Ivory panel showing an
archangel
Byzantine, about AD
525-550
From Constantinople (modern Istanbul,
Turkey)
An ivory leaf from a Byzantine
diptych
This exceptionally beautiful leaf is the
largest surviving Byzantine ivory panel. It depicts an archangel
poised at the top of a flight of steps. He holds a staff in his
left hand and a large orb in his right, surmounted by a jewelled
cross. His wings and body overlap fluted columns with composite
capitals and an arch richly decorated with acanthus leaves. A
scallop shell niche below the arch contains a ribboned wreath
around a cross. The size of the panel is so great that it exceeded
the width of the tusk from which it was carved, resulting in angled
corners on the left-hand
side.
The Greek inscription
at the top may be translated as: 'Receive the suppliant
before you, despite his sinfulness'. The magnificence of
the panel suggests it was carved in Constantinople, perhaps as an
imperial commission. The style of carving relates to other diptychs
carved in the 520s, and the leaf may have been associated with the
accession of the Byzantine emperor Justinian I in AD 527. If this
was the case, the angel may have been presenting the orb to the
emperor, who could have been depicted on the panel that originally
formed the other half of the diptych.
D. Buckton (ed.), Byzantium: treasures of Byzant (London, The British Museum Press, 1994)
A. Cutler, 'The making of the Justinian diptychs', Byzantion, 54 (1984), pp. 75-115