Sunday, 30 September 2007
Nigerian Celebrations
Saturday, 29 September 2007
Byzantine Roots - Mistra
The galleries of the convent provide unforgettable views:
The well-preserved Cathedral (below) stands in the lower city:
It preserves a fine pulpit. In the gallery above, ladies of the Byzantine above would have looked down at the divine worship.
The nave floor preserves a plaque of a double-headed eagle where, it is said, the last Emperor of Constantinople was crowned (below). Sadly, this is unlikely to be true: Constantine was never crowned. The Patriarch (who alone could perform the ceremony) was not in Mistras, and was anyway a deeply unpopular Uniate, whose presence at such a ceremony would have undermined Constantine's reign at its very beginning. However, it is certain that the last Emperor of Constantinople worshipped here, and would have gazed at these same images.
For the rest, Mistra hugs the mountainside, and it is most pleasant simply to become lost in it, to turn into winding alleyways or broad streets, to stumble across a church or a chapel, and savour the phenomenal views of the Spartan plain glimpsed between arches or windows:
The art of fresco reached a pinnacle at Mistra, with a cross-fertilising with the early Italian renaissance. Figures have a dynamism and a solidity that reflects what Giotto was doing at about the same time:
Every archway was worth a diversion:
Lying about 8km from modern Sparta, Mistra is a Unesco World Heritage Site, and of ourstanding interest in seeking to understand Byzantine civilisation.
Friday, 28 September 2007
The Phoenix Reborn

The mosaic is one of the series executed by the Russian artist Boris Anrep in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel.
Thursday, 27 September 2007
O Nata Lux
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Wednesday, 26 September 2007
Tuesday, 25 September 2007
Byzantine Roots - Piraeus
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Monday, 24 September 2007
Bishops' speak
Sunday, 23 September 2007
National Catholic Congress 1929



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