"Sicut lilium inter spinas". Floral Metaphors in Late Medieval Marian Iconography from Patristic and Theological Sources

Keywords: Medieval Art, Iconography, Mariology, Patrology, Late Medieval Painting

Abstract

This paper proposes  an  interpretation  of the  flowers  and  other plant motifs present in some late medieval images of four Marian themes: the Virgin Enthroned with Child, the Virgin of Humility, the Sacra Conversazione and the Coronation of the Virgin. By supplementing certain unjustified conventions that, without any argument, see these flowers as natural symbols of Mary’s love or virginity, our iconographic proposal is based on multiple evidence by prestigious Church Fathers and medieval theologians. By commenting some significant passages of the Old Testament, all of them praise the Mother of the Savior in terms of flowers and plants as metaphors for her holiness and virtue. Thus, on the basis of a solid patristic and theological tradition, this paper attempts to interpret these botanic elements as symbolic figures of purity, humility, charity, sublimity of virtue and absolute holiness of Mary and, as the essential core, her perpetual virginity and virginal divine motherhood.

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Published
2014-09-20
How to Cite
Salvador González, José María. “‘Sicut Lilium Inter spinas’. Floral Metaphors in Late Medieval Marian Iconography from Patristic and Theological Sources”. Eikón / Imago 3, no. 2 (September 20, 2014): 1–32. https://doi.org/10.5209/eiko.73394.
Section
Papers

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