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Theotokos of Vladimir
The 'Theotokos of Vladimir', also known as 'Our Lady of Vladimir', the ''Virgin of Vladimir'' or ''Vladimirskaya'' (), is one of the most venerated
Orthodox icons. The
Theotokos (Mary) is regarded as the
holy protectress of
Russia, and the
icon is displayed in the
Tretyakov Gallery,
Moscow. Her feast day is
June 3.
Patriarch Luke Chrysoberges of
Constantinople sent the newly made icon as a gift to
Grand Duke Yury Dolgoruky of
Kiev about
1131. The beautiful image was coveted by Yury's son
Andrey Bogolyubskiy who brought it to his favourite city
Vladimir in
1155. When the horses that transported the icon stopped near Vladimir and refused to go further, this was interpreted as a
sign that the
Theotokos wanted her icon to stay in Vladimir. To house the icon, the great
Assumption Cathedral was built there, followed by other churches dedicated to the Virgin throughout northwestern Russia.
In
1395, during
Tamerlane's invasion, the image was taken from Vladimir to the new capital,
Moscow. The spot where people and the ruling prince met the icon is commemorated with the
Sretensky Monastery.
Vasili I of Moscow spent a night crying over the icon, and Tamerlane's armies retreated the same day. The Muscovites refused to return the icon to Vladimir and placed it in the
Cathedral of the Dormition of the
Moscow Kremlin. The intercession of the Theotokos through the image was also credited with saving Moscow from
Tatar hordes in
1451 and
1480.
One of the most exquisite icons ever created, the icon of the Theotokos of Vladimir is sometimes described as exhibiting universal feelings of motherly love and anxiety for her child. By the
16th century the Vladimirskaya (as the
Russians call it) was a thing of
legend. Church tradition asserted that the icon was painted by
St Luke, though analysis of the image has disproved the legend. The venerated image was used in coronations of
tsars, elections of patriarchs, and other important ceremonies of state. In December
1941, as the Germans approached Moscow,
Stalin allegedly ordered that the icon be placed in an airplane and flown around the besieged capital. Several days later, the German army started to retreat.
[1]
As a work of art, it is widely regarded as the most important
icon produced during the
Comnenian period, expressing deeper humanity and emotionality than that typical of previous
Byzantine art. As David Talbot Rice asserts in the latest edition of the
Encyclopaedia Britannica, "it is of considerable importance in the history of painting, for it not only is a work of outstandingly high quality but also is in a new, more human style, anticipating the late Byzantine style that flourished between 1204 and 1453".
Trivia
★ Today a portion of the icon is used for the logo artwork of
actor and
director Mel Gibsons
Icon Productions, an
American independent
production company founded in
1989.
See also
★
Our Lady of Vladimir Church – a church in St. Petersburg painted in gold and black, the colours of the Theotokos of Vladimir
★
Our Lady of St. Theodore - a miraculous icon said to be painted after the Vladimirskaya