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The Mother of God of Hodigitria

Part of the collection: Icons

Popularization note

Kazan Icon of the Mother of God Hodegetria Since the 16th c., the depiction of the Kazan Hodegetria became one of the most popular ones in Russia - see S.12770MŁ; copied in many domestic use icons decorated with metal coverings, like the displayed S.12773MŁ. The first icon of the Kazan Mother of God appeared to Matrona, the daughter of Daniel Onuchin, in dream visions, after the fire of Kazan. Nobody believed the girl, who ultimately persuaded her mother to dig through the charred remains of the parental house. On the depth of one metre, a painting done on a wooden canvas board was found. It was wrapped in a burnt-up caftan sleeve and shining "brighter than the sun". The painting depicted the Mother of God in half-figure, with Christ on the right side. At the behest of church authorities, the priest Yermolai transferred the image to the Church of St. Nicholas in a procession; at that time, the first miracle of healing a blind man was recorded. A copy of the miraculous icon was sent to Moscow, to Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible, who ordered the construction of a temple and a convent, which Matrona joined, on the site of the revelation in Kazan. The revelation of the icon helped strengthen the Orthodox Church on the territories of a former Islamic State, after the conquest of which the Russian Tsardom set out to conquer Syberia. The first such expedition was led from Kazan by the Cossack Ataman Yermak, carrying a copy of the Kazan Hodegetria to the east and contributing to the popularisation of the image in the farthest reaches of Syberia. The events related to the discovery of the painting and the witness statements about the first miracles are contained in a text written around 1594 by Yermolai, who entered a Moscow monastery and took the name Hermogen several years after the appearance of the icon; he returned to Kazan in 1589 as a bishop-metropolitan. Summoned by Tsar Vasili IV Shuisky , in 1606 he was ordained as the Moscow Patriarch at a time of a deep state crisis, which is described under S.12778MŁ. Teresa Bagińska-Żurawska https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9243-3967

Information about the object

Information about this object

Other names

Kazan Mother of God

Dimensions

height: 25 cm, width: 19.8 cm

Object type

Icons

Technique

gilding, metalloplastics, oil

Material

silver, brass, oil-based paint, wood

Origin / acquisition method

decyzja administracyjna

Creation time / dating

1880 — 1910

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Russia (Europe)

Owner

Castle Museum in Łańcut

Identification number

S.12773MŁ

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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