Various Panels of Stained Glass in the Cloisters,…
Stained Glass Panel in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Sections of a Border Stained Glass in the Cloister…
Statue of a Bishop Saint in the Cloisters, Sept. 2…
Statue of the Virgin in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Window with Grisaille Decoration in the Cloisters,…
Detail of a Window with Grisaille Decoration in th…
Detail of a Window with Grisaille Decoration in th…
Various Panels of Stained Glass in the Cloisters,…
Woman with Two Flasks Stained Glass Panel in the C…
The Saint-Guilhem Cloister in the Cloisters, Sept.…
The Saint-Guilhem Cloister in the Cloisters, Sept.…
The Saint-Guilhem Cloister in the Cloisters, Sept.…
Vision of a Sleeping Monk Stained Glass Panel in t…
The Saint-Guilhem Cloister in the Cloisters, Sept.…
The Saint-Guilhem Cloister in the Cloisters, Sept.…
Fountain in the Saint-Guilhem Cloister in the Cloi…
The Battlements at the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
View of the George Washington Bridge from the Cloi…
View of the George Washington Bridge from the Cloi…
Exterior Architecture of the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Exterior of the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Exterior of the Langon Chapel in the Cloisters, Se…
Detail of a Virgin and Child Statue in the Cloiste…
Sweetmeat Fork in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Detail of a Virgin and Child Statue in the Cloiste…
Virgin and Child Statue in the Cloisters, Sept. 20…
Detail of one of the Head-Shaped Supports of the L…
Lion Relief in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Wooden Statue of the Virgin and Child in the Clois…
Mary Magdalene in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Seated Virgin and Child in the Cloisters, Sept. 20…
St. Margaret in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Marble Virgin and Child in the Cloisters, Sept. 20…
Detail of St. Christopher in the Cloisters, Sept.…
St. Christopher in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Terracotta Enthroned Virgin in the Cloisters, Sept…
Head (Perhaps of an Angel) in the Cloisters, Sept.…
Detail of the Pontaut Chapter House in the Cloiste…
Detail of the Pontaut Chapter House in the Cloiste…
Saint Hubert and the Stag Relief in the Cloisters,…
Man of Sorrows Wall Painting in the Cloisters, Sep…
Head in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Reliquary Bust of St. Juliana in the Cloisters, Se…
Bursa Reliquary in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
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Theodosius Arrives at Ephesus Stained Glass Panel in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007


Theodosius Arrives at Ephesus (Scene from the Legend of the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus), 1200–1205
French; Made in Rouen
Pot-metal glass, vitreous paint; 25 x 28 1/8 in. (63.5 x 71.5 cm)
The Cloisters Collection, 1980 (1980.263.4)
According to their legend, seven noble retainers of the Roman emperor Decius were converted to Christianity and refused to perform pagan rites. To escape persecution, the seven hid in a cave and prayed for deliverance. God answered their prayers by putting them into a deep sleep just as imperial soldiers discovered the hiding place and sealed the cave with a huge stone. Two centuries later, during the reign of Theodosius II, a shepherd removed the stone to use it as building material, and one of the sleepers, Malchus, ventured forth to buy bread. After he tried to pay the baker with an ancient coin, he was brought before the prefect and the bishop, who, although skeptical at first, realized when they arrived at the cave that they were witnessing a miraculous resurrection. Hearing the news, Theodosius traveled to the cave to venerate the seven, but after talking to the emperor, they once again fell into a deep sleep. Despite the popularity of the legend of the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus during the Middle Ages, its appearance as a theme in French stained glass is highly unusual; no other extensive cycles predate the glass from the nave of the Cathedral of Rouen. The attribution of the Seven Sleepers series to the Cathedral of Rouen is based on its similarity to a window devoted to Saint John the Evangelist still found in the cathedral's nave. Both share a light, bright palette of unusual colors. The expressive, boldly silhouetted figures and the dramatic narrative make these windows among the finest of the period, rivaling the stained glass at the cathedrals of Chartres and Bourges.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_art/ViewOne.asp?item=1980.263....
French; Made in Rouen
Pot-metal glass, vitreous paint; 25 x 28 1/8 in. (63.5 x 71.5 cm)
The Cloisters Collection, 1980 (1980.263.4)
According to their legend, seven noble retainers of the Roman emperor Decius were converted to Christianity and refused to perform pagan rites. To escape persecution, the seven hid in a cave and prayed for deliverance. God answered their prayers by putting them into a deep sleep just as imperial soldiers discovered the hiding place and sealed the cave with a huge stone. Two centuries later, during the reign of Theodosius II, a shepherd removed the stone to use it as building material, and one of the sleepers, Malchus, ventured forth to buy bread. After he tried to pay the baker with an ancient coin, he was brought before the prefect and the bishop, who, although skeptical at first, realized when they arrived at the cave that they were witnessing a miraculous resurrection. Hearing the news, Theodosius traveled to the cave to venerate the seven, but after talking to the emperor, they once again fell into a deep sleep. Despite the popularity of the legend of the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus during the Middle Ages, its appearance as a theme in French stained glass is highly unusual; no other extensive cycles predate the glass from the nave of the Cathedral of Rouen. The attribution of the Seven Sleepers series to the Cathedral of Rouen is based on its similarity to a window devoted to Saint John the Evangelist still found in the cathedral's nave. Both share a light, bright palette of unusual colors. The expressive, boldly silhouetted figures and the dramatic narrative make these windows among the finest of the period, rivaling the stained glass at the cathedrals of Chartres and Bourges.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_art/ViewOne.asp?item=1980.263....
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