Pelican in her Piety, St Mary's, Beverley. By awmc1 @ flickr |
Tuesday, 3 April 2012
The Passion
The Passion, for those who don't know, is a term for Jesus' crucifixion on Good Friday. In medieval times one of the symbols of this was the pelican. A widespread story, often illustrated in Bestiaries, related how the pelican fed her starving young with her own blood; this was taken as a metaphor of Christ's sacrifice. The Pelican in her Piety, as this story was called, became a common artistic motif in medieval religious architecture, and in encyclopaedic books. The image here shows the Pelican in her Piety represented in a misericord at St Mary's Abbey, Beverley, in Yorkshire, a famous example of 14th century English Gothic style. She is pecking her own breast to release the blood and feed the chicks. (They weren't shy of graphic images in those days!)
A misericord is a little folding seat in the quire (i.e. choir) area of churches that the monks or canons could lean on during long services. It comes from the Latin for mercy, because allowing a tired singer to sit down was like taking mercy on him! In the medieval period the underneath of misericords, like the one shown here, came to be decorated in marvellous carvings, since this was the part of the seat most often visible to those moving about the church between services. Some had religious images, and others had very surprisingly secular ones, like illustrations from tales of knightly deeds and the rescue of fair maidens, or images of monsters.
Labels:
bestiary,
Easter,
misericord,
Passion,
pelican
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1 comment:
Happy Easter Sunday everyone, this word Bestiaries I had never heard of before and explains a lot about life's well integrated myths and legends. woven into our memories are stories of dragons, serpents and eagles and as the article points out references to the devil and evil spirits. The story of the pelican is interesting, it's amazing how you can look at an image like that and not have understanding of the story, or how the story came about just taken for granted that it has some meaning. I also enjoyed the chanting but no Latin understanding just nice sounds
Enjoy Ross
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