Skip to the main content

Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.21857/mnlqgcjejy

Deconstructing the Myth of Byzantine Crown: The Head Reliquary of Saint Blaise in Dubrovnik

Ana Munk ; Faculty of Philosophy, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia


Full text: english pdf 12.310 Kb

page 7-52

downloads: 1.094

cite


Abstract

The head reliquary of Saint Blaise in Dubrovnik, made in 1694 by the Venetian goldsmith Francesco Ferro, has long been thought to replicate an earlier version that was mentioned in the 1335 inventory of Dubrovnik cathedral. The article examines the history of the head relic and the assumption that it may have replicated or connoted a shape of the Byzantine imperial crown, a kamelaukion. From the available evidence such reading has been rejected. Instead, it is proposed that it resembled the dome-shaped reliquary such as that of Saint James in Zadar dated to the end of the eleventh or beginning of the twelfth century. Furthermore, it is proposed that group I enamels that adorn the reliquary were not made in Constantinople, but in Dubrovnik between 1164 and 1180, given that they show a number of non-Byzantine stylistic and iconographical features and inscriptions in Beneventan script incompatible with enamel production in Constantinople.

Keywords

head reliquary; relic; Saint Blaise cult; Dubrovnik; enamel; kamelaukion; Byzantine reliquaries

Hrčak ID:

167081

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/167081

Publication date:

28.9.2016.

Visits: 1.956 *