The St. Honoré Portal at Amiens Cathedral and Its Reception
Abstract
:1. St. Honoré’s Vita
2. The St. Honoré Portal
3. Miracles and Reception of the St. Honoré Portal
On the great day of the feast of that confessor [St. Honoré], … we, a great crowd composed equally of clergy and laymen, were accustomed to carry the body of that saintly confessor around our cloister, after we had returned … the reliquary of the most blessed confessor was placed upon the altar in the middle of the church [and] was protected by the devoted services of the assisting priests [and] the people (plebs) … The aforementioned [crippled] boy approach[ed] the reliquary of that blessed confessor, and look[ed] at those [people] who were looking at [the reliquary], as if he was about to receive something from them; he sensed within himself a hidden miracle of divine power, which was apparent to all others in its workings. Indeed, his mother being there and insisting on prayers, the boy began to proclaim that it seems to him to come from on high … The mother … respond[ed] to him: “Have faith, my son, and get up, touch the reliquary of the blessed confessor. I believe that you will be saved by the one who gives aid.” At these words the boy got up, and his feet and his arms were equally restored in their strength; we … resounded in praise of the Lord and sounded the bells of the church.22
The news of the miraculous healing spread fast in the hospital located near the cathedral … There, an unfortunate woman paralyzed in all her body except her hands was condemned to stay in her bed; when she heard the bells ring to celebrate the miraculous cure (of the boy), she felt inspired with a sudden confidence, and was transported to the cathedral. The woman encircled with her hands the protective châsse and found herself miraculously healed. In the presence of the bishop she blessed God for his act, and after receiving some donations from the faithful, she went back to the hospital in order to share her joy with all of whom have sympathized with her sufferings.23
4. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The only two other contemporary examples are the Confessor’s Portal at Chartres (c. 1215–1220) and the Portal of the Saints at Reims (c. 1220), which is briefly discussed below. |
2 | There has been scholarly debate on the dating of the sculptured tympana. Murray argues that the construction of the portal began in the 1230s and that its sculpture work is dated to post-1240, except for the jamb figures (Murray 1996, pp. 118–20). Kimpel and Suckale suggest a pre-1236 dating for the beginning of construction (Kimpel and Suckale 1985, pp. 11–64). Murray dismissed this idea. Finally, Gaposchkin dates the sculptures to 1260, which is the date broadly accepted today for the end of the construction of the portal and the insertion of the trumeau figures (Gaposchkin 2005, pp. 217–42). I find Murray’s dating the most persuasive. |
3 | See Mâle (1913, pp. 390–96, esp. 398). Mâle noted: “The medieval cathedral takes the place of books” (ibid., 398). The idea of the sculptural program of the cathedral as a “Stone Bible” was first introduced by John Ruskin in connection with Amiens Cathedral (Ruskin 1908, pp. 5–187). |
4 | See Murray (2021, pp. 146–55). See also the website “Life of a Cathedral: Notre-Dame of Amiens” Available online: https://mcid.mcah.columbia.edu/art-atlas/mapping-gothic. (accessed on: 10 April 2024) |
5 | In the most immediate way, the historical time is the past time where the action took place. The contemporary time is the time of the thirteenth-century beholder. As in the case of the Baptism of Clovis at Reims Cathedral, the beholders are not only invited to participate in the past event and to revive it, but also offered them the possibility of reliving it in the present procession, through movement in space and time, as part of the ceremony. See Shalom (2017, pp. 96–113). See also Jaritz and Moreno-Rianõ (2003). |
6 | The relics of the three saints were later offered as a gift to the cathedral (Beauvillé 1867, p. 11). |
7 | A representation of this fee can be seen in the middle register of the St. Firmin portal, in which one of the boys holds a coin. |
8 | The 1220 dating for the beginning of the construction is based on two written sources: the inscription around the edge of the bronze tomb of the founding bishop, Evrard de Fouilloy, and the inscription in the center of the labyrinth on the nave pavement. However, as Murray shows, these sources do not clarify when the work started and how it progressed. Today, most scholars agree that construction began in the nave and continued towards the choir. In 1206, the church received the head relic of St. John the Baptist from Wallon of Sarton, who was the canon of Picquiny. However, it seems that it was the 1218 fire that led to the construction of the new edifice. See (Murray 1996, pp. 26–27; Kimpel and Suckale 1973, pp. 217–65). |
9 | See also note 2. It is generally accepted to distinguish the “hands” of three masters who presided successively over the construction work: Robert de Luzarches (d. 1223), whose work included the dado wall of the south transept portal, the nave, and the west façades; Thomas de Cormont (d. 1228), who introduced his own forms in the tracery of the choir aisle window, the dado in the radiating chapels, and the transverse arches and capital in the ambulatory and upper nave; and Renaud de Cormont (n.d.), Thomas’s son, who constructed the upper transept and the upper choir. The names of the three masters along with the name of the founding bishop, Evrard de Fouilloy, appear in the labyrinth dated to 1288. For the question of the portal’s location, see Murray (1996, p. 118). For studies of Amiens’s labyrinth, see (Soyez 1984; Bord 1976). |
10 | There is disagreement regarding the identification of this scene: Katzenellenbogen suggests that the people represent types for the function of the bishop, similar to the bottom register of the St. Firmin portal (Katzenellenbogen 1961, p. 281); Murray recognizes them as the Twelve Apostles (Murray 1996, p. 119); while Sandron (2004) argues that the scene depicts the separation of the Twelve Apostles, which might explain their shoeless state (p. 139). |
11 | Originally, the trumeau figure depicted St. Honoré (Kasarska 2011b, p. 200). The famous Vierge Dorée dates to 1288. The one in situ is a copy of the original and is located inside the cathedral. See Sandron (2004, p. 138). |
12 | It is hard to tell if the figure is indeed male or female. It has no breasts and the hair is tied under a coif, suggesting its masculinity. However, none of the other female figures too in the portal have breasts (for example, the mother holding of the boy by his arm), and the textual source clearly states that it was a woman whose sight was miraculously restored. Therefore, it seems plausible that the tympanum follows the text and depicts a woman. |
13 | On the different types of inviting figures see (Shalom 2017, pp. 96–113; Shalom 2019, pp. 89–113). |
14 | Additionally, it should be remembered that the sculptures were once painted. On the polychromy of the portal, see the final four essays in Verret and Steyaert (2002, pp. 207–58). |
15 | Little is known about this reliquary, which was lost during the French Revolution (Durand 1901, p. 2) |
16 | The arm reliquary also connects the tympanum with that of St. Firmin. See Gaposchkin (2005, p. 240). For the role of arm reliquaries, see (Boehm 1997, pp. 8–19; Hahn 1997, pp. 20–31). |
17 | The broken, fragmented sculptures just above this figure perhaps depicted the flow of the holy oil descending from above. However, the current state of the sculpture makes it impossible to confirm such a reading. |
18 | On the question of the audience of the portals in the south porches, see Hollengreen (2004, pp. 81–108). |
19 | On the story and its textual sources, see Hinkle (1965, p. 48). |
20 | In contrast, the two scenes, in Reims on the lintel, the Baptism of Clovis and the Martyrdom of St. Nicaise, invite the active participation of their beholders. See Shalom (2017, pp. 96–113). |
21 | St. Firmin’s principal feasts commemorated the translation of his relic on January 13; his martyrdom on September 25; his octave on October 2; his arrival at Amiens on October 10, and the deposition of his relics in a new reliquary on October 16. St. Honoré’s principal feast and octave were on May 16. See Gaposchkin (2005, pp. 222–23). |
22 | Bolland et al. (1863, May 16, col. 613–15): In die etenim magno festivitatis praedicti Confessoris, qua nos, cum multa cleri pariter; populi frequentia, corpus sanctissimi Confessoris circa claustrum nostrum deferre consuevimus, redeuntibus nobis ad ecclesiam, cum jam clerus in chorum se recepisset missarum celebraturus solennia; theca beatissimi Confessoris in medio ecclesiae super tabulam posita, sacerdotum assistentium devotis servaretur obsequiis; plebs, ibidem in honore Domini; beati Confessoris collecta, orationes suas diutius funderet; vota solveret repromissa; puer praedictus ad thecam beati praedicti confessoris accedens; intuens in eos qui eam observabant, tamquam aliquid accepturus ab eis; sensit intra se divinae SIC? virtutis occultum miraculum, quod foris omnibus manifestum est in opere. Praesente enim matre sua; orationibus insistente, clamare coepit puer, quod videbatur ei si sursum trahi: sed parum intelligens, nondum cognoscebat quae sibi virtus divina praeparasset. Cui mater in Domino confortatt SIC?, respondit: Confide, fili, surge, apprehende thecam beati Confessoris. Credo enim quod ipso opitulate salvaberis. Ad quae verba surrexit puer; pedum pariter ac tibiarum recuperata virtute, in laudem Dei pariter conclamantes; ecclesiae pulsantes classicu; nos qui in choro eramus prius stupore. Translation from Gaposchkin (2005, pp. 235–36, n. 70). |
23 | “La nouvelle de cette guérison subite parvint bien vite à l’hôpital voisin de la cathédrale où, sous la direction de frères hospitaliers, la charité des fidèles nourrissait des pauvres et des infirmes. Là, une malheureuse femme perclue? CHECK de tous ses membres, à l’exception des mains, était condamnée à rester toujours au lit; en apprenant le miracle qui célébrait la voix joyeuse des cloches, elle se sent inspirée d’une subite confiance, se fait transporter à la cathédrale, entoure de ses bras la châsse protectrice et se trouve soudain guérie; elle bénit Dieu de son bienfait, en présence de l’évêque, et, après avoir reçu quelques libéralités des fidèles, elle retourna à l’hospice pour faire partager sa joie à tous ceux qui jadis avaient compati à ses souffrances.” The bishop’s testimony postdates the vita and was added in the vernacular French. My translation is based on Corblet (1868, vol 3, p. 55). On the structure of the medieval city of Amiens and the location of the hospital, see Bayard (1999, pp. 199–214). |
24 | On the question of the senses in Gothic art, see the studies in Palazzo (2016, pp. 547–647). On Tactility see Jung (2010, pp. 203–40) |
25 | I do not wish to suggest that seeing is less important than touching but, rather, that the sculptures’ emphasis on touch was an essential aspect of curative miracles. For seminal studies on theories of sight and its importance in medieval art, see (Lindberg 1976, pp. 42–52; Caviness 2001, 2000; Elsner 1995; Nolan 1977; Kessler 2000; Nelson 2000 and Biernoff 2002). |
26 | |
27 | Proust (1986) states: “Il n’y a pas de Logos, Il n’y a que les hiéroglyphes” (préface, pp. 44–45). See also (Deleuze 1993, p. 195; Ruskin 1908, pp. 249–340). |
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Shalom, G. The St. Honoré Portal at Amiens Cathedral and Its Reception. Religions 2024, 15, 536. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050536
Shalom G. The St. Honoré Portal at Amiens Cathedral and Its Reception. Religions. 2024; 15(5):536. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050536
Chicago/Turabian StyleShalom, Gili. 2024. "The St. Honoré Portal at Amiens Cathedral and Its Reception" Religions 15, no. 5: 536. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050536
APA StyleShalom, G. (2024). The St. Honoré Portal at Amiens Cathedral and Its Reception. Religions, 15(5), 536. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050536