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The Tomb of Alfanus in S. Maria in Cosmedin, Rome, and its Place in the Tradition of Roman Funerary Monuments
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 August 2013
La tomba di alfanus nella chiesa di s. maria in cosmedin
Il monumento funerario del camerorius papale Alfanus nel portico di ingresso della chiesa di S. Maria in Cosmedin a Roma, databile circa al 1123 d.C, si erge all'inizio di una fila di tombe tardo-medievali che impiegano la stessa formula strutturale: un sarcofago sormontato da un arco. La formula stessa deriva dal periodo tardo-antico, e specificamente dalle tombe ad arcosolio nelle catacombe, e ci si domanda se il monumento di Alfanus rappresenti la rinascita o la sopravvivenza della tradizione classica. Benchè le testimonianze di monumenti funerari nei secoli intermedi siano scarse, resta abbastanza da permettere la conclusione che le tombe importanti seguivano questo modello, e in tal modo la formula del disegno della tomba può essere considerata come il continuamento della tradizione nel Medio Evo. Il vocabolario scultoreo, però, non ha precedenti alto-medievali, e questo si colloca meglio nel contesto della renovatio del XII secolo.
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- Copyright © British School at Rome 1983
References
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23 Petrus Mallius, Descriptio basilicae Vaticanae, cap. 8: ‘Hic itaque sanctissimus papa Gregorius III requiescit in loco illo, ubi nunc felicis memoriae beatus Eugenius papa III requiescit. Ubi etiam ad honorem eiusdem Gregorii papae fuit erectus arcus, optimo musibo depictus, et permansit arcus ille usque ad tempora domini Eugenii III papae. De quo habemus in epitafio eius hunc versum: Tertius hie papa Gregorius est tumulatus.’ The text is published by Valentini, R. and Zucchetti, G.Codice Topografico della Cittá di Roma III (Rome 1946) 388Google Scholar. I would like to thank Ingo Herklotz for drawing my attention to this reference.
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27 For example, the early-ninth-century funerary chapel of Theodora, mother of pope Paschal I, in S. Prassede, Rome, or the fourteenth-century funerary chapel of Theodore Metochites in the Kariye Camii, Istanbul.
28 The Farfa tomb has been assigned to the twelfth century by Premoli, B., ‘La chiesa abbaziale di Farfa’, Rivista dell' Istituto Nazionale di Archeologia e Storia dell' Arte XXI–XXII (1974–1975) 5–77Google Scholar, esp. 32, but an earlier date appears more likely. Prof. Charles McClendon, co-director of the British School excavations at Farfa, has presented convincing arguments (as yet unpublished) for dating the tomb to the Carolingian period.
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31 Einhard, Vita Karoli Magni, cap. 31: ‘In hac sepultus est eadem die … arcusque super tumulum deauratus cum imagine et titulo exstructus.’ See also Deér, op. cit. (n. 19) 27 note 15.
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