Alabaster panel showing the signs of the Last
Judgement
Medieval, about AD
1420-60
From England
In the Middle Ages it was believed that the
Last Judgement would be preceded by fifteen signs of its coming.
They derived from Revelation, the last book of the Bible, and the
teachings of St Jerome, and were itemized in the
Golden Legend of Jacopo
da Voragine (died 1298). This thirteenth-century text was second
only to the Bible in popularity and its imagery influenced many
medieval works of art.
This
alabaster panel depicts the tenth sign of the Last Judgement, which
describes how men will emerge from caves where they have retreated,
unable to speak and out of their senses. Other apocalyptical signs
included the rising and falling of the sea, earthquakes, stars
falling from the sky and Heaven and Earth burning. The thirteenth
sign, where all the living shall die, is illustrated by another
alabaster held by The British
Museum.
The angel hovering
beneath an architectural canopy holds a scroll that would have
carried an inscription (now lost) explaining the significance of
the scene. Traces of coloured paints survive, as a reminder that
alabasters were originally highly coloured, decorative works of
art.
P. Nelson, 'A Doom reredos', Transactions of the Historic S, 34 (1919), pp. 67-71
J. de Voragine (translated by W. Granger Ryan), The golden legend: readings on (Princeton University Press, 1993)
F. Cheetham, English medieval alabasters (Oxford, Phaidon-Christie's, 1984)