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Section dedicated to the mosaics related to the stories of the Virgin Mary |
| The theme of Mary is announced in the church's exterior decoration. On the
south façade towards the pier, between the crowning arches, the mosaic of
the Virgin Praying has been an object of great popular worship, with two
lamps lit by night, ever since a merchant who survived shipwreck while sailing
from Chioggia to Venice expressed his acknowledgement of the Virgin whom
he had invoked. Since then she has been considered protector of the waters.
The Virgin however is mainly linked to the founding of Venice, which is said to date to Annunciation Day, 25th March 421. The external portraits are preparatory to seeing the interior where the image of the Virgin is found in a very great number of reliefs, bas-reliefs and statues. There are also two chapels dedicated to her, the Mascoli, with a splendid marble group on the altar and the vault mosaics, and the Nikopeia, the one most venerated by Venetians. The Virgin's life is appropriately celebrated in two mosaic cycles in
two symmetrical orders with a range that is unequalled in West or East:
on the west sides of the right and left transept. The mosaics are more
or less faithfully based on the apocryphal gospel of James and the Pseudo-Matthew.
Here are depicted the Stories of Mary from the announcement of her birth
to her death.
Again, in the centre of the narthex above the main door, the Virgin and
Child with the Apostles and Evangelists, invites all Christians to cross
the threshold of the holy building.
Setting the events of the Virgin's life in the transept up to her Dormitio in the narthex is not rare in a Byzantine context. The iconographic itinerary follows the scheme of the Byzantine liturgical year which began in September with the nativity of Mary (in the south transept) and ended in August with her death (in the narthex). |
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