The Sacrifice of Isaac Capitals at Sainte-Foy at Conques and Saint-Seurin at Bordeaux
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Capital in the Twelfth Century
3. The Sacrifice of Isaac Capital in the Choir of Sainte-Foy at Conques
4. The Sacrifice of Isaac Capital in the Western Porch of Saint-Seurin at Bordeaux
Thus, the procession enacted the “passing over” of the dead in a space designated for meeting the risen Christ (Cons. Floriacenses, pp. 165, 246).Therefore, from among these [psalms], two or three, or as many as the hour requires, are sung, [and then] all go out into the Galilee. When, however, the prior comes in the procession near the body, which should be placed at the entrance of the Galilee, the psalms are left off and the Paternoster is said by all (Bernard of Cluny, p. 219).11
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | All biblical citations refer to the Douay-Rheims Bible, https://www.drbo.org (accessed on 15 January 2023). |
2 | Brutailis, Cartulaire de l’église collégiale Saint-Seurin de Bordeaux (Bordeaux: Imprimerie G. Gounouilhou, 1897), p. 8. The group of canons at Saint-Seurin from 816 followed the Rule of Aachen (Institutio canonicorum Aquisgranensis, 816), as described in a charter signed by Louis the Pious confirming the community and requiring them to live as monks. By the eleventh century, the status of canon was clearly articulated in the texts. For more on the distinction between monks and regular canons in the twelfth century, see Caroline Bynum Walker, Docere Verbo Et Exemplo: An Aspect of Twelfth-Century Spirituality (Missoula, Montana: Scholars Press, 1979), especially “Introduction,” pp. 2–8. |
3 | William Durand, The Rationale Divinorum Officiorum of William of Mende: A New Translation of the Prologue and Book One, transl. Timothy M. Thibodeau (New York: Columbia University Press, 2007), p. 19. Durand notes that “The heads of the columns are the minds of the bishops and teachers; just as the members of the body are directed by the head, our words and deeds are directed by our minds. The capitals of the columns are the words of sacred Scripture upon which we must meditate and which we are obliged to follow.” |
4 | In his book, Bearers of Meaning: The Classical Orders in Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and The Renaissance (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1988), John Onians presents a history of columnar forms, relating the architectural forms to contemporary written theories. From the encyclopedic tradition of Isidore of Seville’s Etymologies (ca. 623), which provides a formal and anthropomorphic description of the column and its capital, to Hrabanus Maurus’s (ca. 800) reprisal of Isidore’s text which includes explicitly Christian interpretation of columns, Onians traces the shifting interpretations of the column in the Middle Ages. Éliane Vergnolle’s presents analysis of the formal and technical transformations of the column as an architectural member during the Romanesque to the Early Gothic period. See Éliane Vergnolle, “La colonne à l’époque romane. Réminiscences et nouveautés,” Cahiers de civilisation médiévale 41e année n°162 (Avril-juin 1998): 141–174. |
5 | There is consensus on dating the construciton of Conques based on the cartulary. See G. Desjardins, ed., Cartulaire de l’abbaye de Conques (Paris: A. Picard, 1879). For a recent analysis of the abbey’s archaeology based on masons’ marks and stonework, see Lei Haung, “Le chantier de Sainte-Foy de Conques: éléments de réflexions,” Les Cahiers de Saint-Michel de Cuxa 45 (2014): 93–103. |
6 | Corpus des inscriptions de la France médiévale (Paris: Éd. du Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1974–2010) [hereafter referred to as C.I.F.M.]. Conques: C.I.F.M., Robert Favreau, Bernadette Leplant, Jean Michaud, eds., vol. 9, Aveyron, Lot, Tarn (1984), p. 26–27; Saint-Seurin: C.I.F.M. Robert Favreau, Bernadette Leplant, Jean Michaud, eds., vol. 5, Dordogne, Gironde (1979), p. 93; Notre-Dame-du-Port: C.I.F.M., Robert Favreau, Jean Michaud, Bernadette Mora, eds., vol. 18, Allier, Cantal, Loire, Haute-Loire, Puy-de-Dôme (1995), p. 193; Saint-Trophîme: C.I.F.M., Robert Favreau, Jean Michaud, Bernadette Mora, eds., vol. 14, Alpes-Maritime, Bouches-du-Rhone, Var (1989), p. 47. The Corpus des inscriptions de la France medievale (vols. 1–25) was started by Robert Favreau at the Centre d’Études supérieures de la civilisation médiévale (CESCM) in 1974 at the University of Poitiers. The project records inscriptions produced between 750 and 1300 with each volume organized geographically by current adminsitrative departments. At present, 75% of France has been catalogued by the C.I.F.M. The north and east of France has not yet been treated. This article also draws from the digital project, The Inscribed Capital Index (ICI), which the manuscript’s author has built (https://dataartem.org/ici). accessed on 12 March 2024. The ICI presents instances of capitals with lapidary inscriptions (ca. 1080–1160) available for scholarly research in a searchable electronic format. The corpus presented in the ICI is defined largely by the C.I.F.M. as well as items the author found during visits to various monasteries, dépôts lapidaires, and museums. The data source presented in the ICI is by no means exhaustive, but additions continue to be made. |
7 | Van Woerden notes that the Canon of the Mass codified by Pope Leo in 500 explicitly links the sacrifices of Abel, Abraham, and Melchisedek to the Eucharist. See especially, page 220. See also Robin M. Jensen, “The Offering of Isaac in Jewish and Christian Tradition. Image and Text,” Biblical Interpretation vol. 2, n° 1 (1994): 85–110. Jensen focuses on Early Christian images of the Sacrifice of Isaac and reconsiders the question of visual representation of the biblical narrative and its interpretation. |
8 | Odo, Collationes, II, PL 113:558 “Nos parentes nostri, sicut Abraham obtulit Isaac, et Anna Samuelem, Deo in sacrificium obtulerunt. Nos templum Dei quod esse ipsi debuimus violantes, et oblationem ejus commaculantes idem nosmetipsos, in fermentum conversi sumus. Naaman Syrus in tantam habuit reverentiam locum in quo nomen Dei invocabatur, ut de Israel terram cum burdonibus portaret. Nos in atriis ecclesiae consistentes, in terram sanctorum, juxta quod propheta plangit, iniqua gerimus: In terra sanctorum, inquit, iniqua gessit (Isa. XXVI, 10). Sed sequitur: Ideo [Col.0558C] non videbit gloriam Domini (Ibid.). Vox ad Moysen: Locus, ait, in quo tu stas, terra sancta est (Exod. III, 5). Qui etiam non est ausus respicere contra ignem, et ecce plus est in altare, ad quod nos impure et irreverenter accedimus. Nam ignis ille non erat Deus, sed creatura, ex qua vox Dei resonaret; hic vero corpus Christi est, in quo habitat omnis plenitudo divinitatis.” |
9 | Quinn provides a detailed account of the ceremony. Her book provides a new perspective on the topic than previously proposed because she focuses on the oblates themselves, asking about their experiences and how they were raised within the monastery. |
10 | For discussion of the church’s dating, see Philippe Araguas, “Saint-Seurin de Bordeaux: les grandes étapes de l’évolution de l’église canoniale du XIe au XIXe siècle.” There are two schools of thought regarding the dating of the porch. Marcel Durliat dates the sculpture to theend of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth century. Éliane Vergnole places the sculpture to the second half of the eleventh century. Araguas relates the eleventh-century configuration of the porch to the porch of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire. |
11 | Ex his ergo duo vel tres, vel quot ipsa hora exigit, canuntur, exitur ab omnibus usque in galileam; cum autem prope Corpus, quod ad galilaeae introitum positum esse debet, venerit Prior cum processione, cessatur à Psalmis, dicitur Pater noster, ab omnibus. Bern, 219. |
12 | For the history of the college of canons established at Saint-Seurin in the eleventh century, see the mid twelfth-century cartulary of Rufat, the community’s sacristan. Rufat, Cartulaire de L’église collégiale Saint-Seurin de Bordeaux publié avec une introduction et des tables by Jean-Auguste Brutails (Bordeaux: Imprimerie G. Gounouilhou, 1897). The cartulary, also known as the petit Sancius, is housed at the Archives de la Gironde (G 1030). The archives of the collegial chapter burned in the thirteenth century and were pillaged in December 1542. All that rests of the collection, G. 1010–1654. |
13 | For recent detailed analysis of the capital’s epigraphy, see Debiais and Voyer, 151–154. |
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Tanton, K. The Sacrifice of Isaac Capitals at Sainte-Foy at Conques and Saint-Seurin at Bordeaux. Religions 2024, 15, 465. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040465
Tanton K. The Sacrifice of Isaac Capitals at Sainte-Foy at Conques and Saint-Seurin at Bordeaux. Religions. 2024; 15(4):465. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040465
Chicago/Turabian StyleTanton, Kristine. 2024. "The Sacrifice of Isaac Capitals at Sainte-Foy at Conques and Saint-Seurin at Bordeaux" Religions 15, no. 4: 465. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040465
APA StyleTanton, K. (2024). The Sacrifice of Isaac Capitals at Sainte-Foy at Conques and Saint-Seurin at Bordeaux. Religions, 15(4), 465. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040465