Jump to content

Globus cruciger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Imperial Orb of the Holy Roman Empire, part of the Imperial Regalia

The globus cruciger (Latin for 'cross-bearing orb'), also known as stavroforos sphaira (Greek: σταυροφόρος σφαίρα)[1] or "the orb and cross", is an orb surmounted by a cross. It has been a Christian symbol of authority since the Middle Ages, used on coins, in iconography, and with a sceptre as royal regalia.

The cross laid over the globus represents Christ's dominion over the world, literally held in the hand of a worthy earthly ruler. In the iconography of Western art, when Christ himself holds the globe, he is called Salvator Mundi (Latin for 'Saviour of the World'). For instance, the 16th-century Infant Jesus of Prague statue holds a globus cruciger in this manner.

History

[edit]
The globus cruciger was used in the Byzantine Empire, as shown in this coin of Emperor Leontius (died 705)

Holding the world in one's hand, or, more ominously, under one's foot, has been a symbol since antiquity. To citizens of the Roman Empire, the plain spherical globe held by the god Jupiter represented the world or the universe, as the dominion held by the Emperor. A 2nd-century coin from the reign of Emperor Hadrian shows the Roman goddess Salus with her foot upon a globus, and a 4th-century coin from the reign of Emperor Constantine I shows him with a globus in hand. The orbis terrarum was central to the iconography of the Tetrarchy, in which it represented the Tetrarchs' restoration of security to the Roman world. Constantine I claimed to have had a vision of symbol of Christ above the sun, with the words "In this sign, you shall conquer" (Latin: "In hoc signo vinces"), before the Battle of Milvian Bridge in AD 312. This symbol is usually assumed to be the "Chi-Rho (X-P)" symbol, but some think it was a cross. Consequently, his soldiers painted this symbol on their shields and then defeated their foe, Maxentius.

Christ as Salvator Mundi by Andrea Previtali
Danish globus cruciger, part of the Danish Crown Regalia

With the growth of Christianity in the 5th century, the orb (in Latin works orbis terrarum, the 'world of the lands', whence "orb" derives) was surmounted with a cross, hence globus cruciger, symbolizing the Christian God's dominion of the world. The Emperor held the world in his hand to show that he ruled it on behalf of God. To non-Christians already familiar with the pagan globe, the surmounting of a cross indicated the victory of Christianity over the world.[2][3][4] In medieval iconography, the size of an object relative to those of nearby objects indicated its relative importance; therefore the orb was small and the one who held it was large to emphasize the nature of their relationship.[5] Although the globe symbolized the whole Earth, many Christian rulers, some of them not even sovereign, who reigned over small territories of the Earth, used it symbolically.[4][2]

The first known depiction in art of the symbol was probably in the early 5th century AD, possibly as early as AD 395, namely on the reverse side of the coinage of Emperor Arcadius, yet most certainly by AD 423 on the reverse side of the coinage of Emperor Theodosius II.[citation needed]

The globus cruciger was associated with powerful rulers and angels; it adorned portrayals of both emperors and kings, and also archangels. It remained popular throughout the Middle Ages in coinage, iconography, and royal regalia. For example, it was often used by Byzantine emperors in order to symbolize their authority and sovereignty over the Christian world, usually being done via coinage. The symbol was meant to demonstrate that the emperor ruled both politically and divinely.[6][7] The papacy, which in the Middle Ages rivaled the Holy Roman Emperor in temporal power, also used the symbol on top of the Papal tiara, which consisted of a triple crown; the Pope did not use a separate orb as a symbol. The globus cruciger (made up of a monde and cross) was generally featured as the finial of European royal crowns, whether on physical crowns or merely in royal heraldry, for example, in Denmark, the Holy Roman Empire, Hungary, Italy, The Netherlands, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden, and Yugoslavia. It is still depicted not only in the arms of European polities for which a monarchy survives, yet also, since the end of communism in 1991, in the arms of some eastern European polities, despite the termination of their historical monarchies. Even in the modern era in the United Kingdom, the Sovereign's Orb symbolizes both the state and Church of England under the protection and domain of the monarchy.

[edit]

Use as an alchemical symbol

[edit]

The globus cruciger was used as the alchemical symbol () for antimony. It was also used as an alchemical symbol for lupus metallorum "the grey wolf", supposedly used to purify alloyed metals into pure gold. Lupus metallorum (stibnite) was used to purify gold, as the sulphur in the antimony sulphide bonds to the metals alloyed with the gold, and these form a slag which can be removed. The gold remains dissolved in the metallic antimony which can be boiled off to leave the purified gold.[8]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Sphaira". wordreference.com. Retrieved 2024-02-29.
  2. ^ a b Rhys, Dani (2023-07-29). "Globus Cruciger: A Powerful Christian Symbol". Symbol Sage. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
  3. ^ "Globus Cruciger". Ancient Symbols. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
  4. ^ a b Pyrgies, Joanna (2021-02-20). "'Globus cruciger' in the Hands of Monarchs - ARCHAEOTRAVEL.eu". Retrieved 2024-08-04.
  5. ^ "Scaling the Middle Ages: Size and scale in medieval art". The Courtauld. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
  6. ^ Society, American Numismatic (2021-05-06). "The Changing Iconography of Byzantine Gold Coins". CoinWeek: Rare Coin, Currency, and Bullion News for Collectors. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
  7. ^ "globus cruciger | Acropolis Museum | Official website". www.theacropolismuseum.gr. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
  8. ^ Stockdale, D. (1924). "Historical Notes on the Assay of Gold". Science Progress in the Twentieth Century (1919-1933). 18 (71): 476–479. JSTOR 43430908.
[edit]

Media related to Globus cruciger at Wikimedia Commons