Abundance of Job's flocks (Job 1:3)

Unknown (Byzantine)


Item type:
miniature
Date of creation:
11th century
Technique / Medium:
parchment

Additional titles

Αφθονία των κοπαδιών του Ιώβ (Ιώβ, 1:3)
Eyüp'ün sürülerinin bolluğu (Eyüp 1:3)

    Item location

  • Monē tēs Hagias Aikaterinēs (Mūsá, Jabal) (St. Catherine’s Monastery Mount Sinai | دير سانت كاترين )
    [Museum inv. no.: Sinai Gr. 3, fol. 8r]Microfilm copy: © Library of Congress of the United States of America

Description

The miniature illustrates the abundance of Job's flocks. Two male figures are depicted. The one on the left is playing a double aulos and the one on the right a syrinx.

People as subjects

Job (Biblical figure)

Iconclass

71W1
Job's wealth and piety (Job 1:1-5)

Instruments [MIMO Code] (notes)

Double aulos
Syrinx [4084]

Image URLs

image link 1
Europeana exhibition: Echos of an Empire--Byzantine Musical Instruments through the Ages
image link 2
Item entry in Koç University GABAM Byzantine Musical Instruments Collection

RIdIM record id

7108

Data provider


Koç University – Stavros Niarchos Foundation Center for Late Antique and Byzantine Studies (GABAM) and The Friends of Music Society in Athens launched the Byzantine Musical Instruments Project in 2018 with Dr. Antonios Botonakis, under the scientific supervision of Prof. Nikos Maliaras. In 2020, the results of the research were integrated with Koç University Suna Kıraç Library’s website to present an online database with various filters to help researchers make in-depth research.
The main objective of the project was to thoroughly document the depictions of Byzantine musical instruments. During the research, a great number of visual representations on artefacts from the wider geographic area of the Byzantine Empire were studied. In the database more than 400 visual representations of musical instruments spread across 136 different cultural institutions in 27 countries around the world are presented to researchers.
In order to encompass the rich variety of the instruments used in the Byzantine times, some recurring visuals have been eliminated from the database to make room for unique visuals. Since the research was conducted by a Post-Doctorate researcher who is a musicologist, the database demonstrating the iconography also provides a unique classification of instruments. This project is a natural partner for the RIdIM database of performing arts images from all cultures and eras.
Project Direction- Engin Akyürek | Scientific Supervision- Nikos Maliaras | Scientific Research- Antonios K. Botonakis | Content Editor & Turkish Translation- Merve Özkılıç | Project Coordination- Barış Altan, Alexandros Charkiolakis | Digital Collection Technical Support- Senem Acar (Digital collection archivist), George Boumpous, Vera Kriezi, Sina Mater (Web design) | Funded by: Koç University – Stavros Niarchos Foundation Center for Late Antique and Byzantine Studies (GABAM)