Sculptures and Accessories: Domestic Piety in the Norwegian Parish around 1300
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Crucifixes and Crosses in Medieval Norway
3. Medieval Devotion to the Cross
4. Arm Ring Symbolism and Miracle Working Crosses in Old Norse Texts
The Holy Cross is a shield for all danger, support for all misery, in sorrow it is a comfort and in joy an encouragement for the good; it is protection from danger, healing from ailment liberation from all ties, counsel from sin, victory in battle, strength against temptation, powerful for the poor and a chieftain for the powerful (stjórn auðigra) (…). All this is due to God’s mercy, for the one who on the Cross redeemed mankind from death—Jesus Christ. Him be praised with the Father and the Holy Spirit per omnia saecula saeculorum amen.(Gammelnorsk homiliebok, 109)
5. Silver Bracelets—Devotion, Gifts and Gender
This would I have done: I would be borne to Skalaholt if I die of this sickness, because my mind tells me that that stead will be for one while the most worshipped stead in the land; and I wot also,” says she, “that there will be priests to do the singing over me; so I pray thee to bring me there, and of my goods shalt thou [Thorod] have so much as that thou wilt have no loss thereby; but from my undivided goods shall Thurid have the scarlet cloak that I own; and this I do to the end that she may be content that I see to my other goods in such wise as I will; but I will that thou take for the cost thou hast for me that which thou wilt, or that pleases her, from such things alone as I leave thereto. A gold ring I have which shall go to church with me, but I will that my bed and my bed-hangings be burned up with fire, for that they will be of no good to any man; and I say this not because I grudge anyone to enjoy those good things, if I knew that they would be of good avail to any; but now I say so much thereover,” says she, “because I deem it ill that folk should have so much heavy trouble from me, as well I wot will be, if ye turn away from that which I now ordain.”(Eyrbyggja saga, chapter 51)
6. Concluding Remarks
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
Primary Sources
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1 | Ræflum/refil is a rectangular, horizontally cut textile often with iconographical motifs; tioldum/tjeld are textiles hang on the wall in larger pieces. |
2 | “Jtem æin kross stor cum mari et Johanne med sex silfr spongum þriar vm huarn arm ok [æ]in silfr sylgia” and “Jtem æinn kross klædr med ok pæll tuæimr silfr spongum vm mitt ok vi vm armanna.” |
3 | Eight öre but one örtug. Öre = 1/8 mark and örtug = 1/24 mark. In 1287, one mark = 214.3 g, cf. Nils Ludvig Rasmussen, “Mark” in Kulturhistorisk leksikon for nordisk middelalder (KLNM) Vol.11:424 and Swen Owe Jansson, “Vikt” in KLNM, Vol. 20: 58 (Karker et al. 1956–1978). |
4 | Pellz/pell probably refers to silk fabrics; camelot refers to a woven fabric that might have originally been made of camel or goat’s hair, and fustane is a fabric made of cotton. |
5 | Apart from the two crucifixes in Hamar and Røldal and the Borre cross, there is also a cavity on top of the head and incised tear channels in the figure of St Anne in the late medieval imported sculpture group of Virgin and Child with St Anne (c.1520, of unknown original display, now preserved at the Museum of Cultural Heritage, Oslo), betraying agencies similar to the ones ascribed to the crucifix from Hamar. This perceived animation, however obviously post-date the kinds of devotional activities considered for this essay. |
6 | Post-dating the inventories, two entries from the Icelandic diploma allows us to identify two crucifixes in the church of St Mary at Alftanes, «one cross dressed and one undressed» (1354) and one in Vallanes which was fitted with a suitable chasuble and amictus (1448). |
7 | Dagför or Lunu til Luku; þar er Biskopsstoll at Mario kirkiu [i.e., San Martino], þar er roda su er Nichodemus let gera eptir Gudi sialfum; hon hefir ii. sinnum mælt, annat sinn gaf hon sko sin aumun manni, enn annat sinn bar hon vitni rægdum mann. |
8 | Hann Eirikr Danakonungr Sveinsson lagdi fé til i Luku, at, hverr madr skylldi drecka vin okeypiss…einu af danski tunugu ok hann let gera spital viii milum sudr fra Plazinzoborg. |
9 | “Men boin tissut pour caindre de ymagène Notre-Dame di Tournay.” |
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Bø, R.M. Sculptures and Accessories: Domestic Piety in the Norwegian Parish around 1300. Religions 2019, 10, 640. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10110640
Bø RM. Sculptures and Accessories: Domestic Piety in the Norwegian Parish around 1300. Religions. 2019; 10(11):640. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10110640
Chicago/Turabian StyleBø, Ragnhild M. 2019. "Sculptures and Accessories: Domestic Piety in the Norwegian Parish around 1300" Religions 10, no. 11: 640. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10110640
APA StyleBø, R. M. (2019). Sculptures and Accessories: Domestic Piety in the Norwegian Parish around 1300. Religions, 10(11), 640. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10110640