S Maria Antiqua Conference: Abstracts of papers and posters: 23 11 13 1 Santa Maria Antiqua: “The Sistine Chapel of the 8 th Century” in Context A Consideration of the site from the 4th – 9th century Abstracts and details of Chairs of Sessions: November, 2013
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S Maria Antiqua Conference: Abstracts of papers and posters: 23 11 13
1
Santa Maria Antiqua: “The Sistine Chapel of the 8th Century” in Context
A Consideration of the site from the 4th – 9th century
Abstracts and details of Chairs of Sessions: November, 2013
S Maria Antiqua Conference: Abstracts of papers and posters: 23 11 13
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NAME Title and Abstract Session
SPEAKERS
Ackerman, Lisa
Introduction and Welcome 1
Andaloro, Maria
Riscoprire le pitture di Santa Maria Antiqua dai ponteggi
La relazione si compone di due parti. La prima intende illustrare le linee generali, l’approccio metodologico, la messa a
fuoco degli strumenti investigativi, gli obiettivi, insomma il succo di quel Riscoprire le pitture di Santa Maria Antiqua dai ponteggi, cuore del progetto “Santa Maria Antiqua” che il gruppo di ricerca dell’Università degli Studi di Viterbo sta svolgendo dall’anno 2000 ad oggi nell’ambito di una serie di progetti PRIN (Progetti di ricerca interuniversitari di interesse nazionale), in collaborazione con la Soprintendenza Speciale per i Beni archeologici di Roma, parallelamente e talora in connessione con le vaste campagne di restauro dei dipinti sostenuti dal Word Monuments Fund, New York (2001-2013). E si conclude, rinviando
all’ascolto della relazione “corale”, Occhi puntati sui palinsesti di Santa Maria Antiqua, elaborata quale exemplum metodologico del progetto e qui applicato a due “casi” problematici riguardanti il campo delle pareti-palinsesto del presbiterio. La seconda parte vuole perseguire invece le tracce di un’altra linea guida, maturata ugualmente all’interno del progetto, ma diversa, avente per oggetto non tanto la parete dipinta in sé quanto un orizzonte di relazioni; in particolare, le
relazioni in divenire interagenti in Santa Maria Antiqua fra lo spazio del monumento e l’immagine dipinta. Di questo orizzonte si offriranno tre casi e tre sfaccettature differenti
1. Dipinto murale senza luogo. Il dipinto murale staccato, con la figura di sant’Agata
a mezzo busto entro clipeo, pubblicato da Pietro Toesca negli anni ’50, e
dichiarato “già coll. Fairfax Murray”, presenta tali punti di contatto con il patrimonio
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pittorico ed epigrafico di Santa Maria Antiqua da indurre a non escludere una sua
provenienza proprio dagli ambienti della chiesa nel Foro. Il brano che per molti
aspetti è assai eloquente, in quanto pezzo erratico è privo di voce e muto a
proposito delle relazioni, infrante, con il proprio contesto originario.
2. Percorso iconico e spazi: dialogo a più livelli fra queste due categorie lungo l’asse
della chiesa, dal presbiterio alla facciata, fra la fine del VI secolo e gli anni di
Giovanni VII (705-707)
3. Le pitture di Santa Maria Antiqua contestualizzate attraverso una selezione delle
tavole dedicate alla basilica di Santa Maria Antiqua nell’opera La pittura
medievale a Roma 312-1431. Atlante, percorsi visivi, volume secondo (a cura di
Maria Andaloro, di prossima pubblicazione)
Andaloro, Bordi, Viscontini, Amato,
Pelosi, Pogliani, Schmid, Valentini:
Occhi puntati sui palinsesti di Santa Maria Antiqua
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Avdokhin, Arkadii
Forging Identities, Promoting Orthodoxies – Lateran Synod Texts in the Sanctuary
Frescoes of Santa Maria Antiqua in their Byzantine Context
The seminal study by P. J. Nordhagen (1968) introduced a new perspective on part
of the frescoes of Santa Maria Antiqua as an essentially Byzantine-oriented decoration
program commissioned in the wake of the Lateran Synod of 649.
As was recently argued by D. Knipp, the incubation cult of Cyrus and John – a
Byzantine influence as well – was admittedly practiced in the diakonikon. Bringing an
explicit emphasis on the current version of orthodoxy as followed at the healing site (as
seen in the lower apse decorations with saints holding scrolls with formulations of the
Lateran Synod) is, arguably, another eastern trait.
While the historical identities of most incubation healing saints (and other miracle
workers) are suspicious (pseudo-4th
century saint St. Dometius blending with a 7th
century
martyr; St.Thecla, an apocryphic disciple of St. Paul; St. Demetrius, an martyred dux
Augusti with a strong Arian record; Cosmas and Damian with their unclear Syriac –
monophysite – origin; Cyrus and John featuring an invented martyrdom), they were
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theologically profiled to serve the needs of changing “orthodoxies” by way of creating
widely accessible textual accounts of themselves and their cultic centres – the miracle
collections of 5-7 centuries and hymns.
This textual tailoring of the doctrinal identity of incubation cults and their sites is a potent
– and thoroughly Byzantine – means of disseminating a newly arrived version of
“orthodoxy” clearly paralleled in the early 8th
century decoration program of Santa Maria
Antiqua.
Barbera, Mariarosaria
Introduction and welcome 1
Booth, Philip "Eastern monks and eastern cults in seventh-century Rome"
This paper reconstructs the intimate association of five celebrated eastern
ascetics gathered in Rome during the period c.620-c.650: John Moschus,
Sophronius of Jerusalem, Maximus the Confessor, Theodore of Tarsus, and the
author of the so-called Georgian Appendix to the Spiritual Meadow. It explores
the ties of friendship and discipleship which bound together the entire circle,
the political and doctrinal circumstances which brought each of them to Rome,
and their prominent position as champions of papal pre-eminence in conflicts
with Constantinople. At the same time, it also explores their status as
conduits for the cults of new eastern saints and their associated hagiographic
corpora in Rome, as well as their conspicuous role in establishing the cult of
a recent pope.
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Bordi, Giulia
L’abside e i suoi strati
Sin dal 1900, nella chiesa di Santa Maria Antiqua, punto focale è stato non
l’abside, ma la cosiddetta “parete palinsesto” con la sua straordinaria
stratificazione di intonaci dipinti. Lo stato di conservazione delle sue pitture,
coperte di sali già all’indomani della scoperta, ha condannato l’abside ad essere
relegata in secondo piano e talvolta tagliata fuori dai più rilevanti studi
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monografici dedicati alla chiesa, concentrati sui contesti pittorici più leggibili.
Questo intervento ha come obiettivo quello di riportare l’attenzione sull’abside e
rimettere in gioco i suoi strati pittorici nello studio organico delle pitture di Santa
Maria Antiqua. Partendo dalla mappatura degli intonaci dipinti conservati nella
calotta e nell’emiciclo, si intende sfogliare strato dopo strato il complesso e
sconosciuto palinsesto pittorico dell’abside e ricostruire, dove possibile, la facies
frammentata delle sue molteplici fasi decorative.
Börjesson, Johannes
The Cult of Augustine in the Byzantine Church of the First Millennium
While Augustine of Hippo was recognised as the foremost teacher in the Medieval Latin
West, the knowledge of him in the Greek East was sparse. Even so, he was included in the
list of authoritative fathers and teachers of the Church, which was accepted by the
Ecumenical Council of Constantinople in 553. His reputation in the Greek world,
however, exceeded the level to which his teaching was known – a situation which would
remain until the Palaiologan era, when De Trinitate and several of his other works were
translated into Greek. Until then, it seems as if the extent of his cult in the Greek world
mirrored the limited knowledge of his teaching, as there is little remaining evidence
thereof. This paper reflects on that evidence from the period before the translations, and
situates this in the larger context of his legacy in Byzantine theology. Special focus is
given to Pope John VII’s restoration of Santa Maria Antiqua and his inclusion of
Augustine among its frescos. This inclusion is considered in the political, cultural and
theological context of early 8th century Italy.
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Brenk, Beat
S. Maria Antiqua: Patronage and Theology
The paper discusses the following topics: Who was responsible for the construction and
decoration of the church of S. Maria Antiqua in Rome? If it was the soldiers of the
Palatine guard stationed at the bottom of the Palatine ramp, why would they have required
such a large and ambitious church? And if a Pope was the builder, why would he have
been conceded the right, or even have been interested in constructing a church below the
Palatine adjacent to the station of a Byzantine garrison? The first documented pope
responsible for commissioning mural paintings in S. Maria Antiqua is Martin I (649-653),
organizer of the Lateran Council in 649.
Why is it that theology plays such an important role in the pictorial program of S. Maria
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Antiqua? Had it been important before Martin I? What evidence is there for its prior role?
The Annunciation is the scene par excellence that focuses on both the human and the
divine will of Christ. The patrons of the multiple Annunciation scenes in S. Maria Antiqua
were opponents of Byzantine Monotheletism then living in Rome. The Lateran Council of
649 forms the background against which this commission should be seen. Greek monks
coming from the monastery of San Saba to the southeast of Bethlehem, and from
Carthage, Armenia and Cilicia are attested “iam per annos habitantes in hac Romanae
civitate “ in the acts of the Council of 649. Maximus Confessor (d.662) and Pope
Theodore (642-648) were the planners of the Lateran Council. Many art historians are still
convinced that the murals in S. Maria Antiqua are the last paintings to bear witness to
Constantinopolitan artistic influence in seventh-century Rome. In view of the sources
discussed in this paper, such a theory requires reconsideration and revision.
Coates-Stephens, Robert
“Oratory of the Forty Martyrs”
The apsed Roman hall at the foot of the Domitianic ramp to the Palatine was converted to
a church in the 6th century and abandoned in the later middle ages. It takes its modern
name from its frescos of the Forty Martyrs of Sebaste, but its original dedication is
unknown, as also are the circumstances of its conversion. The paper considers the
unanswered questions of its Christian origins.
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Costambeys, Marios
Liturgy and patronage at S. Maria Antiqua in the eighth century
S. Maria Antiqua presents a striking assemblage of some of the most important elements
in the shaping of eighth-century Rome: the cult of saints and their relics, the patronage of
sacred buildings, the assumption of civic functions by the Church, the interaction of
papacy and aristocracy. This paper will seek to analyze some of these elements by
considering how the church functioned liturgically in the eighth century. Direct textual
evidence for liturgical practice in eighth-century Rome is very scant, so the paper will also
consider circumstantial factors such as its architectural form, its role as the church of a
diaconia, and, in particular, the saints culted there, and the relics that it housed.
Contemporary practices in relation to the cult of the Virgin will be considered, as will the
fact that this church housed martyr relics (in the Theodotos chapel) from a date (c. 741)
earlier than the well-known move by Pope Paul I to bring extramural martyr relics into the
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city’s churches. It will be seen that the changing decorative programme in S. Maria
Antiqua responded to changes in liturgical practices that were themselves driven by the
changing complexion of political cultural power in the city from the papacy of John VII,
through those of Gregory III, Zacharias and Paul, to that of Hadrian.
Cubitt, Katie
The Lateran Synod of 649 and St Maria Antiqua: Ritual Action and its audience
This paper will be divided into three sections – the first will set out the significance of the
Lateran synod for imperial politics and for the development of papal identity and action.
It will contextualise it not only in the opposition of Maximus, Sophronius and the
Palestinian monks to the imperially sponsored teachings of monoenergism and
monothelitism, but also in relation to papal involvement in the west, in Africa and in the
churches of the new successor states.
The next section will focus specifically on the role of ritual action in the course of the
controversy. The conflict over theological doctrine is largely understood today in terms of
the surviving documentation, whether of the synodal acta or the correspondence of its
protagonists like Sergius of Constantinople, Maximus the Confessor or the popes.
However, such documents also demonstrate the significant use of ritual action in the
course of the controversy, particularly by the dyophysites, to underline and dramatise the
nature of the conflict. This included, for example, the display of the Ekthesis in the
narthex of the Hagia Sophia and the persistent demands by the papacy that this should be
removed. The deployment of ritual action sheds light on the role of visual communication
in the course of the controversy and will thus elucidate the images from the Fathers put up
by Pope Martin in Sta Maria Antiqua.
The final section of the paper will consider questions of audience for these, highlighting
the close relations of Maximus the Confessor with the secular Byzantine elite and the
personal connections between Rome and Constantinople at this time. It will also address
questions of the pilgrims present in Rome in the mid seventh century, and their possible
presence in the church.
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Englen, Alia
Dialogando coi restauratori
L’intervento sarà incentrato sulle peculiarità paesaggistiche e archeologiche del sito in cui
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è inserita S. Maria Antiqua e, in particolare, sul carattere di duplice palinsesto che
caratterizza questo monumento: palinsesto architettonico e palinsesto decorativo.
Quest’elemento è stato alla base della sperimentazione e delle scelte tecnico scientifiche
che hanno preceduto e supportato il restauro che si è proposto di rendere di nuovo visibile
la straordinaria stratificazione cronologica e stilistica degli intonaci e delle decorazioni,
restituendo armonia e unità alle immagini, da quelle più degradate, ridotte a lacerti, a
quelle riconducibili a un’ efficace integrità.
Folgerø, Per Olav Expression of Dogma: Text and Imagery in the Triumphal Arch Decoration
in the Sanctuary of S. Maria Antiqua in Rome (705-707 A.D.).
The point of departure in my article is the triumphal arch decoration of John VII and its
strong pro-Chalchedonian and anti-Monothelitic leads (cf. particularly J.-M.
SANSTERRE, À propos de la signification politico-religieuse de certaines fresques de
Jean VII à Sainte-Marie-Antique, in Byzantion (57) 1987, pp. 434-440). I will then turn to
the Old Testament text-catena, and discuss whether a Christological, and dogma-related,
interpretation of this typological chaining of verses might be possible. Moreover, as I will
argue, symmetry will always be a principle at work in expression of dogma, as in this
strictly symmetrical monumental painting. I will raise the question whether this principle
can lead to some assumptions as to what was written in the lost part of the catena r. side.
The article concludes with some reflections on what might be a deeper symbolism behind
the beautifully white letters written on purple/red ground.
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Gantner, Clemens
The pontificate of Zacharias
'S Maria Antiqua in the Theodotus chapel features the portrait of Pope
Zacharias (741-752), which was in all probability done during his pontificate.
This paper's objective will be to present the pontificate of Zacharias with a
special emphasis on his relationship with the Byzantine Empire and the
implications this had for Rome and also for the pope's building policy in the
city. In this context I will also address the question as to what extent
Zacharias was 'the last Greek pope' and whether this had an influence on his
rule in Rome.
I will include the relatively rich information (compared to other Roman
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nobility) we have about Theodotus, the donor of the image-programme (Quiricus
and Iulitta) that shows Zacharias. He was the uncle and benefactor of Pope
Hadrian I, who, in turn, during his pontificate also acted as donor for S Maria
Antiqua.'
Gasbarri, Giovanni
Wladimir de Grüneisen and the study of Santa Maria Antiqua in its multi-cultural context
Only a few months after its discovery, Santa Maria Antiqua started to be considered as a
crucial topic in early Christian and Byzantine art historiography. A general consensus
exists on the importance of pioneering contributions by specialists like Louis Duchesne or
Gordon Rushforth in identifying the ‘Eastern’ factor lying beneath the newfound wall
paintings. The publication of sources as the Liber Pontificalis, together with Rushforth’s
interpretation of the inscriptions in the apse, turned into precious critical instruments to
better understand the relationship between the monument and its context in the early
Middle Ages, when Rome was exposed to strong Eastern Mediterranean political and
religious influences.
But what about the stylistic features of the frescoes? With few remarkable exceptions, the
persistent idea of the preponderance of a ‘Latin’ tradition in the history of Western art did
not facilitate the recognition of ‘foreign’ aesthetical languages. In this regard, the case of
the art historian Wladimir de Grüneisen looks extremely interesting. This obscure
Russian-born scholar moved in Italy in 1903, and became the author of the first
monograph ever dedicated to Santa Maria Antiqua, written in French and published in
1911. With the help of a large amount of photographs and many original illustrations, in
this book de Grüneisen offered a unique reconstruction of the multicultural artistic
environment that surrounded the church between the 6th
and the 9th
centuries. Santa Maria
Antiqua thus became a genuine témoin - or witness - of a mix of different influences,
ranging from Egypt to Persia, from Anatolia to Greece.
Appena pochi mesi dopo la sua scoperta, Santa Maria Antiqua cominciò ad essere
considerata come un argomento cruciale nella storia dell’arte paleocristiana e bizantina. Si
è oggi concordi nel riconoscere l’importanza del contributo di studiosi come Louis
Duchesne e Gordon Rushforth nel mettere in luce la radice ‘orientale’ sottesa alle pitture
murali appena scoperte. L’edizione di fonti storiche come il Liber Pontificalis, assieme
alla decodificazione delle iscrizioni nell’abside elaborata da Rushforth, divennero preziosi
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strumenti critici per comprendere meglio la relazione tra il monumento stesso e il contesto
della Roma altomedievale, fortemente esposta alle influenze politiche e religiose
provenienti dal Mediterraneo orientale.
Per quanto riguarda i caratteri stilistici degli affreschi, la situazione era molto diversa. Con
poche eccezioni significative, l’idea diffusa del predominio della tradizione ‘latina’ nella
storia dell’arte occidentale non facilitava l’individuazione di linguaggi estetici ‘stranieri’.
In questo senso, il caso di Wladimir de Grüneisen appare estremamente interessante.
Questo studioso di origine russa, trasferitosi in Italia nel 1903, fu autore della più antica
monografia dedicata a Santa Maria Antiqua, redatta in francese e pubblicata nel 1911.
Servendosi di una gran quantità di fotografie e di molte illustrazioni originali, nel suo
volume de Grüneisen presentò una ricostruzione unica del contesto artistico multiculturale
che circondava la chiesa tra VI e IX secolo. Santa Maria Antiqua divenne così una vera e
propria témoin – o testimone – di un crogiolo di influenze diverse, dall’Egitto alla Persia,
dall’Anatolia alla Grecia.
Gianandrea, Manuela Il dipinto murale di Santa Sabina all’Aventino e il Concilio del 680: implicazioni
teologiche di una rara iconografia.
Lo studio si incentra sul dipinto murale recentemente scoperto nel nartece della basilica di
Santa Sabina all’Aventino e, in particolare, sull’iconografia della Vergine con il Bambino
nella mandorla (diffusa nell’Oriente bizantino quanto rara a Roma e nell’Occidente
medievale), evidenziandone il legame con le delibere antimonotelite del Concilio di
Costantinopoli del 680.
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Hurst, Henry
The basilica and diaconia of S. Maria Antiqua
This paper focuses on the beginning and the end of SMA, setting it in a wider study both
of the imperial buildings in which it is set and of later use of the area following the
disappearance of the church. There seems to be better evidence than was previously
supposed for a church on the site prior to the traditional later 6th
/7th
-century date of Santa
Maria Antiqua. There are grounds for placing its origin in the 4th
century together with a
redevelopment of the imperial complex as storage/commercial/domestic buildings. The
church seems to have included a baptismal font in a secondary stage. The post-disuse
history of the church and adjacent areas is also vital in understanding the remains. Not
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only was the ‘atrium’ and part of the church robbed severely of travertine (mainly from
the underlying imperial buildings), probably in the 16th
century, but the excavation of the
church in the early 18th
century seems to have been followed by an attempt at restoration
before it was reburied. This evidence requires some adjustment of our general
understanding of the church’s nature and history.
Jankowiak, Marek
Rome at the Sixth Ecumenical Council (680-681): An Unexpected Victory
When trying in 678 to persuade the pope to send his envoys to Constantinople to debate
on the divisive subject of the wills of Christ, the emperor Constantine IV promised that
even if no agreement was reached, Roman envoys would still not be arrested and would
be granted safe return home. In view of the strained relations between the popes and the
emperors in the preceding decades, the Roman curia could indeed not have nurtured high
hopes for the meeting in Constantinople. But after ten months of dramatic deliberations,
the Sixth Council ended in a complete Roman victory: the Roman doctrine of the two
wills was endorsed, Monotheletism was condemned, and four patriarchs of Constantinople
were anathematised – in exchange for only one bishop of Rome, Honorius. I will argue
that this success was unexpected even for the Roman delegation. I will try to elucidate
why the Sixth Council took this unanticipated turn. Was the Roman success due to the
strategy of the papal legates or to the support of the emperor? Why did Constantine IV
throw his lot with the Romans, and opposed the church of Constantinople? These
reflections will shed light on the Roman perspective on the wider world, and on
Constantinople in particular, in the later 7th
century.
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Jewell, Kaelin
A Chalke in Rome? Byzantine Authority and the Palatine Hill
Since antiquity, the Palatine Hill has functioned as a site of symbolic and topographical
importance, connected to the mythical foundations of the city. Augustus and his
successors added an association of authority to it. Its reoccupation during late antiquity
demonstrates its continuing status as a locus of power. This paper explores the notion that
the Palatine served as a strategic, charged location within the topography of sixth-century
Rome, after the defeat of the Goths and the re-establishment of Byzantine control.
More specifically, I focus on the relationship between the Palatine and the Forum below
during seventh and eighth centuries through an investigation of Santa Maria Antiqua,
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located at the foot of the Palatine. Building on Richard Krautheimer’s interpretation of
that building as a “gate-sanctuary,” which bridged the Forum and the Palatine, I argue that
Santa Maria Antiqua was originally part of a monumental vestibule that sought to evoke
the imperial and sacred authority of Constantinople’s own imperial entryway, the Chalke.
Through an analysis of Rome’s architectural topography during the Byzantine period,
along with textual sources on imperial palaces, I propose a desire among imperial patrons
to seek out the Palatine as their primary place of residence due to its association with the
birth of the Roman Empire. Layered onto this was the imperial authority of the Chalke. In
an interesting reversal of the original pattern, with Constantinople being modelled on
Rome, a monument from the younger city gave new prestige back to an ancient one.
Knipp, David
Richard Delbrück and the Reconstruction of a ‘Ceremonial Route’ in Domitian’s Palace
Vestibule
Delbrück's ingenious interpretation of the archaeological evidence from 1921 will form
the starting point for an investigation of the various ways in which processions and
ceremonial appearances, or private audiences could have been staged within the complex
of Western hall, Northern Hall (Atrium), peristyle court, exedra (S. Maria Antiqua), and
Palatine ramp, from Domitian to Belisarius and down to the conversion of the structure to
a church. This includes, obviously, long stretches of time in which no ceremonial was
conducted at all on the site, since the building served other purposes.
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Lidova, Maria
The Power of Maria Regina. Imperial Background and Theological Connotations of the
Early Byzantine Image
The solemn image of the crowned Virgin defines several programs within rich
decoration of Santa Maria Antiqua church. In one case it even bears the caption ‘Maria
Regina’ or Mary the Queen, a term usually used to designate this type of Marian
representation. Its popularity in the western world, gave reason to regard it as a specific
variant of Marian imagery, which emerged in Rome, introduced by popes as a sort of
political declaration in their opposition to Constantinople. However, this assumption is
contested by the fact that the earliest existing images of Maria Regina (6-8th
c.) do not
imitate but directly quote official representations of the Byzantine empresses.
The borrowing of the iconography from the imperial cult, with its utterly un-
Christian essence, brought in its wake the transfer of semantic and hierarchic accents from
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secular iconography to the Marian. Thus the image of Maria Regina deliberately used the
symbolism and dramatic emotional impact intrinsic in the official imperial
representations. This solution was apparently adopted at the crucial moment in the
formation and development of the Marian cult in order to convey sophisticated theological
“image” of the Mother of God which so far has not been carefully studied nor explained.
In the paper I would like to clarify the dating of the earliest image of Maria Regina on a
palimpsest wall in Santa Maria Antiqua and to propose new reading of the Roman images
of the crowned Virgin in a broader context of the early Marian imagery. I will unveil the
connections of Maria Regina type with the official portraiture of Byzantine emperors and
demonstrate that the turn to the imperial iconography may serve as a strong indication to
Constantinople as a center where Maria Regina type most probably originated.
McKitterick, Rosamond
The seventh- and early eighth-century sections of the Liber pontificalis.
The sections of the Liber pontificalis appended to the sixth-century original text and
running to 715 include the Lives of thirty popes: Vigilius, Pelagius, John II, Benedict I,
Pelagius II, Gregory I, Sabinian, Boniface III, Boniface IV, Deusdedit, Boniface V,
Honorius, Severinus, John IV, Theodore, Martin, , Eugene I, Vitalian, Adeodatus, Donus,
Agatho, Leo II, Benedict II, John V, Conon, Sergius, John VI, John VI, Sisinnius and
Constantine. The section up to Honorius is usually regarded as a coherent addition and an
attempt to add the Lives of these twelve popes as an updating exercise. Thereafter the
Lives are accepted as a succession of contemporary continuators. Their comments on
individual popes, not least popes Martin, Agatho and Sergius, and the famous references
to S. Maria Antiqua in the Life of John VII (705-707) need to be considered, however, in
the context of the Liber pontificalis as a whole and the degree to which it was
disseminated as a coherent narrative from St Peter to Pope Constantine, with particular
narrative strategies and emphases apparent in the text which need to be compared with
other extant evidence, not least the material evidence of the buildings in Rome itself.
There are many peculiarities about the lives from the later seventh-and early eight century
in particular. The extra material Bronwen Neil’s book on Anastastius Bibliothecarius’s
dossier on Martin I provides, moreover, has made further consideration of his career and
the peculiarities of the relations with Byzantium it implies in particular, even more
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necessary. This paper therefore will look at these Lives to highlight both their importance
and their problems as historical evidence.
Monaco, Ernesto Measuring Santa Maria antiqua. From Petrignani at present.
Since 2003 the Archaeological Superintendence of Rome has undertaken a survey
programme of the buildings of Santa Maria Antiqua, that continues up to the present day,
The working plan, begun almost at the same time as the restoration of the general
frescoes, was aimed at drawing up a graphical record and an analysis and description of
the building under present –day conditions, including its unique features. Getting on with
the survey, we are beginning to draft a master plan as a point of reference for restoration
and conservation work, The survey must be seen as a framework of data permitting an
understanding of the cause of critical situations through an analysis of the recorded data
closely related to the historical and archaeological research.
Given that the answers to resolving these critical points are not confined to the Basilica’s
area, the survey was extended to the whole Domitianic building up to the nearest
boundary of the Domus Tiberiana, in order to provide the best possible understanding of
the Basilica’s position in the architectural and structural context of the imperial palace in
which it was placed. Surveying and measuring, in this wider point of view, are additional
ways of addressing the archaeological and topographical analysis, both of the whole
architectural context and of each of its individual parts. At last, with the results obtained
from the survey’s work, we are writing a new chapter of the topographical literature of the
area where Petrignani’s plan is the main point in the history of the archaeological
researches and excavations. Through the computer aided design programmes it has been
possible to “redraw” plans and drawings of past excavations, linking them to the present
topographical net .In this way the past excavation data, already covered and inaccessible,
are updated, inserting and joining them to the present survey net as basis of a new analysis
of the area.
Misurare Santa Maria Antiqua da Petrignani ad oggi
Nel 2003 la Soprintendenza Archeologica di Roma ha intrapreso un programma di
rilevamento,tuttora in corso, del complesso di Santa Maria antiqua. Il rilevamento, iniziato
parallelamente alle operazioni di restauro dei cicli di affreschi e ulteriormente sviluppatosi
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nel tempo, è finalizzato alla redazione di una documentazione grafica dell’edificato nel
suo stato attuale con la registrazione e l’analisi delle caratteristiche e degli elementi del
costruito. Il rilievo, strettamente collegato alle indagini ed alle ricerche archeologiche e
storiche si propone come obiettivo la formazione di un “documento” che costituisse un
quadro di riferimento omogeneo utile sia alla comprensione dei processi di sviluppo della
Basilica, quanto supporto alle operazioni di restauro conservazione con la valutazione
delle situazioni e dei punti critici.
Poiché le cause e le origini di questi non sono circoscritte all’area della Basilica
strettamente detta, il rilevamento e le ricerche sono state progressivamente estese
all’intero complesso domizianeo fino alla prossima domus Tiberiana: questo, per una
ulteriore migliore comprensione della posizione architettonica e strutturale della chiesa nel
contesto del palazzo imperiale in cui è inserita. Il rilevamento e le ricerche riferiti a questo
quadro allargato definiscono i termini di una più organica analisi archeologica e
topografica dell’intero contesto costruttivo e di ogni singola parte.
Da ultimo, con i risultati delle campagne di rilevamento si sta scrivendo un nuovo
capitolo della letteratura topografica dell’area laddove la pianta redatta dal Petrignani
costituisce un caposaldo nella storia delle ricerche e degli scavi. Mediante i programmi di
grafica computerizzata (CAD) è stato possibile “ridisegnare” piante e grafici degli scavi
passati collegandoli alla rete topografica attuale; i dati pregressi ,interrati ed inaccessibili,
vengono,così,resi “odierni”ed attualizzati ponendo in essere le basi di una nuova
discussione sui problemi dell’area.
Morganti, Giuseppe "Per meglio provvedere alla conservazione dei dipinti”. 1984-2014: Santa Maria Antiqua
thirty years later.
In order to illustrate the difficulties connected with the protection of cultural heritage,
Giovanni Carbonara states: “…, in the first place, the work of architects working in the
state administration of protection, especially in the archaeological superintendencies, in
an environment, that is, where the interdisciplinary debate is indispensable, daily, often
hard, and consequently, challenging comes to mind: I think, therefore, that the young
architects freshly appointed of the Ministry should serve for at least two year in these
offices (the archaeological superintendencies), in order to form a scientific and
professional habit of mind which other superintendencies, overwhelmed by more
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numerous and pressing tasks, are struggling to secure”.
Santa Maria Antiqua expresses in a very effective and concise way the Carbonara opinion:
a monument where seamlessly the archaeological building, the mural paintings cycle (as
well as mosaics etc.) and the architecture come together in an inextricable unicum.
Antiquity (the Domitianic monument and the pre-existing buildings), the Middle Ages
(the church and the paintings), and the Modern Age (the demolition of S. Maria
Liberatrice, although in a negative sense; then the excavations and the restorations) are
present in a synchronic rather than a fragmented way. In the case of S. Maria Antiqua it is
therefore impossible to separate into different offices the protection and the safeguarding
of the monument, which must be seen as a whole. In this sense Santa Maria Antiqua
represents a paradigm of the correct methodology for managing a multi-stratified
historical building (at least in many of its features).
The Archaeological Superintendency promoted and led (in cooperation with other
superintendencies, universities and research institutes) the investigations and restoration
works in the church during the last thirty years. A complete cycle of works started in 1984
through the initiative of Adriano La Regina is likely to be completed by 2014. This work
included a preliminary assessment of the state of conservation of the pictures and the
characteristics of the environment; the waterproofing of roof and terraces and the
refurbishment of all the drains; the insertion of frames and glazing of all the windows; the
restoration of the architectural surfaces (masonry foundations and brick walls, stone,
plaster etc.), and finally, since 2001, the restoration of the wall paintings, sponsored by the
World Monuments Fund of New York.
The paper will outline the overall chronology of the work undertaken during these thirty
years, in order to demonstrate their organic and integrated characteristics. This process
was inspired by the rediscovering and rebirth of this monument that resulted from the
actions of Giacomo Boni and Antonio Petrignani. They, of course, did not reinvented the
medieval monument, but, with the declared intention of “meglio provvedere alla
conservazione dei dipinti”, they, in fact, acted as architects, and designed a true “space”,
that re- invokes the sense, the concept, the ideal notion of the architectural monument, and
does not claim to return it to its original form. At the same time it gives back to the
paintings what Brandi called “the space in which the paintings need to be placed”.
"Per meglio provvedere alla conservazione dei dipinti”. 1984-2014: Santa Maria Antiqua
S Maria Antiqua Conference: Abstracts of papers and posters: 23 11 13
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thirty years later.
Per illustrare le difficoltà connesse con la tutela del patrimonio culturale Giovanni
Carbonara afferma: “… vengono alla mente, in primo luogo, i lavori di architetti operanti
presso l'amministrazione statale di tutela, soprattutto nelle Soprintendenze archeologiche,
in un ambiente, cioè, dove il confronto interdisciplinare è indispensabile, quotidiano,
sovente duro e, di conseguenza, stimolante: penso, per questo, che i giovani architetti di
prima nomina del Ministero dovrebbero svolgere servizio, per almeno un biennio, presso
quelle soprintendenze, al fine di formarsi un habitus mentale e professionale scientifico
che le soprintendenze ai monumenti, travolte da più numerose e assillanti incombenze,
fanno fatica ad assicurare”.
Santa Maria Antiqua esprime nel modo più pregnante questa esigenza di Carbonara: un
monumento in cui senza soluzione di continuità l’edificio archeologico, il corredo
pittorico (ed anche musivo etc.) e la struttura architettonica si fondono in un unicum
inestricabile. L’età antica (il monumento domizianeo e le preesistenze), il medioevo (la
chiesa e le pitture), e l’età moderna (la demolizione di S. Maria Liberatrice, pur in
negativo; e poi gli scavi e i restauri) sono presenti in maniera sincronica e non
frammentabile. Nel caso di S. Maria Antiqua non è quindi pensabile che uffici differenti
possano provvedere alla tutela e salvaguardia di un monumento a cui si deve invece
guardare come a un tutto unico. In questo senso il restauro di Santa Maria Antiqua
rappresenta un’indicazione di metodo assai significativa di come si dovrebbe agire nel
caso di edifici pluristratificati (cioè quasi sempre).
La Soprintendenza Archeologica ha promosso e guidato (con la collaborazione delle altre
soprintendenze, di università e istituti di ricerca) le attività di indagine e di restauro negli
ultimi trenta anni. Un completo ciclo di restauri iniziato nel 1984 per volere di Adriano La
Regina e che sarà presumibilmente completato entro il 2014. Tale opera ha incluso lo
studio preliminare dello stato di conservazione delle pitture e i caratteri del microclima;
l’impermeabilizzazione dei tetti e delle terrazze; il rinnovo di tutti gli impianti di
smaltimento e drenanti; la sostituzione degli infissi in tutte le aperture della chiesa; il
restauro delle superfici architettoniche (nuclei murari, cortine a mattoni, pietra, intonaci
etc.), e infine, a partire dal 2001, il restauro delle pitture murali, sponsorizzato dal World
Monuments Fund.
Il contributo al convegno ripercorrerà sinteticamente questi trent’anni di lavori, allo scopo
di evidenziarne il carattere organico e conseguente. Operazione ispirata dalla riscoperta e
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rinascita di questo monumento ad opera di Giacomo Boni e Antonio Petrignani. I quali
non ripristinarono il monumento medioevale, ma – al fine dichiarato di “meglio
provvedere alla conservazione dei dipinti” – in realtà, da architetti, progettarono un vero e
proprio invaso spaziale, mediante il quale restituirono del monumento architettonico, il
senso, il concetto, la nozione ideale, e non la forma. Restituendo al contempo agli
affreschi “lo spazio in cui i dipinti hanno bisogno di collocarsi” (Cesare Brandi).
Osborne, John Rushforth and the text of Magister Gregorius’ Narracio de mirabilibus urbis Romae
In addition to his work on S. Maria Antiqua, Rushforth would later engage in another
major project related to medieval Rome: an extensive analysis of, and commentary on, the
text of Magister Gregorius’ Narracio de Mirabilibus Urbis Romae. The single known
manuscript of this 13th
-century description of the ancient buildings and statues visible in
Rome was discovered by M.R. James in the library of St Catharine’s College, Cambridge,
and published by him in the 1917 issue of the Journal of Roman Studies. James’
contribution is limited to the edition of the text, and he thanks Rushforth for his
interpretative comments. Two years later, Rushforth published a more substantial analysis
in The English Historical Review. As with his initial study of S. Maria Antiqua, his
observations on Magister Gregorius’ Narracio have stood well the test of time, and still
remain valid today. This paper will examine Rushforth’s contribution to this topic.
2
Paribeni, Andrea Con Boni nel Foro? Le relazioni tra Gordon McNeil Rushforth e Giacomo Boni
secondo la documentazione archivistica
Il fotogramma di Boni e Rushforth mentre scendono a braccetto la scalinata di Villa
Bracciano, sede dell’Ambasciata Britannica, restituito da Eva Tea nella sua biografia
boniana, appaiato alle parole adoperate da Rushforth nel necrologio dell’archeologo
veneziano pubblicato nel 1925, forniscono la sensazione che uno stretto rapporto abbia
legato i due studiosi nei primi anni del XX secolo. Ricognizioni negli archivi dell’Istituto
Lombardo a Milano – dove si conservano scritti inediti, corrispondenza e altri documenti
di Giacomo Boni - nell’Archivio Centrale dello Stato e nell’archivio della Soprintendenza
Archeologica di Roma, hanno offerto purtroppo, almeno finora, solo pochissimi altri
elementi utili alla ricerca. Con questo contributo si intende rendere noti i dati fin qui
raccolti e anche cercare di fornire una prima spiegazione a questa mancanza di riscontri:
l’ipotesi è che questioni oggettive (Rushforth trascorse meno di due anni a Roma, in un
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periodo nel quale Boni fu assorbito da un gran numero di scavi nel Foro Romano e anche
dalla questione del Campanile di S. Marco a Venezia) assieme a differenti interessi
culturali, abbiano limitato, in buona sostanza, le occasioni di relazione tra i due,
circoscrivendole essenzialmente all’episodio di S. Maria Antiqua.
The image of Boni and Rushforth going down the stairway of Villa Bracciano arm-in-arm,
seen at the British Embassy - recorded by Eva Tea in Boni’s biography – paired with the
words used by Rushforth in the Obituary Notice devoted to the Venetian archaeologist in
1925, give us the impression that a close relationship had linked these two scholars in the
first years of the 20th
century. A closer scrutiny of the archival documents in the Istituto
Lombardo at Milan – where unpublished papers, letters and other documents of Giacomo
Boni are kept – in the Archivio Centrale dello Stato and in the Archive of the
Soprintendenza Archeologica di Roma offers unfortunately very few other clues to our
research. With this contribution we’ll make known the data collected until now and also
we’ll try to find some reason for this dearth of information: it is possible that practical
facts – Rushforth spent less than two years in Rome, a period in which Boni was absorbed
by many excavations in the Roman Forum and also by Venice’s Campanile affair –
together with some differences in cultural interests, restricted the opportunities of
interaction between the two, that were focused only on the episode of Santa Maria
Antiqua.
Pollard, Richard
Men of letters in 7th
-century Rome: an exercise in literary archaeology
Careful archaeological investigations at Santa Maria Antiqua, begun 110 years ago, have
taught us a great deal about the artistic, religious and political world of seventh-century
and eighth-century Rome. But the paintings there also offer a window on the literary
world of the city in the same period: there are, of course, the scrolls that point to texts
associated with the Lateran Council of 649, or the presence of depictions of saints Cyrus
and John. Hagiographical texts associated with the latter were translated from Greek into
Latin in Rome, sometime in the later seventh century, most likely by Boniface, the papal
consiliarius who also seems to have been an expert in theology, canon law, and possibly
diplomacy. My paper aims to explore the career of Boniface and those like him, for there
seem to have been many 'papal consultants' in the seventh century. In particular I want to
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engage in some literary archaeology: by careful examination of ecclesiastical texts from
seventh century Rome, I can help to restore the literary/intellectual reputation of Romans
in a period where they have been lately (in light of Rudolf Riedinger's discoveries)
overshadowed by Maximus Confessor and his merry band of Greek monks.
Price, Richard
The frescos in S. Maria Antiqua and the Lateran Synod of 649
The task of my paper will be to explain the four panels in the apsidal wall of S. Maria
Antiqua which contain extracts (in Greek) from the patristic florilegia in the Acts of the
Lateran Synod of 649, of which Catherine Cubitt and I are preparing an English
translation and edition for publication in the ‘Translated Texts for Historians’ series.
This will involve a résumé of the monoenergist-monothelete (one energy/operation – one
will) controversy of the seventh century, and an account of the Lateran Synod and of its
acts, and of the function of the patristic florilegia it contains. Finally, I must explain the
significance of the four texts selected for inscription in this particular church.
This topic is less straightforward than might be supposed, and our understanding of these
questions has been utterly transformed over the last thirty years, since the appearance of
the first critical edition of the acts of 649 in 1984. In brief, it is now clear that the assertion
of one energy (or mode of operation) or will in Christ was just as traditional as the
assertion of two, and that the Byzantine Church never formally adopted monoenergism or
monotheletism. The invention of the monothelete heresy and its ascription to the emperors
and patriarchs at Constantinople was the work of a small group of Greek monks largely of
Palestinian origin, who won the support of the Roman see. The acts of 649 were in part a
genuine record of the sessions of the Roman Synod of October 649 and in part a literary
product composed by these same monks in the Greek language, which was then translated
into Latin. When the acts were published, the pretence was made that the Latin was the
original and the Greek the translation.
The four texts selected for inscription in the church are somewhat puzzling, since, while
two of them relate to two operations in Christ, the other two relate to the unity of will
between Father and Son within the Holy Trinity. But in the Roman context, where the
erroneousness of monotheletism was taken for granted, the aim was less to combat heresy
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than to celebrate the totality of the orthodox faith that the synod had reaffirmed.
Rubery Eileen
The Church of Santa Maria Antiqua: Researching with Rushforth’s paper
The preparation and publication of Gordon Rushforth’s paper in the first volume of the
Papers of the British School at Rome in 1902 will be considered in the context of the
papers being presented at the Conference. The importance of his observations on the
complex, especially the identification of the origins of the four texts held by the standing
church fathers on the apsidal arch, will be assessed and some of the questions that these
frescoes pose in relation to the functions of the complex in the seventh and eighth
centuries will be considered.
2
Rubery, Eileen
S Maria Antiqua, the cult of Cyrus and John in Rome and Sophronius of Jerusalem
There are at least four images of the anargyros Saint Abbacyrus (Holy Father Cyrus) in
the church of S Maria Antiqua in Rome, making him the most frequently represented
healing saint depicted there. The earliest mention of his cult comes in three short Homilies
by St Cyril of Alexandria, apparently composed when Cyril translated the bones of Cyrus
and his companion, John of Edessa to Canopus in a move intended to provide a Christian
healing site that could compete with that of a nearby Pagan cult site, probably dedicated to
Isis.
In the seventh century the cult of Abbacyrus in Alexandria received further local support
from the monk Sophronius of Jerusalem, who, after himself being cured of an eye
complaint by these saints (while visiting Alexandria with his companion, John Moschus,
author of the ‘Spiritual Meadow’) wrote a Panegyric and recorded 70 miracles that had
taken place there.
In the paper the images of Cyrus and John and the other medical saints in S Maria Antiqua
will be explored in the context of our knowledge of the presence of the cult of S
Abbacyrus in S Maria Antiqua and in two other early churches in Rome: St’Angelo in
Pescheria, and S Passera. The paper will end by considering what this information tells us
about the relationship between the church of S Maria Antiqua, the ‘Greek monks’
Sophronius and Maximus the Confessor and events surrounding the Lateran Synod of 649.
6
Schmid, Werner Matthias
Diario di un lungo restauro (2000-2013)
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Oggetto dell'intervento è un breve resoconto del recente restauro dei dipinti murali
altomedievali e delle altre superfici architettoniche conservate a Santa Maria Antiqua al
Foro Romano. Il cantiere, iniziato alla fine del 2001 con un generoso finanziamento del
World Monuments Fund di New York, è stato anche un'occasione unica per lo studio
tecnico-esecutivo dei dipinti e per un riesame della stratigrafia dei palinsesti pittorici. Lo
stretto contatto e la condivisone di informazione tra restauratori, storici dell'arte,
archeologici e altri esperti ha portato a nuove scoperte e conoscenze. Il contributo
ripercorre le varie fasi d'intervento a partire dalle indagini preliminari. La
caratterizzazione dello stato di conservazione delle superfici, l'interscambio con l'edificio
che li custodisce, confronti con fotografie d'archivio e la storia dei restauri precedenti sono
tra i temi trattati. I risultati ottenuti e i concetti di base che hanno guidato l'intervento
vengono illustrati attraverso la documentazione fotografica e grafica. Le operazioni
conservative che hanno principalmente contribuito al successo dell'intervento sono: 1) il
consolidamento d'urgenza di tutti gli intonaci dipinti e non dipinti eseguito durante i primi
due anni del progetto, 2) il risanamento della parete absidale mediante il drenaggio delle
acque provenienti dal Colle Palatino, 3) la ricontestualizzazione dei dipinti staccati nella
Cappella di Teodoto e sui pilastri meridionali della navata centrale, 4) il "riordino" estetico
delle superfici e il miglioramento della leggibilità dei dipinti attraverso la rimozione dei
depositi superficiali, la sostituzione delle stuccature di cemento e una reintegrazione
pittorica minimale che non mira alla ricostruzione dell'immagine ma alla mitigazione delle
interferenze visive.
Diary of a long conservation treatment (2001-2013)
This paper is a concise account of the recent conservation of the early medieval wall
paintings and other architectural surfaces of Santa Maria Antiqua on the Roman Forum.
The project, initiated at the end of 2001 with generous funding made available by the
World Monuments Fund di New York, was also a unique opportunity to study the
manufacturing techniques of the paintings and to review their stratigraphic sequence. The
close contact and the sharing of information between conservators, art historians,
archaeologists and other experts generated new discoveries and understanding. This paper
describes the different project phases starting from preliminary investigations. Discussed
issues include the condition of both, the surfaces and the building envelope, comparisons
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with archival photographs and conservation history. Achieved results and basic concepts
which guided the treatment are illustrated through examples of graphic and photographic
documentation. The success of the project is mainly based on the following conservation
operations: 1) emergency stabilization of all painted and unpainted plasters carried out
during the first two years, 2) humidity control of the apse wall by providing drainage to
the water coming from the Palatine Hill, 3) re-contextualization of the detached paintings
from the Chapel of Theodotus and the two southern pillars of the central nave, 4) aesthetic
"re-ordering" and improvement of the legibility of the paintings achieved through the
removal of heavily obscuring surface deposits, replacement of cement fills and a
minimum pictorial reintegration which does not aim at reconstructing the images but at
mitigating visual interferences.
Smith, Christopher
Introduction and welcome; 1
Smith, Christopher
Closing Speech 9
van Dijk, Ann
Visual Diplomacy on the Apsidal Arch of Santa Maria Antiqua
Scholarship on the Adoration of Christ Crucified in Santa Maria Antiqua was long
dominated by the idea that the image represented a modified Adoration of the Lamb, an
image of Christ replacing the lamb in deference to Quinisext canon 82. This, coupled with
the choice of the same, rare facial type for Christ that appears on Justinian II’s coinage,
was given a political interpretation; it demonstrated John VII’s cowardly submission to
the emperor on the issue of the unsigned canons of the Quinisext Council, an
interpretation in line with the Liber pontificalis’s unflattering presentation of the pope’s
handling of this issue. Recent scholarship has retreated from these ideas. Historians
(Sansterre, Noble) have questioned the Liber Pontificalis’s assessment of John VII’s
diplomacy, while art historians (Barber, Kartsonis, Nilgen) have turned their attention to
the image’s theological and liturgical significance but without exploring the possible
political implications of their findings. Yet the church’s proximity to the seat of imperial
power on the Palatine, where John VII established his Episcopal residence, and the erasure
of the provocative imagery related to the Lateran Council of 649 that resulted from the
pope’s new decoration for the sanctuary both suggest that a political dimension is
inescapable. In this paper, I will propose a new, more nuanced interpretation of this
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unusual image that demonstrates the sophistication of John VII’s visual diplomacy.
Wiseman, Peter Gordon McNeil Rushforth. The First Director of the British School at Rome and Santa
Maria Antiqua
Gordon McNeil Rushforth was the first Director of the BSR (1900-1903), and author of
the first monograph on S. Maria Antiqua (PBSR 1 [1902] 1-123). Using the published
letters of Matilda Lucas and the Rushforth papers in the Exeter University Library
(including three unpublished letters from Thomas Ashby), this paper attempts to add a
little to what I wrote many years ago about Rushforth and about his contemporary, Boni’s
friend W. St Clair Baddeley:
‘The First Director of the British School’, PBSR 49 (1981), 144-63;
‘Con Boni nel foro: i diari romani di W. St Clair Baddeley’, Rivista dell'Istituto Nazionale
di Archeologia e Storia dell'Arte ser. 3, 8-9 (1985-6), 119-49;
both reprinted in T.P. Wiseman, Talking to Virgil: A Miscellany (University of Exeter
Press 1992): ‘With Boni in the Forum’, 111-48; ‘Rediscovering a Benefactor’, 149-70.
2
POSTERS
Bollók, Adám
The jewels of Theodotus’ daughter between Rome and Byzantium
The ktetor’ portraits of Theodotus’ chapel of the church of Santa Maria Antiqua are not
only exceptionally well-known among specialist, but several aspects of their significance
have been thoroughly discussed during the last one hundred years since the church
exploration at the very beginning of the 20th
century. After the in-depth investigations of
Hans Belting and Natalia Teteriatnikov, who were about to interpret the iconographic and
devotional program of the private chapel, Arno Rettner’s fairly recent paper examined the
caftan and mounted belt wore by the young boy (possibly Theodotus’ son) depicted on
one of the chapel’s frescos. On the other hand, however, Theodotus’ daughter’s tunic and
delightful jewels (a pair of earrings, a necklace and a long gold pendant) have not yet been
adequately analyzed. This paper therefore aims to present and contextualize the existing
material evidence known from the archaeological record. Although these pieces of
(8)
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jewellery may not appear to be of utmost importance at first, at least three interrelated
questions arise. Were these artefact classes, generally dated to the sixth–seventh centuries
in Byzantine contexts, current and fashionable personal adornments in eight-century
Rome? If yes, were these objects imports from the East, or were they manufactured
locally, a possibility that obviously arise in the light of Byzantine style objects produced
in workshops at Crypta Balbi? And last but not least: Why should Theodotus’ deceased
daughter have to be depicted, in apparent contrast to the almost unadorned Virgin, in her
full ornate?
Grafova, Maria
The Row of Saints in the Left Aisle of Santa Maria Antiqua as Historical Evidence of the
Iconoclastic Era at Rome
The row of saints in the left aisle has never been a purpose of a special historical and
iconographical study. Meanwhile, this is an important historical evidence of the Papal
Rome of the Iconoclastic Era which is known for the lack of sources. In my paper I study
the lives of the saints, their vestments, the history of their pictures and their veneration in
Rome and outside. I come to the conclusion that groups on the right and on the left hand
of Christ are formed according to a certain principle. The first group consists of venerated
Roman and Italian saints (the idea could be that all types of saints should have been
represented). The second group represents mainly the intellectuals-theologians of the
Christian East. With one exception they were never venerated at Rome. One can suppose
that the whole composition was designed with an antiiconoclastic meaning: the united
Oecumenical Church is opposed to the heresy of Constantinople. We put this hypothesis
into the historical context of the pontificate of Paul I, the identified donator of the apse. It
was a time of an open political and theological conflict between Rome and Constantinople
(we learn it from many sources including those mentioning pope Paul and his older
brother and predecessor Stephan as protagonists). Some researchers have already assigned
the frescoes of the left aisle to the time of Pope Paul on the basis of the artistic style. In
my opinion this hypothesis may be also corroborated by the historical evidence.
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Vukovich, Alexandra
The Genesis of Eastern Monastic Themes at the Church of Santa Maria Antiqua
This paper will discuss the appearance of eastern monastic iconographies in the Late
Antique and early Byzantine periods. At the church of Santa Maria Antiqua, there exist
several depictions of eastern monastic saints in the frescoes of popes John VII and Paul I.
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For example, in the South-West chapel: SS Barachisius and Dometius of Persia; in the
east aisle, SS Eutheymius and Sabas of Palestine; and on the East aisle wall where male
saints and the Genesis Cycle (c. 757-767) are depicted. By taking a comparative approach,
I will discuss the creation and proliferation of these iconographies from the Eastern
Empire to Rome and will focus on the modes and evidence for transfer (or acculturation)
of these iconographies in the early Byzantine period. Furthermore, I will make the
connection with the compilation and dissemination of hagiographic literature relating the
tales of eastern monastic saints and the modes of transfer to the West. The result of this
study will be to place the monastic iconographies of Santa Maria Antiqua within a greater
cultural sphere in order to examine the genesis of monastic iconographies and their link to
the compilation and dissemination of Eastern early monastic hagiographies to the West
and, specifically, Rome. As Nordhagen, Sansterre, and Lacey have already discussed, the
iconographies and epigraphic evidence found in Santa Maria Antiqua all suggest a mixed
Latin-Greek influence on the church in the Early Byzantine period, thus an iconographic
and philological approach will further elucidate the cultural environment of the Byzantine
Roman Forum.
Chairs of Sessions
Christopher Smith
1: Introductions and Welcome 1
Christopher Smith
2: Gordon Rushforth: Commemoration of his life and work 2
Augenti, Andrea
3: The Santa Maria Antiqua complex and its Links with the Palatine
3
Andaloro, Maria
and
Morganti, Giuseppe
4: Understanding and Conserving Santa Maria Antiqua (1984-2013)
4
Rubery, Eileen
5: Santa Maria Antiqua, the Lateran Synod and other Church Councils
5
Knipp, David
6: The Cult of Saints 6
Pace, Valentino
7: Santa Maria Antiqua: Images of worship in the Sanctuary
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Brown, Peter 8: Santa Maria Antiqua: Patronage and Theology
8
Osborne, John
9: Final Discussion: Santa Maria Antiqua in Context and directions for future