Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 889455
Una processione da farsi ogni anno con una Messa Solenne. Reception of stone relics from the Holy Land in Renaissance Ragusa
Una processione da farsi ogni anno con una Messa Solenne. Reception of stone relics from the Holy Land in Renaissance Ragusa // Natural Materials of the Holy Land and the Visual Translation of Place, 500-1500 / Bartal, Renana ; Bodner, Neta ; Kühnel, Bianca (ur.).
London : New York (NY): Routledge, 2017. str. 79-93
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Naslov
Una processione da farsi ogni anno con una
Messa Solenne. Reception of stone relics from
the Holy Land in Renaissance Ragusa
Autori
Trška, Tanja
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Poglavlja u knjigama, znanstveni
Knjiga
Natural Materials of the Holy Land and the Visual Translation of Place, 500-1500
Urednik/ci
Bartal, Renana ; Bodner, Neta ; Kühnel, Bianca
Izdavač
Routledge
Grad
London : New York (NY)
Godina
2017
Raspon stranica
79-93
ISBN
978-1-4724-5177-4
Ključne riječi
relics, Holy Sepulchre, Dubrovnik, Bonifacio de Stephanis da Ragusa, Lodovico Beccadelli
Sažetak
The paper discusses the reception of the two relics from the Holy Land sent to the Republic of Ragusa (present-day Dubrovnik in Croatia) by the guardian of Mount Sion fra Bonifacio de Stephanis da Ragusa (Lopud, ca. 1500 - Timişoara, 1581). In a letter dated July 24 1558, fra Bonifacio presented the Republic with a piece of the column to which Christ was tied during flagellation, and a fragment of the Holy Sepulchre detached during its 1555 restoration initiated by fra Bonifacio himself, later described in his work entitled »Liber de perenni cultu Terrae sanctae« (Venice, 1573). Their importance was immediately recognized by the Republic, which proposed an official annual veneration of the two relics on December 15, the day of their arrival to the city. A more cautious attitude was expressed by the archbishop of Ragusa Lodovico Beccadelli (Bologna, 1501 - Prato, 1572), who made inquiries with the Roman Curia regarding similar relics from the Holy Land previously sent by fra Bonifacio to Rome and Venice. The reception and significance of these two stone bits - of which the fragment of the Holy Sepulchre was described as »unica, e singolare reliquia, la quale in fuori di Gerusaleme, non si trova in altra parte del mondo« is traced across archival documents from 1558 until late 18th century: from Bonifacio’s letter to the Republic and official state records, the correspondence of archbishop Beccadelli, to subsequent chronicles and manuscript sources describing their veneration in Ragusa.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Povijest, Povijest umjetnosti