A Heritage of Holy Wood: The Legend of the True Cross in Text and Image
In
the fourth century the idea arose that the Cross on which Christ was
crucified had been found by Helena, mother of Emperor Constantine. Thus
began a legend that would grow and flourish throughout the Middle Ages
and cause the diffusion of countless splinters of holy wood. And where
there is wood, there was once a tree. Could it be that the Cross was
made from that most noble species, the Tree of Life? So, gathering
characters along the way, the legend evolved into a tale that stretches
from the Creation to the End of Time.A Heritage of Holy Wood is the
first reconstruction of the iconographic and literary tradition of the
Legend of the True Cross. Its broad scope encompasses relic cults,
pilgrimages, travellers' tales and the Tree of Life and involves Church
Fathers, crusader kings, Teutonic Knights and mendicant orders, all of
which influenced the legend's depiction from its earliest representation
in manuscripts, reliquaries and altarpieces, to the great monumental
cycles of the high Middle Ages. If the holy wood was the medium of
medieval memory, A Heritage of Holy Wood reveals the growth rings of
fifteen centuries of imagery.
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