Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Recutting the Cross: The Anglo-Saxon Baptismal Font at Wilne
- 2 The Fountain Sealed Up in the Garden Enclosed: A Vine Scroll at Kells
- 3 The Art of the Church in Ninth-Century Anglo- Saxon England: The Case of the Newent Cross
- 4 ‘The Stones of the Wall Will Cry Out’: Lithic Emissaries and Marble Messengers in Andreas
- 5 Conversion, Ritual, and Landscape: Streoneshalh (Whitby), Osingadun, and the Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Street House, North Yorkshire
- 6 Outside the Box: Relics and Reliquaries at the Shrine of St Cuthbert in the Later Middle Ages
- 7 An Unusual Hell Mouth in an Old Testament Illustration: Understanding the Numbers Initial in the Twelfth-Century Laud Bible
- 8 The Problem of Man: Carved from the Same Stone
- 9 Glass Beads: Production and Decorative Motifs
- 10 Unmasking Meaning: Faces Hidden and Revealed in Early Anglo-Saxon England
- 11 Alcuin, Mathematics and the Rational Mind
- 12 Looking Down from the Rothbury Cross: (Re)Viewing the Place of Anglo-Saxon Art
- Bibliography of Jane Hawkes’ Writings
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
- ALREADY PUBLISHED
4 - ‘The Stones of the Wall Will Cry Out’: Lithic Emissaries and Marble Messengers in Andreas
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Recutting the Cross: The Anglo-Saxon Baptismal Font at Wilne
- 2 The Fountain Sealed Up in the Garden Enclosed: A Vine Scroll at Kells
- 3 The Art of the Church in Ninth-Century Anglo- Saxon England: The Case of the Newent Cross
- 4 ‘The Stones of the Wall Will Cry Out’: Lithic Emissaries and Marble Messengers in Andreas
- 5 Conversion, Ritual, and Landscape: Streoneshalh (Whitby), Osingadun, and the Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Street House, North Yorkshire
- 6 Outside the Box: Relics and Reliquaries at the Shrine of St Cuthbert in the Later Middle Ages
- 7 An Unusual Hell Mouth in an Old Testament Illustration: Understanding the Numbers Initial in the Twelfth-Century Laud Bible
- 8 The Problem of Man: Carved from the Same Stone
- 9 Glass Beads: Production and Decorative Motifs
- 10 Unmasking Meaning: Faces Hidden and Revealed in Early Anglo-Saxon England
- 11 Alcuin, Mathematics and the Rational Mind
- 12 Looking Down from the Rothbury Cross: (Re)Viewing the Place of Anglo-Saxon Art
- Bibliography of Jane Hawkes’ Writings
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
- ALREADY PUBLISHED
Summary
What is the value of a graven idol, because the maker has made it, a molten, and a false image? Because the maker has trusted in a thing of his own making, to make dumb idols. Woe to him who says to wood, ‘awake’, or to the dumb stone ‘arise’. Can it teach? Behold, it is covered with gold and silver, and there is no spirit within it. The Lord is in his holy temple, let all the earth keep silence before him.
(Habakkuk 2:18–20)Thus writes the prophet Habakkuk, in terms that were echoed throughout Christendom in the Middle Ages, and are found in abundance in law codes and other prohibitions from early medieval England, condemning the veneration of, and donation of votive offerings to, wooden and stone idols. There are numerous supposedly inanimate objects whose voices were recognised in various contexts: in riddling texts, devotional works such as The Dream of the Rood, or as objects inscribed with words that validate their existence, such as the ‘Alfred’ Jewel or the Ruthwell Cross. This study focuses on a rare instance, in the Old English poem Andreas, in which Christ himself gives the power of speech and movement to a sculpted stone – a wall carving in the temple of Jerusalem – and in doing so offers a lesson to his disciple St Andrew about the didactic properties of this material, whose permanence echoes both Christ's eternity and the permanence of the heavenly kingdom.
The incident in the temple is shown in a flashback. Andrew is dispatched by God to the city-stronghold of Mermedonia to rescue St Matthew from the clutches of its cannibalistic, devil-worshipping inhabitants, who have imprisoned and plan to eat him. The voyage to Mermedonia takes place over the open seas, in a ship piloted by Christ, who has disguised himself as its helmsman. Though initially reluctant to undertake this mission, Andrew's confidence increases over the course of the journey, and he delights in recounting the (apocryphal) story of how Christ and the apostles visited the Temple in full force, and Christ demonstrated both his divinity and his human ancestry.
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- Information
- Insular IconographiesEssays in Honour of Jane Hawkes, pp. 61 - 80Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2019