“Holy to the Lord”: The Material Conversion of the Cammarata Finials
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Objects in Question: Gothic, Mudejar, Oriental, or Jewish?
תורת ייי; עדות ייי; פקודי ייי; מצות ייי; יראת ייי; משפטי יייאלו; הרמונים; קדש; ליייבכנסת יהודי; קמרטא יצ אמןThe teaching (Torah) of the Lord; the decrees of the Lord; the precepts of the Lord; the instruction of the Lord; the fear of the Lord; the judgments of the LordThese rimmonim are Holy to the LordIn the synagogue4 of the Jews of Cammarata the Lord will safeguard it. Amen.
The teaching (Torah) of the Lord is perfect,renewing life;the decrees of the Lord are enduring,making the simple wise;The precepts of the Lord are just,rejoicing the heart;the instruction of the Lord is lucid,making the eyes light up.The fear of the Lord is pure,abiding forever;the judgments of the Lord are true,righteous altogether.
3. The Rimmonim in the Synagogue
The decorative silver and gold rimmonim that are made for a Torah scroll are considered sacred articles and may not be used for mundane purposes, unless they were sold with the intention of purchasing a Torah scroll or Pentateuch with the proceeds.(Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Sefer Torah, 10:4)
You shall make the robe of the ephod of pure blue. (…) On its hem make pomegranates of blue, purple, and crimson yarns, all around the hem, with bells of gold between them all around: a golden bell and a pomegranate, a golden bell and a pomegranate, all around the hem of the robe. Aaron shall wear it while officiating, so that the sound of it is heard when he comes into the sanctuary before the Lord and when he goes out—that he may not die.
The synagogue is square, measuring forty ama in length and width. Toward the east is the heikhal (sanctuary), a pretty stone structure like a chapel, because they do not place the Sefer Torah (Torah scrolls) in an aron (ark). Instead, they place them in a heikhal, on a wooden platform, with their nartikim (cases) and their atarot (crowns) on their tops, and silver and crystal22 rimmonim fitting the heads of the rods [of the scroll]. […] and in the middle of the synagogue is a migdal etz,23 which is the teivah, where the cantors go up to pray.
4. Migration and Conversion
5. Bordons in the Service of the Church
My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord,my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,for he has looked with favor on his lowly servant.From this day all generations will call me blessed:the Almighty has done great things for me,and holy is his Name.[…]Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit,as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be forever. Amen.
6. An act of Material Conversion
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The exact number of expelled Jews varies according to different reports. Don Isaac Abravanel (1437–1508), a financier and royal servant to Ferdinand and Isabella for eight years, reported that 300,000 were expelled. Christian sources state that around 100,000 moved to the Kingdom of Portugal alone, while Jewish sources attest to ca. 120,000. For an in-depth discussion, see Beinart (2001, pp. 284–90). |
2 | Estimations of the Jewish population’s size vary; 20,000 is the minimum and 30,000 the number commonly agreed upon. See Roth (1946, pp. 229–30) and Zeldes (2003, p. 5). |
3 | The inscriptions were decoded by Cantera and Millás (1956, pp. 389–93, no. 275). |
4 | The Hebrew word כנסת (Knesset, Hebrew for “assembly”) can be interpreted as a community, but also as a synagogue. It originated at the time of the Second Temple, denoting an assembly of prophets, sages, and scribes, which influenced the canonization of the Hebrew Bible, the introduction of Jewish festivals and rituals, and the institution of prayers. See Mantel (1983). Parallel meanings are retained by analogous words in ancient Greek (ἐκκλησία) and Latin (ecclesia), signifying an assembly, a congregation, as well as the building used for the congregation’s gatherings. |
5 | This reference, and all the following, are in accordance with the Hebrew Bible. These verses correspond to Ps. 18:8–10 in the Vulgate and Ps. 19:7–9 in the King James Bible. All citations from the Hebrew Bible translated into English in this article follow the Jewish Publication Society 1985 edition. |
6 | The recitation of Ps. 19 during the Sabbath morning service, as well as on festivals, harks back to the eighth century and forms an integral part of this service in all rites. See Elbogen (1993, p. 95). |
7 | |
8 | Brought in Planas (1960, p. 7). |
9 | The double horseshoe arches appear in Islamic architecture from Spain, for example, in the Great Mosque of Cordoba (tenth century), which displays an almost identical monumental representation of this form. |
10 | An impressive collection of objects from Chalcis (Greece) in the collection of the British Museum, London, shows similar use of filigree applied in spherical objects. Dalton (1911, 1912) characterized their style as “Veneto-Greek.” Recent chemical analyses confirm the variety of Aegean workshops involved in the production of the Chalcis objects (Kontogiannis and Orfanou 2019). |
11 | See the objects preserved in the Palermo Cathedral Treasury (Di Natale and Vitella 2010). |
12 | In the document, the finials are called “apples” (poma), meaning rimmonim, commonly used in Sephardi communities. |
13 | |
14 | |
15 | No fewer than 21 Jewish coral workers, not including apprentices, were active in Trapani between 1440 and 1456 alone (Bresc-Bautier 1979, p. 116). |
16 | Maimonides, or Rabbi Moses Ben Maimon (1135–1204), was one of the leading rabbinic authorities in Jewish history, with immeasurable influence on Jewish life, law, and philosophy. His prominent work, Mishneh Torah, brought an unprecedented summary of Mishnaic and Talmudic rulings, and became the foundation of all Jewish communities. See Halbertal (2014). |
17 | This ruling is based on tractate Megilah (26b) in the Babylonian Talmud, which considers all articles accompanying and decorating the Torah scroll as “articles of sanctity” (tashmish kedushah). |
18 | The earliest reference to Torah finials is found in a document from the Cairo Genizah dated to 1159 and citing the use of silver rimmonim decorated with bells. As mentioned above, rimmonim are also described in Maimonides’ Mishneh Torah, also dating from the twelfth century. It is possible that due to Maimonides’ authority, the term “rimmonim” eventually prevailed among the Sephardi rite practitioners, even when the form of the finials was no longer round. See also Roth (1971). |
19 | The anagram is used due to respect for this divine name and is also considered to be the form in which the inscription appeared on the high priest’s robe. Some rabbinical exegeses even argue that the two Hebrew words did not appear one after the other in a linear line on the High Priest’s robe, but rather were positioned one above the other, as may have originally been the case with the inscription plaques on the Cammarata rimmonim. See Joseph Bekhor Shor’s Commentary on the Torah, vol. I (Gad 1956, pp. 110–11). |
20 | These two loci may be called by different names according to the rite of the community. The relationship and the practice performed, however, remain the same, and are based on legal codes accepted throughout the Jewish world. See Wischnitzer (1974) and Narkiss (1992). |
21 | On R. Bertinoro and his letters recounting his journey to Jerusalem, see Artom and Abraham (1997). |
22 | Bertinoro uses the Hebrew word bedolaḥ to indicate the additional material incorporated in the rimmonim. While in Biblical and Talmudic times bedolaḥ was used to indicate a precious stone or a pearl; medieval Jews could understand it also as crystal. In medieval Hebrew sources, bedolaḥ is mentioned as a clear crystal, sometimes a glass, used for creating cups, crowns, and eyeglasses (Ben Yehuda 1908, vol. I, pp. 466–67). |
23 | The migdal etz (“wooden tower” in Hebrew) is the teivah in the synagogue. The term evokes the pulpit of Ezra, set up in the Temple court upon the return from Babylon: “Ezra the scribe stood upon a wooden tower made for the purpose […]. Ezra opened the scroll in the sight of all the people, for he was above all the people; as he opened it, all the people stood up” (Nehemiah 8:4–5). See also Wischnitzer (1964, p. 34). |
24 | The exact rite practiced in the synagogue of Cammarata is unknown, but it was likely close to the Sephardi rite practiced in Spain (Sepharad) and in many communities around the Mediterranean, in both Christian and Muslim territories (Assis 1992, pp. 7–8). As Simonsohn has observed, the lack of preserved documentation prevents a distinct definition of the traditions and minhagim (socio-religious customs) practiced in the different Jewish communities on the island. Sicily attracted Jewish immigrants from various Mediterranean lands. Moreover, no notable traces of Sicilian religious traditions are found elsewhere after the expulsion of 1493, perhaps because of their assimilation into the rites of the new environments (Simonsohn 2004–2022, vol. 18, p. 12126–27). See also Espinosa Villegas (2010). |
25 | This type of heikhal described by Bertinoro might have taken the form of those still extant in Italy and France, a small room furnished with one or more shelves, upon which the Torah scrolls are displayed. Archaeological excavations of the surviving medieval synagogues of Spain also reveal that the heikhal was often designed as a small room. At times, the room is large enough to house a few persons (Cantera Burgos 1984; Narkiss 1992). |
26 | Such medieval cases from Sephardi (or other) areas did not survive. One of the earliest known Torah cases, dated to 1568, is preserved in the Jewish Museum, New York (S 21). However, it was made for the Samaritan community in Damascus, Syria, and is heavily influenced by Mameluke techniques and ornamentation. |
27 | In the few extant medieval Sephardi synagogues, the teivah did not survive, thus making knowledge of its exact location in the synagogue (whether in its middle, or at the opposite wall to the heikhal) uncertain (Narkiss 1992). |
28 | |
29 | Already in the time of the Sages (eighth century), there existed a distinct and elaborate ceremony, as can be seen in Seder Rav Amram (Frumkin 1912) and tractate Soferim, 14:4–8, whose form and progression are shared by all Jewish communities and rites. See Elbogen (1993, pp. 159–61) and Langer (1993). |
30 | Langer (1993, p. 102) applies this term to biblical-style phrases which are not included in the Bible. |
31 | On the liturgical experience in medieval synagogues related to their design and arrangement, see Shalev-Eyni (2015). |
32 | The Sacred Royal Council of Sicily drafted a report on the disadvantages of the expulsion for Sicilian society as a whole, notably stressing the variety and number of Jewish craftsmen vital to the island (Del Mare 2009, p. 44; Abulafia 2008, p. 58). The Sicilian nobility had its own motivation to prevent the expulsion: the Jews served as a significant source of manpower in numerous services, including cleaning, building, and securing the cities (Zeldes 2003, p. 9; Roth 1946, pp. 256–57). |
33 | Five tari are equal to one ducat. |
34 | |
35 | Although the cathedral’s documents clearly state that the bordons were bought in Sicily and had previously belonged to the Jews that “King Ferdinand banished,” there is no mention of the name of the first buyer. Arxiu Capitular de Mallorca (ACL), de sacristia 1493, fol. 33v. |
36 | |
37 | |
38 | |
39 | Examples of which can be found in Museo Lázaro Galdiano, Madrid (Inv. n. 1.466, 1.467, 1.714, 2.861, 2.862, 2.896, and 2.897), and in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (M.256-1956). The pair of verge heads in London was long dated to the period around 1500 (Oman 1968, p. 6, no. 18). Its features, however, may indicate a nineteenth-century manufacture, a time when many Gothic-inspired pieces were produced (Cruz Valdovinos 2000). I am grateful to Kirstin Kennedy from the Victoria and Albert Museum for sharing her insights concerning the verge heads and raising the question of their dating. |
40 | As described by William Durand in his Rationale divinorum officiorum (Rationale), IV, 9, 5. See Thibodeau (2015, p. 195). |
41 | |
42 | The folios in the manuscript recounting its liturgy were added at a later date, after the constitution of the feast on 22 September 1575. See the analysis of Seguí i Trobat (2011, p. 43). |
43 | |
44 | |
45 | For the complete dimensions of the cathedral interior, see Fuentes and Wunderwald (2019). |
46 | The cathedral interior went through extensive changes in the early twenteith century as part of the renovation led by Antoni Gaudí, in which the entire design was altered and caused the removal and destruction of several Gothic, Renaissance, and Baroque alterpieces and furnishings. Thus, the 1855 painting serves as a testimony that allows for the reconstruction of the cathedral interior prior to the extensive renovation. See Cram (1932). |
47 | Feasts relating to Mary were usually marked by white and red vestements, whereas gold vestments were a sign of general dignity and festivity (Atchley 1904). |
48 | |
49 | |
50 | Sic. The authors of the label were probably unaware that the Hebrew term already incorporates the plural form. |
51 | Mainly because of its potential to provide insights concerning production, iconography, and historical context. See Poleg (2018, p. 488). |
52 | The significance of an object’s moment of manufacture is considered by Christopher S. Wood as a condition of the modern (post-Renaissance) culture, focusing on the primary (and, by consequence, singular) performance of an object, in contrast to perceiving it as a link to a certain reference point that may change over time. See Wood (2008, pp. 15–9). |
53 | |
54 | The literature on Sephardi synagogues is vast. See most notably Cantera Burgos (1984). |
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Manor, H. “Holy to the Lord”: The Material Conversion of the Cammarata Finials. Religions 2023, 14, 1502. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14121502
Manor H. “Holy to the Lord”: The Material Conversion of the Cammarata Finials. Religions. 2023; 14(12):1502. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14121502
Chicago/Turabian StyleManor, Hila. 2023. "“Holy to the Lord”: The Material Conversion of the Cammarata Finials" Religions 14, no. 12: 1502. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14121502