A 13th-century fresco rediscovered in Ferrara, Italy, provides unique evidence of medieval churches using Islamic tents to conceal their high altars.
The 700-year-old fresco is thought to be the only surviving image of its kind, offering precious evidence of a little-known Christian practice.
An Islamic tent depicted on 13th-century frescoes in Ferrara, Italyâs church of S. Antonio â CREDIT: Cambridge historian Dr. Federica GiganteThe partially visible fresco, identified by Cambridge historian Dr. Federica Gigante, almost certainly depicts a real tent, now lost, which the artist may have seen in the same church.
The brightly colored original tent, covered in jewels, could have been a diplomatic gift from a Muslim leader or a trophy seized from the battlefield.
Giganteâs research, published in The Burlington Magazine, also suggests that a high-profile figure such as Pope Innocent IVâwho gifted several precious textiles to the Benedictine convent church of S. Antonio in Polesine, Ferrara, where the fresco was paintedâmay have given such a tent.
âAt first, it seemed unbelievable and just too exciting that this could be an Islamic tent,â said Dr. Gigante.
âI quickly dismissed the idea and only went back to it years later with more experience and a braver attitude to research. We probably wonât find another such surviving image. I havenât stopped looking but my guess is that it is fairly unique.â
The fresco provides crucial evidence of a medieval church using Islamic tents in key Christian practices, including mass, the study suggests.
âIslamic textiles were associated with the Holy Land from where pilgrims and crusaders brought back the most precious such Islamic textiles,â Gigante said.
âThey thought there existed artistic continuity from the time of Christ so their use in a Christian context was more than justified. Christians in medieval Europe admired Islamic art without fully realizing it.â
While it is well known that Islamic textiles were present in late medieval European churches, surviving fragments are usually found wrapped around relics or in the burials of important people.
Depictions of Islamic textiles survive, in traces, on some church walls in Italy as well as in Italian paintings of the late medieval period. But images of Islamic tents from the Western Islamic world, such as Spain, are extremely rare and this might be the only detailed, full-size depiction to be identified.
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The fresco was painted between the late 13th and early 14th centuries to represent a canopy placed over the high altar. The artist transformed the apse into a tent comprising a blue and golden drapery wrapped around the three walls and topped by a double-tier bejeweled conical canopy of the type found throughout the Islamic world.
âThe artist put a lot of effort into making the textile appear life-like,â Gigante said.
The background was a blue sky covered in stars and birds, giving the impression of a tent erected out in the open.
In the early 15th century, the fresco was partly painted over with scenes from the lives of the Virgin Mary and Jesus Christ. This later fresco has captured the attention of art historians who have overlooked the sections of older fresco.
Gigante identified the depiction of Islamic textiles when she visited the church ten years ago but it took further research to prove that the fresco represents an Islamic tent.
Gigante argues that the fresco depicts an Islamic tent that actually existed and that at some point in the 13th century, may even have been physically present in the convent church, providing a direct reference point for the artist.
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It is already known that medieval churches used precious textile hangings to conceal the altar from view either permanently, during Mass, or for specific liturgical periods. And when studying the fresco, Gigante noticed that it depicts the corner of a veil, painted as if drawn in front of the altar. Gigante, therefore, believes that the real tent was adapted to serve as a âtetravelaâ, altar-curtains.
âIf the real tent was only erected in the church on certain occasions, the fresco could have served as a visual reminder of its splendor when it was not in place,â Gigante said. âThe interplay between painted and actual textiles can be found throughout Europe and the Islamic world in the late medieval period.â
Giganteâs study notes that the walls of the apse are studded with nails and brackets and that they could have served as structural supports for a hanging textile.
Gigante points to the frescoâs âextraordinarily precise detailsâ as further evidence that it depicts a real tent. The fabric shown in the fresco features blue eight-pointed star motifs inscribed in roundels, the center of which was originally picked out in gold leaf, exactly like the golden fabrics used for such precious Islamic tents.
A band with pseudo-Arabic inscriptions runs along the edge of both the top and bottom border. The textile also features white contours to emphasise contrasting colors reflecting a trend in 13th-century Andalusi silk design.
The structure, design, and color scheme of the tent closely resemble the few surviving depictions of Andalusi tents, including in the 13th-century manuscript, the Cantigas de Santa Maria. They also match one of the few potential surviving Andalusi tent fragments, the âFermo chasuble,â which is said to have belonged to St Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury.
Gigante also compares the jewels depicted in the fresco with a rare surviving jeweled textile made by Arab craftsmen, the mantle of the Norman King Roger II of Sicily (1095â1154), which was embroidered with gold and applied with pearls, gemstones, and cloisonnĂ© enamel.
In the 13th century, it was common for banners and other spoils of war to be displayed around church altars in Europe.
âTents, especially Islamic royal tents were among the most prized gifts in diplomatic exchanges, the most prominent royal insignia on campsites, and the most sought-after spoils on battlefields,â Gigante said.
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âTents made their way into Europe as booty. During anti-Muslim expeditions, it was common to pay mercenaries in textiles and a tent was the ultimate prize. The fresco matches descriptions of royal Islamic tents that were seized during the wars of Christian expansion into al-Andalus in the 13th century.â
From the 9th century, Popes often donated Tetravela (altar-curtains) to churches and papal records reveal that by 1255, Pope Innocent IV had sent âdraperies of the finest silk and gold fabricsâ to the convent of S. Antonio in Polesine.
âWe canât be certain but it is possible that a person of high profile such as Pope Innocent IV gifted the tent,â Gigante says.
An Andalusi tent taken from the campsite of the Almohad caliph Muhammad al-NÄsir was sent to Pope Innocent III after 1212 meaning that there was an Islamic tent in St Peterâs Basilica at some point prior to the painting of the fresco.
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Gigante suggests that the tent could also have been part of a diplomatic gift made to the powerful Este family which brokered alliances between the Guelfs and Ghibellins, factions supporting the Pope and the Holy Roman Emperor respectively. The convent was founded in 1249 by Beatrice II dâEste.
âMany people donât realize how extraordinarily advanced and admired Islamic culture was in the medieval period,â Gigante said.
Last year Dr. Gigante identified the Verona Astrolabe, an eleventh-century Islamic astrolabe bearing both Arabic and Hebrew inscriptions.
Reprinted under CC 4.0. License from Cambridge University. Originally written by Tom Almeroth-Williams.