Abraham Senor Ante
Abraham Senor Ante
Abraham Senor Ante
ROMAN CATACOMBS
Valerie Abrahamsen
ABSTRACT
The Orante, or Orans, figure, a very common and important
symbol in early Christian art, is difficult to interpret. Theories
of what she meant to early Christians, especially Roman
Christians who buried their dead in the catacombs, range from
a representation of the soul of the deceased to a symbol of filial
piety. In this article, I will attempt to show that the Orante
figure originates with the prehistoric goddess, the all-encompassing Nature deity worshipped for millennia throughout the
Mediterranean world. While many early Christians superimposed Christian meaning on her, it is likely that other
Christians still viewed her in conjunction with the earlier
Nature goddess of birth, life, death and rebirth, even as they
worshipped God in male form.
Introduction
7 Jean Lassus,
The Early Christian and Byzantine World (New York and
Toronto: McGraw Hill, 1967), 13.
8 Early Christian Art, Harpers Encyclopedia of Art, Vol. I (New York and
London: Harper & Brothers, 1937), 112.
9 Gospel of Thomas 51.19-26, as quoted in Elaine Pagels, The Gnostic Gospels
(New York: Random House, 1979) 49, 67.
10 Pagels, Gnostic Gospels, 48-69.
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What might this figure have represented, and could the same
meaning have persisted into the Graeco-Roman era?
In recent years, excavations of sites dating to the Neolithic
era (New Stone Age, approximately 7000-3500 BCE in this region)
have yielded finds indicating that, unlike later societies, people
revered a powerful female deityin effect, a female manifestation
of Nature or Earth and all its (her) attributes.15 Neolithic (and
some Paleolithic) sites that have yielded significant finds include
atal Hyk in Turkey; sites on the Greek island of Crete, the
height of whose culture is Bronze Age but owes a great debt to the
Neolithic; Sitagroi, Greece, near the early Christian colony of
Philippi; and a number of sites in Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia
and Hungary.
From multidisciplinary interpretation of the material remains
from these sites, a description of the Nature/Earth goddess can
be attempted. Artifacts found by archaeologists in countless
Neolithic sitesoverwhelmingly female in form bear symbols of
a deity that link her with water, animals, plants, birth, life, death
and regenerationindeed, all of Life. This goddess was believed,
through observation, to have dominion over not only the earth
and all things on it, but also the skies and the planets (which
were viewed as earths ceiling, for all intents and purposes).16
Belief in the female origin of life and close attention to its
manifestations in Nature allowed Neolithic peoples of Old Europe
and elsewhere to cultivate crops, domesticate animals, and live in
harmony with Nature and one another.
However, even when death and disaster struck, whether
through storms, animal attacks, illness, or accident, the prehistoric mind still viewed the world from a gynocentric (femaleUniversity of California Press, 1996. First ed.: London: Thames and Hudson,
1974, 1982. Originally published in the U.S. in 1974 by University of California
Press under the title The Gods and Goddesses of Old Europe: 7000-3500 BC. New
and updated edition in paperback, 1982), 17.
15 The question can be raised as to whether one speaks of one goddess or
many. If one views earth and Nature as a single entity with many aspects, with
that entity being in female form, then one can view the deity, equated with the
earth and Nature, as one female entity with many aspects. This is not a philosophical discussion so much as it is based on the close observation of ones
surroundings.
16 The deity had dominion over Nature and human beings by the mere fact
that, for the most part, human beings could not control Nature. This may be a
difficult concept for modern human beings to imagine, since we can control Nature
to some extent: large-scale irrigation mimics rain, airplanes mimic birds, running
water does not depend on a river running downstream, human beings can create
fire without waiting for lightning to strike, and so on.
n the catacombs, space shared by pagans, Jews and Christians, are depicted Graeco-Roman goddesses, plants, flowers,
trees, birds, animals, food and fish. As images representative
of other values or qualities, these symbols all have roots in
prehistory. While such images may be merely decorative, they
may also have deep meaning, especially in a specific context.
Since the primary function of the catacombs was to provide a
permanent resting place for the deceased, it is highly likely that
many of the symbols chosen for the paintings held meaning
related to death, resurrection and the afterlife.
First, as has been noted by art historians, catacomb art
generally conveys peacefulness, plenitude, and deliverance from
danger. There is remarkably little sense of human sinfulness,
death (even the death of Jesus on the cross), fear or the awesomeness of God. Death appears as an almost welcome release from
the perils and hardships of life, not as a dark, foreboding place to
be dreaded.
Since this positive emphasis is so different from much of
early Christian theology as expressed in mainstream literature of
the time (written mostly by men), we must ask why there is a
discrepancy. Might the ethos of the catacombs be due to earlier,
pre-Christian (and even pre-Jewish) conceptions of death and the
afterlife? The underground burials were sacred ground, with
apparently little or no theological conflict occurring between the
many groups using them. This space was also ground itself
mother earth, Nature, a locus of life-sustaining and life-enhancing vegetation.
The connection between Nature and peacefulness is well
illustrated in the Jewish catacomb of Vigna Randanini. The wall
paintings in this catacomb have a festive air... There is nothing
solemn about the graceful, mythological figures, leaping dolphins
and sea horses, flying birds, palm trees full of dates, and garlands
of flowers.24
Furthermore, one of the vault frescoes of Vigna Randanini
depicts a Winged Victory (the Greek goddess Nike) crowning a
naked youth in the center of a round design; Nike holds a palm
leaf in her right hand. The central picture is surrounded by
symbolic flora and fauna: a peacock with its feathers spread sits
on a column, while two birds stand on either side of a pedestal
with a basket of flowers and fruit on top.25 The decoration of the
vault also includes curved and straight lines in a design that
gives a swirling, watery feeling.
Many of the symbols found here not only evoke Nature but
are reminiscent of the prehistoric goddess, as presented especially
by Gimbutas. Nike is a female deity or personification; she, like
many female deities in the Graeco-Roman pantheon, are direct
descendants of the prehistoric goddess.26 The palm leaf has very
early goddess resonance,27 as do birds, flowers and fruit, geometric designs, and water. The peacock, sacred to Juno/Hera,
Queen of Heaven, is also significant: the eyed feathers of
peacocks tail represented the goddess starry heavens or her allseeing awareness. On Roman coins, Junos peacock meant apotheosis for women.28
However, the peacock could also be a bad-luck sign in Christianity, precisely because of its goddess association.29 Since it is
unlikely that anyone, Jewish or Christian, would have surrounded their deceased relative/s with symbols that might negatively impact his or her afterlife journey, it is quite likely that the
artist, the deceased and the deceaseds kin took comfort from
these symbolsand therefore revered the goddess with which
they were associated, whether they called her Nike, Juno, or Hera
or had no name for her at all.
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Symbols such as the tree, the vine, wine, fish and bread are
found frequently in the catacombs. The tree, like the palm,
represents for Christians either a sign of victory (the presentation
of a palm to the winners of the games) or a sign of life or both.
Of course, in many contexts victory could mean victory over
death, which parallels the promise of eternal life. Church
historian Graydon Snyder asserts that the tree appears most
frequently in the context of the Good Shepherd, which may
derive from Orpheus with the tree symbolizing satisfactory
existence.30 However, far back in time the tree represented life in
the sense of Nature, life-giving fruit, shade, and shelter; these too
were all under the dominion of the great goddess.31
Doves and other birds also figure prominently in catacomb
art. Whether under the guise of Aphrodite or Astarte, the dove
represented for pagans of the Graeco-Roman era the great
goddess,32 while for Christians it was often equated with John the
Baptist and the Holy Spirit.33 Therefore, the frequency of the
doves appearance in the catacombs cannot be purely coincidental. In several instances (e.g., the catacomb of Priscilla, several
times in the catacomb of Vigna Randanini, and in the catacomb
of SS. Marcellino e Pietro), the dove is presented with an olive
branch or roses.34 For people of the Neolithic era, both the olive
branch and the dove symbolized the peace of the goddess.35
Elsewhere in the catacomb of Vigna Randanini, four doves,
depicted with a spray of roses, may signify the four seasons,36
which were also under the domain of the goddess in the
prehistoric mindset. Another examples of doves is from the
catacomb of Priscilla: a figure of the Good Shepherd stands amid
his flock of sheep flanked by doves who sit on two trees.37
The roses too were significant, appearing in graveside
funerary rituals and symbolizing immortality, rebirth and hope
from very early times.38 A hen and roses appear on a wall painting
30
31
319.
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
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Idem, 24.
Idem, 21.
Idem, 9.
Idem, 24.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Sj and Mor, Great Cosmic Mother, 59.
Brettman, Vaults, 10.
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Conclusion
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