Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Icon Exhibit from Sinai - at the Getty in Los Angeles

I was able to visit this exhibit last week and it's REALLY worth a visit if you're in the area...

The J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles is currently hosting an incredible collection of religious icons from the Holy Monastery of Saint Catherine "in the shadow of Mount Sinai in Egypt."

This exhibition offers an unprecedented look at some of the oldest surviving icons from the Byzantine world, and provides rare insight into monastic life, past and present, at the remote Holy Monastery of Saint Catherine.

Lying in the shadow of Mount Sinai in Egypt, the Holy Monastery of Saint Catherine is the world's oldest continuously operating Christian monastery. Since the third century, monks have resided here, at the foot of the mountain where Moses is said to have encountered God. The present church and monastery walls were commissioned by the Byzantine emperor Justinian, who ruled over most of the Mediterranean region, including the Sinai peninsula, between 527 and 565.

Fifty-three objects have traveled from the monastery in Sinai for this exhibition. All were either commissioned by the monastery or received as gifts and have remained in the continuous care of generations of monks at Saint Catherine's.

Because of its geographic and political isolation from the Byzantine Empire, the monastery escaped the destruction of religious images that was sanctioned by Byzantine emperors during the period of Iconoclasm in the 700s and 800s. The veneration of icons continued uninterrupted at Sinai, and over the centuries the monastery both commissioned and received as gifts numerous icons, manuscripts, and liturgical objects.

Today, Saint Catherine's monastery is the world's largest repository of Byzantine icons. The works on display underscore the icon's central role in religious practice and introduce the public to the compelling history of Saint Catherine's.

View images and details on the Getty website.

Amy Welborn reports on an article regarding the exhibit.

The exhibit runs from November 14, 2006 - March 4, 2007

Sunday, August 20, 2000

Eratosthenes (287-192 BC)

The Librarian Who Measured the Earth by Kathryn Lasky
1994, Little Brown Publishing, 48 pages, hardcover

This is a fascinating story, told for children and fully illustrated (beautiful full color pictures with interesting and at times humorous details) of the Greek Scientist, Mathematician and Astronomer - Eratosthenes.

Monday, January 17, 2000

Shadow Hawk by Andre Norton (1590 BC)

Shadow Hawk by Andre Norton
1960, Bethlehem Books, 246 pages, softcover

Set in approximately 1590 B.C. in Ancient Egypt and Nubia, this historical novel tells of Rahotep, an Egyptian nobleman who commands a small but capable force of Nubian archers. He and his archers offer their services to the Pharaoh Sekenenre, who wishes to finally throw off the rule of the Hyksos invaders and restore Egypt to its former glory.

Wednesday, January 05, 2000