The Green Man

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The Green Man Page 6

by Kathleen Basford


  South Tawton. St. Andrew. Roof bosses, 14th or 15th century.

  Page 98

  Plate 73a and b

  Sampford Courtenay, Devon. St Andrew. Roof bosses 14th or 15th century

  Page 99

  Plate 74a

  Sampford Courtenay, St Andrew. Roof boss. 14th or 15th century.

  Plate 74b

  Spreyton, Devon. St. Michael. Roof boss. 14th or 15th century.

  Page 100

  Plate 75a

  Melrose, Roxburgh, Scotland. Abbey Museum. Roof boss. 15th century.

  Plate 75b

  Ottery St. Mary. Devon. St Mary. Corbel. 14th century.

  Page 101

  Plate 76

  Lostwithiel, Cornwall. St. Bartholomew. Font. 14th or 15th century.

  Page 102

  Plate 77 a and b

  Norwich Cathedral. Roof bosses in the Cloisters. 14th or 15th century.

  Page 103

  Plate 78 a and b

  Norwich Cathedral. Roof bosses in the Cloisters. 14th or 15th century.

  Page 104

  Plate 79 a and b

  Norwich Cathedral. Roof bosses in the Cloisters. 14th or 15th century.

  Page 105

  Plate 80 a and b

  Norwich Cathedral. Roof bosses in the Cloisters. 14th or 15th century.

  Page 106

  Plate 81 a and b

  Langley Marish, Buckinghamshire, ST. MARY. Corbels. 15th century.

  Page 107

  Plate 82a

  Mildenhall, Suffolk. ST. MARY. Boss inside the porch. 15th century.

  Plate 82b

  Great Shelford, Cambridgeshire, ST. MARY. Boss inside the porch. 15th century.

  Page 108

  Plate 83a

  Whalley, Lancashire, St. Mary and All Saints. Misericord. 15th century. Foliate tricephalos.

  Plate 83b

  Whalley, Lancashire, St. Mary and All Saints.. Misericord. 15th century. Foliate head.

  Page 109

  Plate 84a

  Cumbria, Lancashire. Priory. Misericord. 15th century. Crowned foliate tricephalos.

  Plate 84b

  Paris. Bibliothèque Nationale. Miniature in a 13th century

  MS. Satan as triceps Beelzebub, the Trinity of Evil.

  (Photo. Bibliothèque Nationale)

  Page 110

  Plate 85a

  Kings Lynn, Norfolk. St. Margaret. Misericord. 14th century. Cross-eyed Green Man.

  Plate 85b

  Ludlow, Shropshire, St. Laurence. Misericord. 16th century. Cross-eyed Green men as supporters.

  Page 111

  Plate 86a

  Llangwm, Monmouthshire (Gwent). St. Jerome. Corbel. Probably 15th century.

  Plate 86b

  Llantilio Crossenny, Monmouthshire (Gwent). St. Teilo. Carving on the wall in north transept. 14th or 15th century.

  Page 112

  Plate 87a

  Crowland, Lincolnshire, Abbey. Roof boss. 15th century.

  Plate 87b

  Queen Camel, Somerset. St. Barnabas. Roof boss. Probably 15th century.

  Page 113

  Plate 88

  Whalley, Lancashire, St. Mary and All Saints. Canopy in the choir stalls. ? 15th century.

  Page 114

  Plate 89

  Astbury, Cheshire. St. Mary. Roof boss. 15th century.

  Page 115

  Plate 90a

  Silkstone, Yorkshire, All Saints. Roof boss. 15th century.

  Plate 90b

  Norwich Cathedral. Misericord. Late 15th century.

  Page 116

  Plate 91

  Bishops Lydeard, Somerset. ST MARY. Bench end. 15th century.

  Page 117

  Plate 92

  Crowcombe, Somerset. Holy Ghost. Bench end. 16th century.

  Page 118

  Plate 93a

  Hereford Cathedral. Lintel carving. 15th century

  Plate 93b

  Bosbury, Herefordshire, Holy Trinity. Monument to Richard Harford and his wife. 16th century. One of two Green men.

  Page 119

  Plate 94

  Ebrach (Former Cistertian Abbey). Leaf mask at the base of the Memorial of Abbot Hölein. 17th century.

  Page 120

  Plate 95

  Bristol. St. Mary. Redcliffe. Foliate skull at the base of the Sandford and Challoner Memorial. (La. Paty. Bristol, fecit), circa 1747.

  Page 121

  List of Plates

  1. Trier. Rheinisches Landesmuseum

  Cast taken from one of the capitals dating from the first half of the end century A.D., discovered by J. N. von Wilmowsky during excavations in Trier Cathedral circa 1874. The capitals, salvaged from the ruins of a Roman temple (Am Herrenbrünnchen) of the Hadrianic period (117-138 A.D.) by Bishop Nicetius, were remounted on pillars set up at the corners of the Square Chancel when it was restored in the 6th century. The pillars were finally hidden from view when this part of the cathedral was again restored and partly rebuilt between 1028 and 1037.

  2. (a) Baalbek, Lebanon. Bacchus Temple

  Leaf mask in a frieze on a temple built in the time of Antoninus Pius (138-161 A.D.). (Photo. British Library.)

  (b) Hatra, Mesopotamia. (Al Hadr, Iraq)

  Male Medusa on the façade of a temple dating from the mid-second century A.D. (Photo. Professor J. B. Ward Perkins.)

  3. (a) Trier, Rheinisches Landesmuseum

  Leaf mask, probably representing Okeanos, on a reconstructed fragment from a funerary monument. Neumagen. 2nd or 3rd century A.D.

  (b) Trier, Rheinisches Landesmuseum

  Leaf mask in the centre of a panel from the Iphigenien-pfeiler. Neumagen. 2nd or 3rd century A.D.

  4. (a) Trier, Rheinisches Landesmuseum

  Leaf masks in a frieze. Fragment from a funerary monument. Neumagen. 2nd or 3rd century A.D.

  (b) Trier, Rheinisches Landesmuseum

  Two faces formed from acanthus in a fragment of a frieze from the Schulreliefpfeiler. Neumagen. 2nd or 3rd century A.D.

  5. (a) Évreux (Eure) Musée Municipale

  Leaf mask on a Roman capital. 3rd century.

  Leaves sprout from all parts of the face and from the corners of the mouth; even the eyes are formed from rolled up leaves.

  (b) Bordeaux (Gironde). Musée d'Aquitaine

  Faces formed from leaves in Gallo-Roman frieze. (Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg: No. LA 632/27.)

  6. Istanbul Archaeological Museum

  (a) Capital discovered in the City Wall during excavations, 1972. (Museum No. 7237). 6th century. Leaf mask with horns of plenty.

  (b) Another leaf mask on the same capital (opposite face).

  7. Istanbul Archaeological Museum

  Capital discovered at Mudanya in 1885. (Museum No. 748). 6th century.

  Two leaf masks with a horn of plenty between them.

  8. Istanbul Archaeological Museum

  Capital with a leaf mask on each of its four faces. (Museum No. 749). 6th century.

  (a) The pupils of the eyes converge slightly, and the large irises are raised, almost bulging, giving the face an intense ''far away" expression.

  (b) Adjacent face. The mask has similar prominent and barely focused eyes.

  9. Istanbul Archaeological Museum

  Capitals discovered circa 1953 on the site of the New Palace of Justice, Istanbul. 6th century.

  (a) (Museum No. not recorded). The eyes squint.

  (b) (Museum No. 5073A).

  10. Istanbul Archaeological Museum

  Capital discovered circa 1972-73 at Kanlica. 6th century. (Museum No. 5977).

  11. Poitiers (Vienne). Saint-Hilaire-Grand

  Carving on the base of the lid of the tomb of Sainte-Abre. 4th or 5th century.

  Sainte Abre was the daughter of St Hilary the Great. She died circa 361.

  12. Paris. Musée des Monuments Français

  Cast of a capital in the crypt of the cathedral in Dijon (Côte d'Or). 9th century.

  13 Cividale de Friuli. Museo
Archeologico Nazionale.

  Dedication page of the Psalter presented to Archbishop Egbert of Trier in 983.

  MS Cod. sanct. 6; Cod. Gertrudianus fol. 17.

  14. Trier. Stadtbibliothek

  Dedication page of the Codes Egberti, fol. 2. vs. presented to Archbishop Egbert in 985. (Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg No. 59662.)

  15. Toscanella. Façade of San Pietro

  Two demons, each in the form of a tricephalos; probably representing triceps Beelzebub, 12th century. (Photo. Alinari-Giraudon, Paris. No. 26150.)

  16. (a) Reims (Marne). Musée Rémi

  Gallo-Roman tricephalos

  (b) Avignon (Vaucluse). Musée Calvet

  Capital (from Notre-Dame, Avignon). 12th century. (Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg No. 23030.)

  17. (a) Stuttgart. Württembergisches Landesbibliothek

  Codex. bibl. 2: 56. Stuttgarter Passionale II. fol. 83v. Initial M in the form of a demon with monsters coming from the ears and tendrils coming out of the mouth. (Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg No. LA 211/1)

  (b) Autun (Saône-et-Loire)

  Capital in the cathedral (Saint-Lazare). 12th century. Man-Eating leaf demon. (Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg No. 31726.) 18.

  18. Castor (Near Peterborough). St. Kyneburga

  Capital dated 1124.

  Page 122

  (a) Mask with tendrils coming from the mouth.

  (b) Mask with tendrils coming from the nose.

  (c) Cat mask, with human hands holding the branches that come from the mouth.

  19. (a) Mars (Nièvre)

  Tympanum. 12th century. (Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg No. 39880.)

  (b) Copenhagen. The Royal Library. (Der Kongelige Bibliotek.)

  f. 17 of the Folkunge Psalter MS Thott 143, fol. 2. 12th century.

  Beatus Initial. (Photo. Detkongelige Bibliotek. Copenhagen.)

  20. (a) Elkstone, Gloucestershire St. John the Evangelist Tympanum. circa 1160.

  Mask with tendrils coming out of the mouth (in right hand corner of the tympanum).

  (b) Linley, Shropshire. St. Leonard Tympanum. circa 1138.

  Nude figure surrounded by foliage. Sprays of foliage come from the mouth.

  21. (a) Châteauneuf-sur-Charente (Charente). Saint-Pierre Capital. 12th century.

  Foliate beasts with man holding their tongues. (Bildar-chiv Foto-Marburg. No. 38688.)

  (b) Königslutter am Elm (former Abbey Church)

  Corbel on the principal apse. circa 1135.

  Foliate head of a type rarely seen in 12th century art. Leaves grow on the face, forming the whiskers, beard and moustache, and the expression is deeply serious. It bears a close resemblance to the leaf masks of antiquity. (Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg. No. 12332.)

  22. Kilpeck. Herefordshire. St. Mary and St. David

  Doorway (leaf mask on abacus on right). circa 1140.

  23. Saint-Denis (Seine). Depôt Lapidaire de l'Abbaye

  (a) Fountain from the cloisters of the abbey, circa 1200.

  The basin is decorated with the heads of Roman gods, each one has the name inscribed above it.

  (b) Head of Silvanus in the form of a leaf mask.

  24. (a) Chartres (Eure-et-Loir). Cathedral

  Three foliate heads above the portal of the south transept. 13th century.

  The head in the centre is in the form of a Tête de Feuilles;, the heads of either side are Masques Feuillus: the one on the right has sprays of oak coming out of the mouth, the one on the left has vines.

  (b) Reims (Marne). Cathedral

  Inner west wall. 13th century.

  Two leaf masks, very similar to one example of the Tôte de Feuilles illustrated by Villard de Honnecourt, 1235.

  25. (a) Poitiers (Vienne). Cathedral

  Misericord carving. 13th century

  (b) Semur-en-Auxois. (Côte d'Or). Notre-Dame Corbel. 13th century.

  26. (a) Poitiers (Vienne). Cathedral

  Leaf mask filling a spandrel in the choir screen. 13th century.

  (b) Aubazine (Corrèze). Abbey

  Leaf mask on the tomb of Saint-Etienne, d'Aubazine 1154. 13th century.

  The Abbey at Aubazine was built by the Cistercians in the 12th century.

  27. Auxerre (Yonne). Cathedral

  Tête de Feuilles. A head of fluttering leaves. 13th century.

  28. Auxerre (Yonne). Cathedral

  Tête de Feuilles above abacus of capital with vine leaves and grapes. 13th century.

  29. (a) Auxerre (Yonne). Cathedral

  Crowned head with foliate moustache. 13th century.

  (b) Montier-en-Der (Haute Marne). Notre Dame Roof boss. 13th century.

  Tête de Feuilles, with some foliage coming from the mouth. (Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg. No. LA 1372/25.)

  (c) Montier-en-Der (Haute Marne). Notre Dame Roof boss. 13th century.

  Tête de Feuilles, with foliage coming from the nose and developing from the lips at each side of the mouth. (Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg. No. LA 1372/28.)

  30. (a) Troyes (Aube). Saint-Urbain

  Lintel over portal. 13th century.

  Leaf demon with horns. A Masque Feuillu. The sprays of leaves coming from the mouth extend to fill the lower and right hand border.

  (b) Semur-en-Auxois (Côte d'Or). Notre Dame Masques Feuillus with vines. 13th century.

  31. (a) Paris. Musée des Monuments Français Tête de Feuilles on the base of the lid of the tomb of Louis de France. 2nd half of 13th century.

  (b) Paris. Musée des Monuments Français Tête de Feuilles on the tomb of Louis de France. It is interesting that each of these small heads, one on each corner of the base of the lid, is treated individually.

  (c) Paris. Musée de Cluny

 

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