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Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level F , Box Black Madonna Topic Box

Holy Card

1880-1910 (Printed and published)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In art history, a black madonna is a painting or sculpture depicting the Virgin Mary with dark or black skin, created in Europe in the late Medieval period. Some are made of dark or black materials such as ebony, others are said to have become blackened from the soot of candles, although this explanation and the significance of the Virgin's skin colour is contested. There are several hundred black madonnas in Europe and the topic has attracted a considerable literature in recent decades approaching the subject from anthropological, art historical, feminist, psychoanalytical and Afrocentric perspectives.

The Abbey of Einsiedeln is a Benedictine monastery dedicated to Our Lady of the Hermits and located in the village of Einsiedeln twenty miles southeast of Zurich. According to 9th and 14th-century sources, the hermit St Meinrad (d. 861) was especially devoted to the Virgin and was given a miracle-working statue of the Virgin and Child by Abbess Hildegard of Zurich around which he built a chapel. Following his murder, a church was built over this chapel. The new church was dedicated but not the chapel. In 948 Conrad of Constance was praying in the chapel when he witnessed Christ and the angels performing the dedication rites. A papal bull of 11th November 966 allowed the celebration of the anniversary of this miracle and granted remission of sins to pilgrims to the shrine. This holy card would have been published for sale to pilgrims as a souvenir of the shrine.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Lithography on paper
Brief description
Souvenir of Our Lady of Einsiedeln, Switzerland, late 19th/early 20th century.
Physical description
Rectangular paper card (portrait format). Front: colour printed illustration of Our Lady of Einsiedeln surrounded by flowers, lettered in German within and below the image in black and gold, border of gold ornament. Back: lettered with prayer in German and name of publisher printed in black.
Dimensions
  • Height: 8.4cm
  • Width: 6.2cm
Content description
Our Lady of Einsiedeln
Marks and inscriptions
  • Unter deinen Schutz fleihen wir! (Lettered within the design, on a ribbon scoll below the figure. The words are from the Sub Tuum Praesidium, the oldest known prayer to the Virgin Mary, dating from the third century. )
    Translation
    Under thy protection we fly!
  • Lith. v. Eberle, Kälin u. Cie Einsiedeln. (Lettered in gold within the design, below the figure.)
  • Das Gnadenbild in Maria-Einsiedeln. (Lettered in gold, below the image.)
    Translation
    The holy image of Our Lady of Einsideln.
Credit line
Given by Tim Travis in memory of Leslie Travis
Subjects depicted
Summary
In art history, a black madonna is a painting or sculpture depicting the Virgin Mary with dark or black skin, created in Europe in the late Medieval period. Some are made of dark or black materials such as ebony, others are said to have become blackened from the soot of candles, although this explanation and the significance of the Virgin's skin colour is contested. There are several hundred black madonnas in Europe and the topic has attracted a considerable literature in recent decades approaching the subject from anthropological, art historical, feminist, psychoanalytical and Afrocentric perspectives.

The Abbey of Einsiedeln is a Benedictine monastery dedicated to Our Lady of the Hermits and located in the village of Einsiedeln twenty miles southeast of Zurich. According to 9th and 14th-century sources, the hermit St Meinrad (d. 861) was especially devoted to the Virgin and was given a miracle-working statue of the Virgin and Child by Abbess Hildegard of Zurich around which he built a chapel. Following his murder, a church was built over this chapel. The new church was dedicated but not the chapel. In 948 Conrad of Constance was praying in the chapel when he witnessed Christ and the angels performing the dedication rites. A papal bull of 11th November 966 allowed the celebration of the anniversary of this miracle and granted remission of sins to pilgrims to the shrine. This holy card would have been published for sale to pilgrims as a souvenir of the shrine.
Collection
Accession number
E.993-2012

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Record createdSeptember 5, 2013
Record URL
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