The inside of the top cover has five painted scenes from the New Testament relating to the main sites, or sights, on the pilgrimage route, in similar style to the ampullae, and believed to be made in Palestine in around 600.[34]

It was long thought that the ampullae reflected the style of art of Palestine itself, and as such they became involved in the intense scholarly debate over "Oriental" influences on Early Medieval art, which preoccupied scholars of the subject in the early decades of the 20th century, and for which the style of Syria and Palestine was a key battleground. In his monograph of 1957, which for the first time gave scholars good images of all the Monza and Bobbio ampullae, and an extensive analysis of their iconography, André Grabar proposed instead that they derived from the style of Constantinople itself, spread to the provinces by Imperial patronage, which is clearly recorded for the major pilgrimage sites.[35] This view has gained considerable influence.[36] After the Persians under Khosrau II took and sacked Jerusalem in 614, and the Muslim conquest of the region in the 630s, pilgimages to the Holy Land sites were greatly reduced, and pilgrim souvenirs with them.[37]

With the exception of the somewhat variant example from Sant Pere de Casseres (see below), which may be later, it is usually assumed that all the Monza-type ampullae predate the Persian sack, and probably come from the late sixth century, a few years before Theodelinda's reign. After a nearly complete gap of three centuries or so, different styles of pilgrimage souvenirs begin to appear from the 10th century, reflecting rather different pilgrimage experiences and customs.

Queen Theodelinda's gift

Theodelinda was a Bavarian princess who married Authari, King of the Lombards in 588. When he died in 590, she was allowed to choose his cousin Agilulf as her next husband and the next king. He was baptised, initially as an Arian like most Lombards, but Theodelinda persuaded him and his son to convert to Catholicism in 603. Together they founded the cathedral at Monza, and endowed it with many treasures, a collection which has remained unusually intact, and includes the Iron Crown of Lombardy (strictly only on deposit there initially), the Late Antique Poet and Muse diptych, a Gospel book and the collection of ampullae. An early inventory survives, although some objects traditionally associated with Theodelinda may actually be made well after her death in 628, when she was buried at Monza.

The collection in the treasury was famous, and later augmented by other royal gifts. It was taken to Avignon during the Avignon Papacy but later returned. However the ampullae were incorporated in the high altar and forgotten until rediscovered in the late 18th century.[38] Their identification in the earlier inventories is complicated by the existence of a further set of glass vials, also used for holy oil. The notula ("little note"), a very early papyrus document, now itself regarded as a treasure, records that a cleric called John, during the reign of Pope Gregory the Great (died 604), transferred (the nature of the transaction, whether a gift from Gregory, or John, or a purchase, is not clear) to Theodelinda small containers with oil that had been in lamps burning before the tombs of saints in Rome.[39] The saints are listed; it seems that in most cases, but not those of Saints Peter and Paul, the oil was blended from that used in several places. There is some scholarly confusion as to how this list relates to the glass and metal ampullae.[40] The origin of ampullae other than those produced by John is unknown, although scholars are unanimous that, wherever they went afterwards, the metal ampullae had been made in Palestine. Gregory is recorded as presenting gifts to Theodelinda in 603 after the conversion of Agilulf and his son, and also sending holy oil in ampullae.[41]

Bobbio Abbey was founded in 613 by the Irish missionary Saint Columbanus in 613, with land and funds from Theodelinda. The Bobbio ampullae were discovered in the 1920s in the crypt of the abbey church, and are presumed to have been given by Theodelinda or her family.

Locations

Apart from the collections at Monza and Bobbio, other examples include two owned by the Staatliche Museen of Berlin and one in the Landesmuseum Stuttgart. Two examples in the United States, one at Dumbarton Oaks near Washington, D. C. and one in the Detroit Institute of Arts, appear to be cast from the same mould.[42] There is an example with a Crucifixion and Ascension in the Cleveland Museum of Art (clear image online).[43]

A single example was found in 1952 at the monastery church of Sant Pere de Casseres, near Tavèrnoles in Catalonia. As at Monza, it was discovered within the main altar, adapted as a reliquary for a piece of bone, and near a glass vial similarly used. It is made of an iron alloy, is rather larger than most at 7.5 cm high and 5.7 cm wide, and has two handles at the neck. The decoration is a Crucifixion on the obverse, and Greek cross on the reverse.[44] This may be later than the Monza and Bobbio ampullae by some considerable time.[45]

Notes

  1. "datable more or less between 500 and 650" says Vikan (1998), 241, but ranges vary with authors.
  2. Beckwith, 57-59
  3. There are perhaps 36 from Monza, at least 10 from Bobbio (some are fragments), three in Germany and two in the USA, plus an example from Catalonia that probably falls rather outside the date range of the others - see locations section below.
  4. Comparable ampulla of St Sergius from Syria, Walters Art Museum, Baltimore.
  5. Descriptions of the metals used vary widely.
  6. Leroy, 320-321
  7. Hackel, 177
  8. Milburn, 264; Beckwith 57-60, and many other of the references
  9. Vikan (1982), 12
  10. Vikan (1998), 235
  11. Dumbarton Oaks ''Catalogue of the Byzantine and Early Mediaeval Antiquities contains a detailed catalogue description of a single example.
  12. Beckwith, 57-59; Dumbarton Oaks. A good illustration of a typical example is at the Egeria website
  13. Vikan (1998), 241
  14. Milburn, 264
  15. Monza no. 2, silver, with seven scenes on one side. Schiller I, 26 and fig. 55
  16. Monza no.1, silver and no.3. See Schiller I, 104 & fig. 258 and Milburn, 264. Beckwith, 57 has an illustration. Though the link with the mosaic remains a common view, Vikan (1998), (p. 241 and elsewhere) discounts such precise derivations, ? perhaps following Grabar.
  17. Monza nos. 6, 10, 13, Dumbarton Oaks image, and others. Schiller II, 90 and fig. 324; Monza no. 6 is fig 21 here
  18. Monza no. 9, Bobbio no. 10, see Leroy, 322; Milburn, 264
  19. Vikan (1982), 24-25
  20. Monza nos. 10 and 11 both have a Cruxifixion and Resurrection on one side, and an Ascension on the reverse. Noga-Banai, 104
  21. Milburn, 264. See also the Dumbarton Oaks and Schiller examples, and Monza no. 6 - image fi. 21 here
  22. according to [Mt 28:1-7]
  23. as in Monza no. 5, see King
  24. Milburn, 264. See also the Resurrection note above.
  25. Milburn, 264
  26. Dumbarton Oaks
  27. Vikan (1998), 247-248; Milburn, 264
  28. Pitarakis, 159
  29. e.g. Dumbarton Oaks
  30. Peers, 41-42; Vikan (1982), 24-25; Wharton, 26-27; Hackel, 177
  31. Vikan (1982), 16
  32. Vikan (1982): on earth, 12, on water, 15, on a clay token at Bobbio, 17
  33. Beckwith, 57
  34. Vikan (1982), 18-20; Beckwith, 60; good image fig. 22 of this thesis
  35. Leroy
  36. See for example Beckwith, 59
  37. Vikan (1982), 39-40
  38. Leroy, 320. They were first published in 1794 by Frisi.
  39. Elsner, 98
  40. Compare Burrus, 109 and Elsner, 98. The mentions in other works cited here give further variations.
  41. Letters of Gregory the Great, 701, note f
  42. Dumbarton Oaks
  43. Pilgrim Flask, The Cleveland Museum of Art
  44. Arad, 59-60
  45. Arad suggests the 8th to 10th centuries

References

Further reading

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