Saved Papers

Save papers so you can find them more easily!

Join Now

Get instant access to over 100,000 papers.

Join Now!

Christ The Pantokrator

Christ The Pantokrator

Upon walking to the contemporary building, one is awestruck from viewing the drastic change from the antique-like Montrose area houses to a modern museum.
This building was an architectural feat intended to imitate an early Byzantine reliquary box. These boxes were containers of sacred objects with a much more deeper meaning than just to be aesthetically pleasing. The tradition of the reliquary box was incorporated into the design of the museum, which was to contain something which had a more profound meaning than to just be admired. The museum contains a model of a Middle-Byzantine chapel housing two restored frescoes from the original Greek Orthodox Church from Lysi, Cyprus.
This museum is unique when compared to the other museums on the De Mil campus. The two frescoes are housed in a manner that reproduces the original church of Saint Themonianos. A specific purpose was envisioned for the housing of the two relics. The purpose has much to do with......


View the rest of this paper...

Approximate Word Count: 2078
Approximate Pages: 9 (250 words per double-spaced page)

Why should you join Frat Files?

  • - It's safe, secure, and private.
  • - Instant access to over 100,000 papers. New papers are added hourly.
  • - Fast and reliable customer support.

Credit Card

Bank Account

PayPal

Similar Essays

  1. Christ The Pantokrator

    Christ the Pantokrator. Christ The Pantokrator ... spirit. The empty throne is
    directly related to Christ's title as Pantokrator. In Greek ...

  2. Byzantine Mosaic Analyze

    ... Constantinople, which ended "the longest-lived political entity of Europe, the
    Byzantine states" (Mathews 1998, 7). The Christ Pantokrator, The Empress Zoë ...

  3. Christ In Majesty

    ... The viewer can clearly see Christ as the central figure because of the ... on the dome
    of the Katholikon in Hosios Loukas, and the Pantokrator, Theotokos, and Child ...