The First Century of The Monastery of Hosios Loukas
The First Century of The Monastery of Hosios Loukas
The First Century of The Monastery of Hosios Loukas
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FUNERARY INSCRIPTION
The discussion opens with an inscription preserved in the lapidarium of the monastery. It is a
marble plaque, 0.73 x 0.45 m, broken into at least
five pieces now glued together. Initially it was
found upside down in the outer western wall of
the church of the Panagia; the monks removed it
from there during repair work conducted in
1873-78. An ignorant monk, thinking that it was
a pagan remain, hammered and broke it, and since
then some pieces have been lost. Yet its text can be
restored almost in its entirety.
This is a funerary inscription, and, consequently, its position in the outer wall of the church
was not the original one. Since it was placed there
upside down, it had obviously been salvaged during previous repairs. Its dimensions show that it
could not have served as the cover of a sarcophagus. Instead, I imagine it above an arcosolium,
'The seminar, conducted by P. Vokotopoulos, A. Kominis, N.
Oikonomides, and S. Troianos, was entitled "The Monastery of
Hosios Loukas and Its Region."
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246
NICOLAS OIKONOMIDES
one at a higher point and that joins another vertical stroke at the bottom; this is followed by the ligThis combination of
ature ME of erTs
Cl4(Orioav.
two vertical strokes and an oblique one cannot be
read as the letter N, because in this inscription the
oblique stroke of N meets the vertical that follows
at a certain height, never at the bottom; it looks
rather like a ligature of AI (cf. the beginning of
line 4) or of AH (cf. the word nktXvof line 11). My
hypothesis is that we have here the ligature AI with
N added at the top of the final vertical stroke (cf.
on line 8).
the letter T of
xaTndvo,
Line 5. From this line it is clear that Theodore
was the person's name as a layman, and that TheoGod endowed me with many appellations,those
dosios was his name as a monk.
coming from ancestryas well as those coming
from the emperors. But as I strove to attain
Line 6. The reconstruction of this line is probsalvation,the names changed as follows:Theodore
lematic. I examined the inscription and can say
became Theodosios; the untouchable(?)
with certainty that after the word &6OunaTog there
anthypatoshimself became a monk; the patrikios
is a A, followed by traces of three letters. Above
shrank to a [spiritual]father; the katepano
the first of these three uncertain letters, there are,
submittedto the haughty; the vestes became a
him
with
not
He
did
take
in
any
mystic hairy garb.
clearly engraved although not clearly visible on
that
for
this
coffin
his
of
fortune,
except
part
photographs, a smooth breathing and an acute accovers the dead: this is his only worldlygain.
cent: consequently, the first uncertain letter has to
Kremos | 2 ExKremos,
be a vowel and, because of the shape of its rem1 [ELgx]XkOelgSotiriou,
Sotiriou:TCvStikas113 xnToetg Stikas114 ntdkLy
nants, it cannot be anything but A. The second unteTze?aOOaLt
Kremos,
Sotiriou
I
scripsiletter consists of one vertical stroke with no
certain
EiroO(0rlooav
(ndow;)
corr.Sotiriou116
Sotiriou,Stikas,RteCEOrlqel0oav
addition at its top. This could be an I, a
horizontal
Kremos,
scripsi:
ai6bg
8'&'vaTorog
kaX(Qob
8'avraxog Stikas11
8
vOvCal)rbgSotiriou,
if
(D
or
a
'J, we suppose that the horizontal protruSotiriou kat(tQObg)..(ac~)Tbg
TxCv:v(Ov)
sions of these letters were placed under the break
and are now lost. The remnant of the third uncerCommentary
tain letter, an oblique line, could be the top of a X
Lines 1-2.
literally "appellations," can
or
an Y, as well as of an A, a A, or a A. We can say
Khk?ctLg,
be titles or names. See, for example, the expreswith certainty, causa metri, that the lacuna must
sion UTldg xatd xkcloLg in the letter addressed by
have contained a three-syllable word with the acNicholas Mystikos to Tsar Symeon of Bulgaria.5
cent on the first syllable, which would contain an a
From this phrase we may conclude that Theodore
or an at. For this reason, I propose, without much
had a distinguished family name (yEvtLx [from
conviction, the adjective &VaCtourog(i.e., one who
ytvog] x iotg) as well as titles that he had received
cannot be touched by commoners), which makes
from (successive?) emperors (xhlOESLgEx P3okL- better sense than &6aTog or
&4avTog.
XMwv).
Line 7. HaTcXLtog g is another play on
tnaTQLX
"as his name shows": he reLine 1.
The
words.
expression naTQtLXgurlCYvog means
4wgEcv4Ut0wg,
of
were
if
as
God;
ceived these
gifts
they
to" or "reduced to" being a father.
is
"led
who
one
XkroGLg
this is a play on the name Theodore in its initial
The word "father" would seem to indicate that
meaning "gift of God."
Theodosios was the abbot of the monastery, "suLine 3. The word [tE shows that the inscription
pervising in a fatherly way" his fellow monks. Adwas drafted by Theodore/Theodosios himself, or
mittedly, the expression is not crystal clear, but the
at least when he was still alive.
abbot hypothesis is supported by the following.
Line 4. The word bdlXv is not certain. At this
Line 8. Another play on the words Cxa'ndv3 point only the lower part of the letters can be read,
XdT03, the word xaTendvw literally meaning "one
that is (from left to right), one vertical stroke, an
who is above." Here again the phrase is not clear.
oblique stroke that presumably struck the vertical
Who are these haughty individuals (WavuXo?ivTSg)
to whom Theodosios was subordinate? This
5NicholasI, Patriarchof Constantinople,Letters,ed. R. J. H. Jenkins and L. G. Westerink (Washington, D.C., 1973), p. 48.
expression cannot refer to other monks, especially
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247
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248
NICOLAS OIKONOMIDES
moment), the metropolitan of Thebes (of the moment), the holiest abbot of Hosios Loukas, Theodosios Leobachos, who was dead, the abbot of Hosios Loukas (of the moment), the abbesses of the
Naupaktitissai (presumably of the moment), current and former members of the confraternity.
Those who are mentioned were in positions of authority at the time of the liturgy (including the abbot of Hosios Loukas); the only deceased persons
mentioned are Theodosios Leobachos and former
members of the confraternity. Hence it would
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249
tzidakis-Bacharas, Les peintures muralesde Hosios Loukas.Les chapelles occidentales(Athens, 1982). General notice in J. Koder and
F. Hild, TabulaImperiiByzantini, I. Hellas und Thessalien(Vienna,
1976), 205-6.
'9Professors Paul Mylonas and Nano Chatzidakis were kind
enough to present our seminar with their important findings
concerning the architectural history and the iconography program of Hosios Loukas. Mylonas' findings have since been published: AORLtxlE~Qeva
@ V
zb xxXhlotLaCox6 oJvyxQ6rtlca to01
'Oolov Aovx~t (xl(6og,
'AQXactooy(a 36 (September 1990),
6-30. Even more recent is C. Connor, Art and Miracles in Medieval Byzantium: The Cryptat Hosios Loukas and Its Frescoes(Princeton, 1991).
200ne exception: C. Connor squeezes all construction, decoration, and marble revetments into the 10th century, in spite of
the fact that there is a mosaic portrait of St. Nikon, who died in
997. But this hardly fits with a 10th-century date.
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250
NICOLAS OIKONOMIDES
in the canticle that the translation of the relics occurred on the third of May, which coincided with
the feast of the Ascension: in the eleventh century,
this coincidence occurred only three times, in
1011, 1022, and 1095. Chatzidakis chose the year
1011, because the author of the canticle speaks of
"invasions of the Scythians," a phrase that must
have been written before the abolition of the state
of the Bulgar sovereign Samuel (cf. note 49 below).
For his part, Mylonas in his recent publication
(cf. note 19 above) has studied in detail the architectural remains of the churches of Hosios Loukas
and proposed four major stages in their construction. (a) The church of St. Barbara, which had
been founded before St. Luke's death, (b) was considerably enlarged later; he supposes that this occurred toward the end of the tenth century and
assumes that it was then rededicated to the Virgin,
becoming thus the actual church of the Panagia. (c)
Above the tomb of St. Luke a cruciform two-storey
martyrium was initially built, (d) and was later replaced by (and incorporated into) the actual katholikon. Mylonas also assumes that the new church
of the Virgin is the one depicted in the hands of
Philotheos. Consequently he dates the inauguration of the new church of the Panagia in 1011 and
that of the katholikon under Constantine Monomachos, as this is attested by the fifteenth-century
traveler Cyriacus of Ancona.
As far as this study is concerned, the two theories diverge mainly as to which church is the one
depicted in the hands of Philotheos. I think that
one can safely accept that abbot Philotheos performed the translation of the saint's relics on a
third of May, most probably in 1011. On that day a
new church was inaugurated in the monastery, the
katholikon (Chatzidakis) or the new church of St.
Barbara/the Virgin (Mylonas). Of the two hypotheses, the first appears closer to reality: in the saint's
canticle studied by Chatzidakis (cf. notes 16 and 17
above), it is clearly stated that his new, monumental
tomb was placed from the very beginning inside a
church dedicated to the saint himself (va@ ... .v
sig obv 6voka .. .), that is, inxaLVq~, 6v iTYELQEV
side the katholikon which is effectively dedicated
to St. Luke.
Let us now return to the frescoes21 in the crypt's
southeastern groin vault, which have to be examined in conjunction with the frescoes of the north21My remarks are largely based on what has already been
written by Chatzidakis (who also provides the relevant iconographic material) and by Connor, Hosios Loukas, 48 ff.
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251
tron saint from the time when he was a layman. Connor has
also attributed the mosaic decoration to the abbot Leobachos.
25Stikas has defended the idea that the katholikon was
founded by Constantine Monomachos, but I think that the
question is seen from a more realistic perspective by Chatzi25 (1972), 301-9.
dakis,
Ekk~Lxd
26Michael
Attaleiates, Bonn ed., 50-51.
27Chatzidakis, "A propos de la date," 141. It is notable that
parts of the walls of the crypt are decorated with imitation
marble ornament, as if the sponsor was trying to follow the example set by the katholikon above.
28
It should be stressed though that the inscription, because of
its dimensions, does not belong to any of the existing tombs.
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NICOLAS OIKONOMIDES
252
HosIos LOUKAS
In what follows I will try to present a scenario
with some of the phases that the monastery of
Hosios Loukas may have gone through in the
first century of its existence. The basic source
will be the Life of St. Luke, and references to the
latest edition of this text are provided in square
brackets.29
During the second half of the ninth century,
mainland Greece had begun recovering from the
Slavic onslaught. New churches were founded by
local patrons, as we know from the surviving inscriptions of St. John Mangoutis in Athens (871),
St. Gregory in Thebes (871/2), and Skripou in Orchomenos (873/75).30 Coins began circulating during the reign of Emperor Theophilos (829-842);
the distribution of finds, though, is very unequal:
many in Corinth, fewer in Athens, and very few in
Thebes (which, it must be said in fairness, has
never been properly excavated in this respect). In
the following centuries, numismatic circulation
would improve, but the distribution of the finds
followed the same pattern.31
St. Luke's family were refugees from Aigina;
they had abandoned their island out of fear of the
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253
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254
NICOLAS OIKONOMIDES
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aixovg,
255
T
0 vtnoHolztxd Ebipo(g, 10o
Xgovok6yrlor
lgHePohTkUmaov
T6Lo0 Bvtactvnvg
xat METav?tVctvnvg 'AgXcatooy(Cag xat
TUXvrg(Athens, 1990), 52-53.
52This is not the only case in which new founders received
respect equal to that of the initial founder of a monastery; see
Actes de Docheiariou, 7-11.
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