The 1,000-year-old crown honouring 'the one who fights
alone' found by a farmer in a field
In 1860, a farmer was
tilling a field in central Slovakia when he unearthed a spectacular panelled
gold Byzantine crown. For more than a century, experts have argued whether it
belonged to the 11th-century ruler Constantine IX Monomachos and how the crown
ended up on the far northern reaches of the Byzantine Empire.
Constantine IX reigned
from 1042 to 1055. His last name Monomachos — meaning "one who fights
alone," or essentially "the gladiator" in Greek — distinguished
him as part of an aristocratic family that was active in the politics of the Byzantine
Empire. But he was not born into the royal family and ruled as emperor only
because he was the spouse of Empress Zoë, and they shared the throne with Zoë's
sister Theodora.
The Monomachos Crown,
in the collection of the Hungarian National Museum in Budapest, consists of
seven gold plates, each with a rounded top and colourful enamel decorations.
The largest of the plates is 4.5 inches (11.5 centimetres) tall and depicts
Constantine IX holding a cavalry standard in his right hand and a purple silk
roll in his left, which were both imperial symbols of leadership. An
inscription in Greek on the central panel reads, "Constantine, Emperor of
the Romans, the Monomachos."
Flanking Constantine IX
are panels depicting Empress Zoë on his right and Empress Theodora on his left.
Both are labelled as "most pious" in Greek. Rounding out the crown
are four panels decorated with dancers and the personification of two Virtues:
Justice and Humility.
According to the
Hungarian National Museum, the symmetrical holes on the sides of the gold
plates may mean they were originally attached to a fabric cap rather than
fastened together into a stand-alone crown.
But the meaning of the
crown and the person who really owned it have been debated for decades.
In 1994, Byzantine
scholar Nikolaos Oikonomides argued that the crown was actually a 19th-century
forgery, basing this claim on unusual choices in the imperial clothing, errors
in the Greek inscriptions, along with the crown's discovery in present-day Slovakia,
far from the seat of imperial Byzantine power in Istanbul.
But art historian Etele
Kiss rebutted those claims in a 2000 study, pointing out similarities between
the imperial clothing and other Byzantine art, the fact that the Greek errors
are largely accents that suggest a simple shift in pronunciation, and noting
the crown may have ended up in Nitra as a diplomatic gift from Constantine IX
to a local ruler.
The Monomachos Crown is
one of only three surviving Byzantine crowns, but it is currently impossible to
draw final conclusions about many aspects of it, Kiss said. Additional research
is needed to fully understand the significance of the gold panelled headwear.
SOURCE: MSN
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