东方对早期基督教肖像学的影响

M. Chumak
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摘要

罗马帝国崇拜传统上被认为是对早期基督教图像产生重大影响的主要根源。大量的视觉和原始文献资料表明,罗马和希腊的神灵被新生宗教的特征所取代,即基督教。基督教在罗马帝国合法化后,罗马皇帝的荣耀自然就转移到耶稣基督身上,在崇拜方面。在像特蕾西东部这样的偏远省份建立首府是一项战略性的政治决策。罗马和后来的基督教习俗不可避免地融入了当地的邪教和传统。因此,东方和西方的传统都可以追溯到罗马帝国的新宗教信仰的实践。本文调查了经常被低估的主要东方来源,而它们存在于罗马帝国东部领土的共同时代(CE)的第一个世纪的古基督教视觉中。其中之一是佛教对犍陀罗艺术的视觉表现,后来得到摩尼教的认可,以促进摩尼教义的快速传播。人们可以观察到来自东方的希腊视觉表现的振荡运动,希腊雕塑家和画家给现存的佛教传统赋予了标志性的形状,后来又回到了拜占庭领土上的基督教。这些表现后来在拜占庭晚期和中世纪早期的视觉风格中被同等数量的稀释。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Influences of the East on Early Christian Iconography
The Roman imperial cult is traditionally considered to have been the main root to have exerted a major influence on early Christian iconography. Numerous visual and original literary sources illustrate the replacement of the Roman and Greek deities by the characters of the newly born religion – that is, Christianity. After the legalization of Christianity in the Roman Empire, the honor given to the Roman Emperor was naturally shifted to Jesus Christ, in terms of worship. Establishing the capital of a remote province, such as the Eastern part of Tracie, was a strategic political decision. Roman and later Christian practices inevitably embraced the local cults and traditions. Consequently, both Eastern and Western traditions can be traced in the practices of the new religious faith of the Roman Empire. This paper investigates the major Eastern sources which are often underestimated, while they are present in the Paleo-Christian visuals of the first centuries of the Common Era (CE) in the Eastern territories of the Roman Empire. One of these is the Buddhist visual representations of Gandhara art, which was later endorsed by Manichaeism in order to facilitate the rapid propagation of Mani’s teaching. One can observe the oscillating movement of Greek visual representations from the East, with Greek sculptors and painters giving an iconic shape to the existing Buddhist tradition and later back to Christianity on Byzantine territory. These representations were later diluted in equal quantity in the style of Byzantine late antiquity and early medieval visuals.
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