Derzhavnaya bogoroditsa?

Daniel Rancour-Laferriere darancourlaferriere at COMCAST.NET
Sun Oct 25 06:37:34 UTC 2009


Dear Will,
That is an interesting point.  Normally an orb  ("derzhava") is topped  
with a cross, signifying the reign of Christ over earthly powers (this  
was true in Byzantine areas, medieval West).  Traditionally the  
Pantokrator may hold the orb, or an earthly ruler may hold the orb.   
For a Russian example, see:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Russian_regalia.jpg

In the "Bogomater' Derzhavnaia" icon, however (Fig. 19 in my book),  
the cross is not atop the globe, but at the tip of the scepter.   
Curious displacement.  Also, the Mother of God, not the Christ child  
is holding the globe (although he is pointing to it).  So she has what  
may be termed an attenuated orb/derzhava (assuming that the cross by  
itself signifies power in an imperial context, which it always has  
from the time of Constantine's adoption of the cross when the Roman  
Empire was Christianized).  So: "Our Lady of the Attenuated Orb?"  No,  
sounds too problematical.  First, she is not MY "lady," for I do not  
belong to OUR Christian collective, and "lady" is a bit off for  
various reasons.  I prefer the literal translation "Mother of God,"  
and "orb" sounds too obscure into the bargain, not a part of the  
vocabulary of ordinary English-speaking believers (at least not this  
former North American believer; perhaps "orb" is more widespread among  
British speakers?).  So perhaps: "Russian Imperial Mother of God" (as  
opposed to Russian national/ist Mother of God, which would describe  
Vladimirskaia, Kazanskaia, etc.; yet nationalists can be imperialists  
or monarchists too).  Other suggestions out there?  It is quite a  
striking image.

Regards to the list -
Daniel RL


On Oct 23, 2009, at 4:21 PM, William Ryan wrote:

Daniel, this is useful information. I do wonder though, in view of the  
iconography, if "derzhavnyi" might perhaps here be an adjective formed  
from "derzhava" not in the sense of state or power, as you have  
translated it, but of the orb (also called "derzhava") which the Mary  
is holding? The orb and sceptre are after all a departure from  
tradition and the most striking feature of the icon. Thus an  
appropriate English name for the icon might be "Our Lady of the Orb".
Will


Daniel Rancour-Laferriere wrote:
> Dear colleagues,
> I agree with the comments of Michele A. Berdy.  The finding of  
> "Derzhavnaya" was represented as "quite an event."  Here are some  
> further sources referring to it (from my 2005 book THE JOY OF ALL  
> WHO SORROW):
>
>>            The Mother of God is interested in defending Russia not  
>> only from external enemies, but from internal enemies as well.   
>> Indeed, she seems to have taken over as protective ruler of Russia  
>> in March of 1917, right after political opponents of Nikolai II had  
>> forced him to abdicate.  At this time in the village of Kolomenskoe  
>> near Moscow an icon was �found� of her called Derzhavnaia  
>> (roughly, �Great Power�).  There now exist many copies of this  
>> icon, which is commemorated every year on 15 (2) March.  The icon  
>> shows the Mother of God seated on a throne with the Christ child,  
>> wearing a crown, and holding a scepter and orb (see Figure 19).[i]   
>> In this image Mary is not only the �Heavenly Tsaritsa,� but even  
>> �Russian Tsaritsa� (�Tsaritsa Rossiiskaia�) in one of the  
>> nationalist accounts.[ii]  According to legend, the finding of this  
>> icon signalled that the Mother of God was �taking power over  
>> Orthodox Rus�,�[iii] or that she �took on Supreme Tsarist  
>> power over Russia and over the people,�[iv] or that she was the  
>> only one worthy to take the �Russian scepter� �from the hands  
>> of Saint Nikolai [i.e., tsar Nikolai II].�[v]  In 1991 myrrh  
>> flowed from a Derzhavnaia icon located in Moscow, prompting one  
>> nationalist scholar to ask rherorically: �Perhaps the Most Holy  
>> Sovereign was bearing witness to the fact that, having accepted the  
>> succession to Russian power at the end of the Orthodox monarchy in  
>> 1917, She was not abandoning Her protective rule in this new Time  
>> of Troubles as well?�[vi]
>>
>>
>> [i] .  Filadel�f 1998, 254; Dorenskaia 1999, 59-63; Orekhov 2000,  
>> 165-73; Zevakhin 1996, fig. 244.
>>
>>
>> [ii] .   Skazanie o iavlenii Presviatoi Bogoroditsy v g.  
>> Budennovske 18 iiunia 1995 goda i napisanii ikony Ee Sviato- 
>> Krestovskoi, 1999, 4.
>>
>>
>> [iii] .  Vladimir 1995, 2.
>>
>>
>> [iv] .  Dorenskaia 1999, 60.
>>
>>
>> [v] .  Orekhov 2000, 167.
>>
>>
>> [vi] .  Liubomudrov 2000, 160.
>>
>>
>
> Regards to the list,
> Daniel Rancour-Laferriere
>
>
>
> On Oct 22, 2009, at 7:32 AM, Michele A. Berdy wrote:
>
> With icons, I don't think you're going to find much scholarly or  
> peer-reviewed literature -- especially about one that was found via  
> visions in March 1917. Here's a link for Metropolitan Tikhon's  
> report on it, which mentions an archeologist at the time who said  
> that it came from one of the churches in the Voznessensky monastery. http://www.krotov.info/acts/20/1917_19/babkin_12.htm
>
> It sounds as if it were quite an event at the time, so your student  
> might check the newspaper archives.
>
> I seem to recall that it was also a very big event when the icon was  
> returned to the church in Kolomenskoe (where it still is).
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Anthony Anemone" <AnemoneA at NEWSCHOOL.EDU 
> >
> To: <SEELANGS at bama.ua.edu>
> Sent: Thursday, October 22, 2009 5:19 PM
> Subject: [SEELANGS] Derzhavnaya bogoroditsa?
>
>
>> Dear List,
>>
>> Here's another interesting question from another former student.  
>> She's looking
>> for information on an icon that they call "Derzhavnaya" in Russian  
>> and the
>> "Reigning (icon of the mother of God)" in English.  Just about  
>> every website
>> of Orthodoxy mentions this icon and they all tell the same story: the
>> peasant girl who found the icon on March 2, 1917, etc.  but she  
>> haven't been
>> able to find a single scholarly, historical, or peer-reviewed  
>> source that
>> mentions this icon.  Does anyone know anything about this icon?  Is  
>> its
>> story a fiction of the post-soviet Orthodox Church?  Any sources?
>>
>> As always, thanks for the help.
>>
>> Tony
>>
>>
>>>
>> -- 
>> Anthony Anemone
>> Chair & Associate Provost of Foreign Languages
>> The New School
>> 212-229-5676 ex. 2355
>>
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