Saint Mercurius slaying Julian the Apostate (St. George church, Struga)

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Saint Mercurius slaying Julian the Apostate
Saint Mercurius killing Julian the Apostate
Year15th century
LocationStruga

Saint Mercurius slaying Julian the Apostate is an icon found in the St. George's church [mk] in Struga. It is the third in a row on this topic in the Ohrid region, North Macedonia.[1][2]

Faced with the upper part of the body, Saint Mercurius, with a cinnabar halo, triumphantly rides a white horse, who with a whirling mane lifts his hooves upon the emperor Julian "the Apostate". Hit by the spear, the fallen emperor can only be seen in the lower right corner. Mercurius is depicted in a leather armor with a metal gambeson; a cinnamon chlamys with pearl ornaments, tied by a large knot on the chest; a short green tunic; blue socks with black and red hinges and ocher shoes; a metal helmet with wide visor and long feather on top; a circular shield, profiled along the outer edge and a black vase motif on the white center field; a sword and a bow with an arrow in obscure fragments to the body. In the upper right corner, a Slavic inscription in three lines, written with cinnabar on the ocher background, describes the content: "Мерькоурï[е] /велïкï [по]корьï /..с…в.ïтек" ("Mercurius/great conqueror/..с…в.ïтек")

In addition to the sense of composition and proportions, the iconographer's painting process is characterized by a deep dark, often black line. The image is painted on a light ocher with olive shades, cinnamon accentuated on the cheeks, nose and mouth, as well as a white weight on the face and neck. The physiognomic features of the saint with a full cheek face, curly hair up to the ears, short dark beard and mustache, as well as the modeling of his helmet, direct the closest analogies to the Church of the Assumption of the Most Holy Mother of God [mk] in Velestovo, near Ohrid, more precisely towards the image of St. Mercurius painted in 1444. However, the duct[clarification needed] of the letters from the Struga icon has greater similarities with the Velest inscription from 1450/51, or with those of the younger frescoes in the church of St. Constantine and Helena,[3] so there is reason to believe that the anonymous author of the icon was associated with Ohrid around the middle of the 15th century.

References[edit]

  1. ^ H. Delehaye, Les légendes grecques des saints militaires, Paris, 1909, p. 96-101.
  2. ^ Ch. Walter, The warrior saints in Byzantine Art and Tradition, Aldershot 2003, 101-108.
  3. ^ Суботиќ, нав. дело, 64 (за натписот врз западниот влез во Велестово), 82-83 (за јужната фасада во Св. Кон стантин и Елена, околу 1460 г.)

Further reading[edit]

  • Vocotopoulos, Panagiotis (1996). "AN ICON OF SAINT MERCURIUS SLAYING JULIAN THE APOSTATE". Muzej Na Makedonija, Zbornik, N. S. 2 Srednovekovna Umetnost – via Academia.edu.
  • Meinardus, Otto F.A. (1972-01-01). "St. Mercurius-Abu's-saifain. A Study of Cult and Art". Studia Orientalia Christiana. 15: 107–119. doi:10.1484/J.SOCC.3.111. ISSN 0585-5403.
  • Baynes, Norman H. (1937). "The Death of Julian the Apostate in a Christian Legend". The Journal of Roman Studies. 27: 22–29. doi:10.2307/297183. ISSN 0075-4358. JSTOR 297183. S2CID 162248976.
  • "Dying Badly: Imperial Misfortune in the Month of June". The Index of Medieval Art. 20 June 2017. Retrieved 2020-07-29.