Graffiti or homage? Hi-tech imaging sheds light on Holy Sepulchre wall crosses

Author: Agencies

Crosses etched in mysterious abundance across the walls of Christianity’s most sacred church were long assumed to be graffiti, but they may be the work of mediaeval masons paid to carve them by pilgrims, research suggests.

Revered in Christian tradition as the site of Jesus’s crucifixion and burial, Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre usually bustles with worshippers and clergy. That has made study of the sacred markings difficult.

But renovations in 2018 at one of its chapels featuring thousands of the close-bunched and hand-engraved crosses gave Israel’s Antiquities Authority and Hadassah Academic College Jerusalem an opportunity for research.

In coordination with the Armenian Orthodox Church, which controls the chapel, the scholars used digital cameras and three-dimensional imaging to map out, compare and date the crosses.

“This unique phenomenon always baffled us: Is it graffiti of the pilgrims, or rather, something else?…,” said Amit Re’em, Jerusalem regional archaeologist for the Authority.

“We saw that all of them (crosses) have the same depth and even the marking of the mason,” he said, provisionally dating them to the 15th century.

“Maybe two or three hand artists made these crosses,” Re’em said. “…So it’s not graffiti, it’s something more organised.”

He suggested an intercessionary purpose.

“Let’s say that you are an Armenian pilgrim, so you pay something to the priest, you pay something to this special artist and he carved for you, for the benefit of your soul and your relatives’ souls, …a special cross in the most sacred place for Christianity on earth,” Re’em said.

Father Samuel Aghoyan, the Armenian superior at the Holy Sepulchre, saw benefits to the church from the research, especially as it struggles to emerge from COVID-19 lockdowns? ?and prepares for Easter.

“Now there are no pilgrims here, (but) still their spirit is here, we know, I believe in that,” he said.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • Op-Ed

US Sanctions – Gone Are The Days

Nations and international organisations have traditionally used sanctions as a pillar of their diplomatic strategies…

26 mins ago
  • Pakistan

CEO of PIA Extends Gratitude on International Labor Day

On May 1st, on the occasion of International Labor Day, a heartfelt message was issued…

6 hours ago
  • Business

Gold price per tola falls Rs2,000

Gold prices extended their decline in Pakistan for the third straight session on Tuesday, in…

7 hours ago
  • Business

Rupee gains 8 paisas against US dollar

The Rupee on Tuesday gained 08 paisa against the US dollar in the interbank trading…

7 hours ago
  • Business

Pakistan earns $614m by exporting transport services in 8 months

Pakistan earned US $614.947 million by providing different transport services in various countries during the…

7 hours ago
  • Business

HBL to inject up to Rs6bn equity in its microfinance bank

The Board of Directors of Habib Bank Limited, one of the country’s largest commercial banks,…

7 hours ago