Saint Christopher (depicted with the head of a dog)
Kermira, Cappadocia St Christopher depicted with the head of a dog. From the 5th century on, it was widely believed in Byzantium that the saint was one of the mythic dog-heads, a barbarian race without the gift of human speech. Nevertheless his depiction as a dog-head had not been the dominant in the Byzantine art, since the Byzantine Church frowned upon the linking of one of its saints with the cynocephali. In the post-Byzantine art, though, especially from the 17th c. onwards, the Orthodox artists several times paint the Saint as a dog-head.
- Collection: Icons and Wood-Carvings
- Type: PORTABLE ICON
- Origin: Kermira, Cappadocia
- Measurement: 67 x 35 cm
- Exhibit Number: ΒΧΜ 01571
- Appears in: IV.3a. The Communities of the Romioi (RUM)
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