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What Happened to the Last Judgement in the Early Church?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Josephine Laffin*
Affiliation:
Flinders University

Extract

The Last Judgement was one of the most important themes in Christian art from the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries. It can be found in glittering mosaics on the west wall of the cathedral on the island of Torcello in the Venetian lagoon, on the sculptured centre portal of the west façade of Notre Dame in Paris, in Luca Signorelli’s haunting frescos in the Chapel of the Madonna of San Brizio in Orvieto, and in Michelangelo’s masterpiece in the Sistine Chapel. Numerous other churches had their own ‘dooms’. A dramatic but not untypical example from the twelfth century can be found above the entrance to the Church of Sainte-Foy at Conques. Christ is enthroned as an austere judge, dividing the saved from the damned. The procession to heaven is neat and orderly while hell is chaotic, being depicted as a hideous mouth devouring the damned, a common representation in medieval art. In ominous foreboding, this Romanesque Last Judgement rivals the thirteenth-century hymn, the Dies Irae, as a reminder of the coming ‘day of wrath and doom impending’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2009

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References

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3 Felicity Harley’s forthcoming monograph, Crucifixion Iconography: Beginnings and Development, ca. 200–600, will be a seminal work. I am grateful to Dr Harley for reading a draft of this paper and providing helpful comments. For the development of resurrection iconography, see Kartsonis, Anna, Anastasis: The Making of an Image (Princeton, NJ, 1986).Google Scholar

4 Felicity Harley provides a survey of the theories in ‘Images of the Crucifixion in Late Antiquity: The Testimony of Engraved Gems’ (unpublished Ph. D. thesis, University of Adelaide, 2001), 16–33. That early Christians might have been deterred from pictorializing the crucifixion because of the stigma associated with that form of execution does not apply to the Last Judgement. Neither do the Christological concerns identified by Kartsonis, as they pertain to how Christ’s death could be understood in terms of his human and divine natures (Anastasis, 33–39).

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24 Ignatius, Letter to the Ephesians 16.2; 10.3.

25 Ibid. 11.1.

26 Idem, Letter to the Romans 6.1-2.

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