Le miniature del Vangelo arabo della Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana di Firenze, codice Orientali 387 (Mardin, 1299 d.C.)

The Laurentian Library in Florence owns an Arabic manuscript with the apocryphal Gospel of the Infancy of Our Lord (cod. Orientali 387), which i illustrated with over fifty drawings. It has the size of a notebook. The text of the manuscript was first published by M. E. Provera, for the Custodia Fran...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Bernabò, Massimo 1951- (Author) ; Fani, Sara ca. 21. Jh. (Author) ; Farina, Margherita ca. 21. Jh. (Author) ; Rao, Ida Giovanna (Author)
Format: Print Article
Language:Italian
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Published: [2017]
In: Orientalia christiana periodica
Year: 2017, Volume: 83, Issue: 2, Pages: 293-447
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Childhood gospels / Arabic language / Handwriting / Miniature / Geschichte 1299
IxTheo Classification:CD Christianity and Culture
HD Early Judaism
KAE Church history 900-1300; high Middle Ages
KBJ Italy
Description
Summary:The Laurentian Library in Florence owns an Arabic manuscript with the apocryphal Gospel of the Infancy of Our Lord (cod. Orientali 387), which i illustrated with over fifty drawings. It has the size of a notebook. The text of the manuscript was first published by M. E. Provera, for the Custodia Francescana di Terra Santa and more recently by S. Voicu. Only a few of the illustrations have been hitherto published. A colophon states that the manuscript was written in Mardin in 1299 C.E., that is during the so-called Syriac Renaissance. Differently from the contemporary Gospel lectionaries in Syriac, the illustrations are in Islamic style. The Gospel of the Infancy is part of a group of narratives of the early days of Jesus; scholars claim that all the writings of the group hark back to a lost fifth-century Syriac narrative. The miracles accomplished by Jesus' bathwater and swaddling bands are the core of the narrative. The chapters of the Gospel tell miracles, healing diseases, casting out demons, and popular events of everyday life. Women's matters dominate the Florentina Gospel: care of children, their diseases, possession, eroticism, beauty, jealousy. The Gospel is completed by a harmony of the events from the canonical Gospels, passages from the Gospel of Nicodemus, and a prologue with Zoroaster prophesying that a virgin will bear the Messiah in Bethlehem.
ISSN:0030-5375
Contains:Enthalten in: Orientalia christiana periodica