Every Christmas that I can remember I have had the same creche. It was bought by my parents when I was a baby, assembled from inexpensive figures available at Woolworth's. The figures are made of plaster, formed in molds, then dried and painted.
When I was very small I used to play with them, in much the same way as I played with my dolls. But, they had a more powerful aura than my dolls did. For one thing, they only appeared for a fairly short time each year and, for another, I knew that they represented something very special, especially the Baby, Mary, Joseph and the angels. I wasn't too certain about the specialness of the shepherds and kings, so today I find those figures to be pretty beat up, while the figures of the Holy Family and the angels are almost pristine. Indeed, the kings were so badly beaten up that a few years ago I scoured Ebay till I found the correct replacements. And, to my immense surprise a number of the replacements still had the original stamping on the bottom. That's how I discovered that this simple set of figures were made in Italy shortly after World War II. Who knew!
So far, so good. However, nowhere in the New Testament descriptions of the birth of Jesus is there a single mention of these two animals (or any others, for that matter). So, where and when did they enter the story, at least visually? In order to find out, I have embarked on a quest of sorts, searching for the earliest images of the manger scene.
Thus I can tell you that the ox and ass have appeared in every Nativity scene I have examined, going back to the fourth century! That is the time during which Christians felt free enough to make public art, no longer confining it to the household or to the veiled symbolism so frequent in the funerary art found in the catacombs.
Fragment of a Sarcophagus Frontal with Scenes from the Nativity Roman, c. 330-360 Vatican, Museo Pio-Cristiano |
Nativity Scene from a Fragment of Sarcophagus Frontal Unknown Provenance, 4th Century Vatican, Pio-Cristiano Museum |
Nativity Scene from a Fragment of Sarcophagus Frontal Unknown Provenance, 4th Century Vatican, Pio-Cristiano Museum |
Nativity from a Sarcophagus Frontal Byzantine, Late 4th or Early 5th Century Athens, Byzantine and Christian Museum |
Nativity from the So-Called "Sarcophagus of Stilicho" Roman, 4th Century Milan, Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio |
Nativity Byzantine, 7th-9th Century Sinai, Monastery of Saint Catherine |
Nativity From The Gospels of Chartres French, c. 850-900 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Latin 9386, fol. 64 |
Ivory Plaque of the Nativity Byzantine (Constantinople), 10th Century Baltimore, Walters Art Museum |
Nativity From the Book of Pericopes of Henry II German (Reichenau), c. 1007-1012 Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek MS Clm 4452, fol. 22 |
Nativity From the St. Alban's Psalter or Psalter of Christina of Markyate English (St. Alban's Abbey), First half of the 12th Century Hildesheim, Dombibliothek |
Nativity From a Psalter (Single Leaf) detail English (Canterbury), c. 1155-1160 New York, Pierpont Morgan Library MS M 724, fol. 1v |
Nativity From a Book of Hours French (Paris), c. 1225-1250 New York, Pierpont Morgan Library MS M 92, fol. 3v |
Nativity From the Carrow Psalter-Hours English (East Anglia), c. 1250 Baltimore, Walters Art Museum MS W.34, fol. 32r |
Nativity From the Livre d’images de Madame Marie Flemish (Hainaut), c. 1275-1300 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Nouvelle acquisition francaise 16251, fol. 21r |
Duccio di Buoninsegna, Nativity with Prophets Isaiah and Ezekiel Italian, c. 1308-1311 Washington, National Gallery of Art |
Lorenzo Monaco, Nativity Italian, c. 1406-1410 New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Robert Lehman Collection |
Domenico Ghirlandaio, Nativity Italian, 1492 Cambridge (UK). Fitzwilliam Museum |
Geertgen tot Sint Jans, Nativity at Night Dutch, c. 1490 London, National Gallery |
Jacopo Bassano, Adoration of Shepherds Italina, 1544-1545 Windsor, Royal Collection |
Federico Barocci, Nativity Italian, 1597 Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado |
Guido Reni, Adoration of Shepherds Italian, c.1640 London, National Gallery |
James Tissot, Adoration of the Shepherds French, 1886-1894 New York, Brooklyn Museum |
So, it appears that these humble domestic animals have been part of the Christmas story from the very beginning of Christian iconography. This seems entirely appropriate as we remember that the Lord of Space and Time chose to enter human time as a baby born in a borrowed stable and put to bed in a feeding trough usually used by cows and donkeys.
Wishing to every reader the blessings of the Birth of Christ I will say Merry Christmas!
© M. Duffy, 2017
Thank you for this wonderful post. Greeting from the Netherlands.
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