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Суздальский и Перемышльский змеевики — молитва и заклинание. / Милютенко, Надежда Ильинична.

In: Словесность и история, Vol. 1, 2021, p. 30-61.

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@article{5372bf3afb714a5ebe267aef6d7135dc,
title = "Суздальский и Перемышльский змеевики — молитва и заклинание",
abstract = "The hematite Suzdal zmeevik (gorgoneion) belongs to the small group of Byzantine engraved gems (intagklios) with a Gorgon{\textquoteright}s head (hystera) and a magic formula, which are usually found on metal medallions and pendants. The Seven Sleepers of Ephesus depicted on the obverse and two-line Slavonic inscriptions on both sides make the Suzdal gorgoneion quite unique even for that group. The Slavonic inscriptions carved on the gorgoneion are an abridged version of the “Prayer when a sick person does not sleep” addressed to the Sleepers. The Prayer is known from the Russian Euchologia of the 15th – 16th centuries. The article argues that, save for the names of the Sleepers, the inscription on the gorgoneion has the closest relationship to the earliest copy of the Prayer found in the fourteenth-century Slavonic Serbian Euchologion in the collection of the Russian National Library (Q. p. I. 24). The reverse of the hematite gorgoneion from Przemy{\'s}l bears the image of the Mother of God surrounded by an unusual Greek hystera formula, and the obverse contains a depiction of a Gorgon{\textquoteright}s head (hystera) that is almost identical to the one found on the Suzdal gorgoneion. Going beyond V. Zalesskaya{\textquoteright}s suggestion that both gorgoneia were made in one Greek workshop, this article argues that the inscriptions on the two objects were carved following the same principles and that both objects can be attributed to the same master, who was likely of South Russian origin. The unique poetics of the Przemy{\'s}l Gorgoneion spell was a result of the versatility of the hystera formula, while the Slavonic Euchologia developed a stable text of the “Prayer when a sick person does not sleep”. When the hystera formula was substituted with the Prayer on the Suzdal Gorgoneion, the magic amulet was transformed into a Christian icon.",
keywords = "zmeevik, gorgoneion, intaglio, healing prayer, euchologion, magic spells, hystera formula, Byzantine and Medieval Russian art, змеевики, инталии, врачевальные молитвы, требники, заклинания, византийское и древнерусское искусство",
author = "Милютенко, {Надежда Ильинична}",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.31860/2712-7591",
language = "русский",
volume = "1",
pages = "30--61",
journal = "Словесность и история",
issn = "2712-7591",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Суздальский и Перемышльский змеевики — молитва и заклинание

AU - Милютенко, Надежда Ильинична

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - The hematite Suzdal zmeevik (gorgoneion) belongs to the small group of Byzantine engraved gems (intagklios) with a Gorgon’s head (hystera) and a magic formula, which are usually found on metal medallions and pendants. The Seven Sleepers of Ephesus depicted on the obverse and two-line Slavonic inscriptions on both sides make the Suzdal gorgoneion quite unique even for that group. The Slavonic inscriptions carved on the gorgoneion are an abridged version of the “Prayer when a sick person does not sleep” addressed to the Sleepers. The Prayer is known from the Russian Euchologia of the 15th – 16th centuries. The article argues that, save for the names of the Sleepers, the inscription on the gorgoneion has the closest relationship to the earliest copy of the Prayer found in the fourteenth-century Slavonic Serbian Euchologion in the collection of the Russian National Library (Q. p. I. 24). The reverse of the hematite gorgoneion from Przemyśl bears the image of the Mother of God surrounded by an unusual Greek hystera formula, and the obverse contains a depiction of a Gorgon’s head (hystera) that is almost identical to the one found on the Suzdal gorgoneion. Going beyond V. Zalesskaya’s suggestion that both gorgoneia were made in one Greek workshop, this article argues that the inscriptions on the two objects were carved following the same principles and that both objects can be attributed to the same master, who was likely of South Russian origin. The unique poetics of the Przemyśl Gorgoneion spell was a result of the versatility of the hystera formula, while the Slavonic Euchologia developed a stable text of the “Prayer when a sick person does not sleep”. When the hystera formula was substituted with the Prayer on the Suzdal Gorgoneion, the magic amulet was transformed into a Christian icon.

AB - The hematite Suzdal zmeevik (gorgoneion) belongs to the small group of Byzantine engraved gems (intagklios) with a Gorgon’s head (hystera) and a magic formula, which are usually found on metal medallions and pendants. The Seven Sleepers of Ephesus depicted on the obverse and two-line Slavonic inscriptions on both sides make the Suzdal gorgoneion quite unique even for that group. The Slavonic inscriptions carved on the gorgoneion are an abridged version of the “Prayer when a sick person does not sleep” addressed to the Sleepers. The Prayer is known from the Russian Euchologia of the 15th – 16th centuries. The article argues that, save for the names of the Sleepers, the inscription on the gorgoneion has the closest relationship to the earliest copy of the Prayer found in the fourteenth-century Slavonic Serbian Euchologion in the collection of the Russian National Library (Q. p. I. 24). The reverse of the hematite gorgoneion from Przemyśl bears the image of the Mother of God surrounded by an unusual Greek hystera formula, and the obverse contains a depiction of a Gorgon’s head (hystera) that is almost identical to the one found on the Suzdal gorgoneion. Going beyond V. Zalesskaya’s suggestion that both gorgoneia were made in one Greek workshop, this article argues that the inscriptions on the two objects were carved following the same principles and that both objects can be attributed to the same master, who was likely of South Russian origin. The unique poetics of the Przemyśl Gorgoneion spell was a result of the versatility of the hystera formula, while the Slavonic Euchologia developed a stable text of the “Prayer when a sick person does not sleep”. When the hystera formula was substituted with the Prayer on the Suzdal Gorgoneion, the magic amulet was transformed into a Christian icon.

KW - zmeevik, gorgoneion, intaglio, healing prayer, euchologion, magic spells, hystera formula, Byzantine and Medieval Russian art

KW - змеевики, инталии, врачевальные молитвы, требники, заклинания, византийское и древнерусское искусство

U2 - 10.31860/2712-7591

DO - 10.31860/2712-7591

M3 - статья

VL - 1

SP - 30

EP - 61

JO - Словесность и история

JF - Словесность и история

SN - 2712-7591

ER -

ID: 87917850