Byzantine Museum
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From the fall of Rome in 476 to the fall of Constantinople in 1453, the Byzantine Empire dominated the Mediterranean region. The mysterious and wealthy Orthodox Church was the most important political and artistic influence in Byzantium, leaving behind a vast legacy. This world-renowned collection embraces 15,000 objects taken from that fascinating period.
Note: At the time of writing, the museum was being renovated, and the positioning of exhibits may be liable to change
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1. Orpheus Playing a Lyre
Orpheus is surrounded by animals, creating an allegory of Christ and his followers. This transmutation of ancient pagan myths into the new religion of Christianity was an essential element of Byzantine art.
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2. Shepherd Carrying a Lamb
This 4th-century marble sculpture is also a Christian allegory with pagan roots. Though the shepherd is meant to be Christ, the image is taken directly from an Archaic sculpture found on the Acropolis of a man bringing a calf to be sacrificially slaughtered to the goddess Athena (see The Calf-Bearer).
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3. Icon of Archangel Michael
Set in a glowing field of gold, this 14th-century icon from Constantinople depicts the Archangel with a sceptre and an orb, symbolic of the terrestrial world.
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4. Manuscript Collection
The highlight of this collection is a 14thcentury imperial document issued by Emperor Andronicus II. The top of the scroll bears a miniature showing the emperor himself handing a document to Christ, while at the bottom, the emperor’s signature appears in red ink.
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5. Mosaic Icon of the Virgin (The Episkepsis)
This 13th Century mosaic shows the Virgin and Child, with a gold background symbolising divine light. Mosaic icons are very rare: Only about 40 are known to exist, all of which, like this one, originate from Constantinople.
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6. Precious Ecclesiastical Artifacts
This case contains a late 14th-century wooden cross covered with silver and embellished with small steatite icons, a 10thcentury copper chalice, and a 14th-century silk stole decorated with holy figures embroidered in metalic and silk thread.
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7. Wall Painting from the Church of Episkopi
Executed between the 10th and 13th-centuries, these paintings depict biblical scenes in warm, muted hues. They are displayed in the positions as they would have been in the church, which was based on a ‘cross in square’ plan with a dome and Narthex.
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8. Double-Sided Icon of St George
Large, double-sided icons were extremely rare in Byzantium. This 13th-century example is especially unusual as it is carved in three dimensions and depicts the full body.
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9. Treasury of Mytilene
A collection of 6th-century silver vessels, gold jewellery and coins, discovered in a sunken ship off the island of Mytilene (Lesvos). Scholars believe the valuables were brought to the island to be hidden, and were never recovered by their owners.
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10. Temporary Exhibitions
Take the time to look beyond the permanent collection to the Temporary Exhibitions Wing. The Orthodox Church works in co-operation with institutions around the world to borrow and exhibit rarely seen Byzantine artifacts, such as items from the famous Monastery of St Catherine on Mount Sinai.
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