‘When Going to Saint James’: An Old Russian Graffito from the 12th Century in Aquitania

In 2015 in Pons, in the former province of Saintonge, an Old Russian pilgrim graffito was found on the wall of the parish church of St. Vivien, a monument of the mid-12th century. It is the second graffito found in France after the one discovered at St. Gilles Abbey. The town of Pons is located on t...

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Main Authors: Alexander M. Gordin, Tatiana V. Rozhdestvenskaya
Format: Article
Language:Bulgarian
Published: Moscow State University of Education 2016-08-01
Series:Slovene
Subjects:
Online Access:http://slovene.ru/ojs/index.php/slovene/article/view/152
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spelling doaj-0d3ba54e058f4ec4b42a4f30b9c07b5f2020-11-24T21:54:15ZbulMoscow State University of EducationSlovene2304-07852305-67542016-08-0151111‘When Going to Saint James’: An Old Russian Graffito from the 12th Century in AquitaniaAlexander M. Gordin0Tatiana V. Rozhdestvenskaya1Государственный Эрмитаж, С.-ПетербургС.-Петербургский государственный университет, С.-ПетербургIn 2015 in Pons, in the former province of Saintonge, an Old Russian pilgrim graffito was found on the wall of the parish church of St. Vivien, a monument of the mid-12th century. It is the second graffito found in France after the one discovered at St. Gilles Abbey. The town of Pons is located on the westernmost route of Santiago de Compostela (via Turonensis) and is noteworthy because of the preserved pilgrim almshouse of the latter half of the 12th century. On the walls of its long archway are horseshoe drawings made by medieval pilgrims, the latest of which, dating from the 16th–17th centuries, bends around a name that is also apparently written in Cyrillic script. The earlier inscription, which appears at the base of the northern end wall of the original façade of the St. Vivien church, is made in the name of one Ivan Zavidovich: “Ivano ps[а]lo Zavi|doviche ida ko | svętomu Ię|kovu” (= ‘Ivan Zavidovich wrote this when going to Saint James’). The most probable palaeographic dating is in the 1160s–1180s. As suggested by birch bark manuscripts, the name of Ivan’s father, Zavid, was popular among Novgorod boyars. Novgorod is also the place with the greatest indirect evidence of the occurrence in Old Russia of the western cult of St. James. This well preserved inscription is an important epigraphic discovery, but its main value lies in the direct evidence of pilgrimages by Russians to the shrine of St. James in Galicia.http://slovene.ru/ojs/index.php/slovene/article/view/152древнерусские граффитисредневековая эпиграфикапалеографияФранцияцерковь Сен-Вивьен в Понсегоспиталь для пилигримовпаломничество в Сантьяго-де-КомпостелаНовгородпроцветший крестXII в.
collection DOAJ
language Bulgarian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexander M. Gordin
Tatiana V. Rozhdestvenskaya
spellingShingle Alexander M. Gordin
Tatiana V. Rozhdestvenskaya
‘When Going to Saint James’: An Old Russian Graffito from the 12th Century in Aquitania
Slovene
древнерусские граффити
средневековая эпиграфика
палеография
Франция
церковь Сен-Вивьен в Понсе
госпиталь для пилигримов
паломничество в Сантьяго-де-Компостела
Новгород
процветший крест
XII в.
author_facet Alexander M. Gordin
Tatiana V. Rozhdestvenskaya
author_sort Alexander M. Gordin
title ‘When Going to Saint James’: An Old Russian Graffito from the 12th Century in Aquitania
title_short ‘When Going to Saint James’: An Old Russian Graffito from the 12th Century in Aquitania
title_full ‘When Going to Saint James’: An Old Russian Graffito from the 12th Century in Aquitania
title_fullStr ‘When Going to Saint James’: An Old Russian Graffito from the 12th Century in Aquitania
title_full_unstemmed ‘When Going to Saint James’: An Old Russian Graffito from the 12th Century in Aquitania
title_sort ‘when going to saint james’: an old russian graffito from the 12th century in aquitania
publisher Moscow State University of Education
series Slovene
issn 2304-0785
2305-6754
publishDate 2016-08-01
description In 2015 in Pons, in the former province of Saintonge, an Old Russian pilgrim graffito was found on the wall of the parish church of St. Vivien, a monument of the mid-12th century. It is the second graffito found in France after the one discovered at St. Gilles Abbey. The town of Pons is located on the westernmost route of Santiago de Compostela (via Turonensis) and is noteworthy because of the preserved pilgrim almshouse of the latter half of the 12th century. On the walls of its long archway are horseshoe drawings made by medieval pilgrims, the latest of which, dating from the 16th–17th centuries, bends around a name that is also apparently written in Cyrillic script. The earlier inscription, which appears at the base of the northern end wall of the original façade of the St. Vivien church, is made in the name of one Ivan Zavidovich: “Ivano ps[а]lo Zavi|doviche ida ko | svętomu Ię|kovu” (= ‘Ivan Zavidovich wrote this when going to Saint James’). The most probable palaeographic dating is in the 1160s–1180s. As suggested by birch bark manuscripts, the name of Ivan’s father, Zavid, was popular among Novgorod boyars. Novgorod is also the place with the greatest indirect evidence of the occurrence in Old Russia of the western cult of St. James. This well preserved inscription is an important epigraphic discovery, but its main value lies in the direct evidence of pilgrimages by Russians to the shrine of St. James in Galicia.
topic древнерусские граффити
средневековая эпиграфика
палеография
Франция
церковь Сен-Вивьен в Понсе
госпиталь для пилигримов
паломничество в Сантьяго-де-Компостела
Новгород
процветший крест
XII в.
url http://slovene.ru/ojs/index.php/slovene/article/view/152
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