Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

En tau-stav fra Island

View through CrossRef
A Tau Crosier from Iceland In 1957 a bronze object was found some 50 cm below the surface of the homefield at þingvellir, a farm situated at the ancient meeting-place of the Icelandic parliament. The object is identified by the present author as a tau cross or tau crosier. It consists of a socket -in which the top end of a staff of cornel wood is still preserved- with two symmetrically placed crooks, all cast of bronze in one piece. The metal is now oxidized to a dark green and there are no traces of gilding. On both sides of the socket there are engraved lines running through loops of the well-known Ringerike or runestone kind. The crooks are terminated by animal heads typical of the Urnes style, with an elongated pointed eye filling almost all the open space of the head, long twisted lip-lappets and degenerate head-lappets. The object must certainly be grouped with the monuments of the Urnes style, and consequently it should very likely be dated to the third quarter of the eleventh century, a period roughly coinciding with the term of office of the first bishop of Iceland, Bishop Ísleifr Gizurarson (1056-1080). If this object really is a bishop's staff, as suggested by the author, it could possibly have belonged to Bishop Ísleifr. It might also have been in the possession of a foreign missionary bishop or an itinerant bishop, as both kinds of clerics are known to have been in Iceland in the eleventh century. At any rate this unique three-dimensional, fully developed work in the Urnes style seems to show what a pastoral staff could look like in early Christian times in the Northern countries.Kristján Eldjárn
Det Kgl. Bibliotek/Royal Danish Library
Title: En tau-stav fra Island
Description:
A Tau Crosier from Iceland In 1957 a bronze object was found some 50 cm below the surface of the homefield at þingvellir, a farm situated at the ancient meeting-place of the Icelandic parliament.
The object is identified by the present author as a tau cross or tau crosier.
It consists of a socket -in which the top end of a staff of cornel wood is still preserved- with two symmetrically placed crooks, all cast of bronze in one piece.
The metal is now oxidized to a dark green and there are no traces of gilding.
On both sides of the socket there are engraved lines running through loops of the well-known Ringerike or runestone kind.
The crooks are terminated by animal heads typical of the Urnes style, with an elongated pointed eye filling almost all the open space of the head, long twisted lip-lappets and degenerate head-lappets.
The object must certainly be grouped with the monuments of the Urnes style, and consequently it should very likely be dated to the third quarter of the eleventh century, a period roughly coinciding with the term of office of the first bishop of Iceland, Bishop Ísleifr Gizurarson (1056-1080).
If this object really is a bishop's staff, as suggested by the author, it could possibly have belonged to Bishop Ísleifr.
It might also have been in the possession of a foreign missionary bishop or an itinerant bishop, as both kinds of clerics are known to have been in Iceland in the eleventh century.
At any rate this unique three-dimensional, fully developed work in the Urnes style seems to show what a pastoral staff could look like in early Christian times in the Northern countries.
Kristján Eldjárn.

Related Results

L᾽«unilinguisme» officiel de Constantinople byzantine (VIIe-XIIe s.)
L᾽«unilinguisme» officiel de Constantinople byzantine (VIIe-XIIe s.)
&nbsp; <p>&Nu;ί&kappa;&omicron;&sigmaf; &Omicron;&iota;&kappa;&omicron;&nu;&omicron;&mu;ί&delta;&eta;&sigmaf;</...
North Syrian Mortaria and Other Late Roman Personal and Utility Objects Bearing Inscriptions of Good Luck
North Syrian Mortaria and Other Late Roman Personal and Utility Objects Bearing Inscriptions of Good Luck
<span style="font-size: 11pt; color: black; font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'">&Pi;&Eta;&Lambda;&Iota;&Nu;&Alpha; &Iota;&Gamma;&Delta...
Un manoscritto equivocato del copista santo Theophilos († 1548)
Un manoscritto equivocato del copista santo Theophilos († 1548)
<p><font size="3"><span class="A1"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'">&Epsilon;&Nu;&Alpha; &Lambda;&Alpha;&Nu;&...
Tau associates with protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP2
Tau associates with protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP2
<p>The microtubule-associated protein tau normally functions to bind to and stabilize microtubules. However, evidence now indicates that tau may also play a critical role in ...
Mitochondrial perturbation drives tau oligomers pathology in Alzheimer’s disease
Mitochondrial perturbation drives tau oligomers pathology in Alzheimer’s disease
Abstract Tau oligomers, prior to neurofibrillary tangle formation, are toxic species responsible for tau pathology, mitochondrial and synaptic damage, and memory impairment...
The Mechanism for Tau Tangles (LB102)
The Mechanism for Tau Tangles (LB102)
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) affects more than 5.2 million people in the US. The disease is characterized by the presence of “Tau Tangles”, which is the aggregation of the protein Tau....
The self-perpetuating tau truncation circle
The self-perpetuating tau truncation circle
Pathological truncations of human brain proteins represent the common feature of many neurodegenerative disorders including AD (Alzheimer's disease), Parkinson's disease and Huntin...
Emergence of directional bias in tau deposition from axonal transport dynamics
Emergence of directional bias in tau deposition from axonal transport dynamics
AbstractDefects in axonal transport may partly underpin the differences between the observed pathophysiology of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and that of other non-amyloidogenic tauopat...

Back to Top