Baptistery

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In Christian architecture the baptistery or baptistry (Old French baptisterie; Latin baptisterium; Greek βαπτιστήριον, 'bathing-place, baptistery', from βαπτίζειν, baptízein, 'to baptize') is the separate centrally planned structure surrounding the baptismal font. The baptistery may be incorporated within the body of a church or cathedral, and provided with an altar as a chapel. In the early Church, the catechumens were instructed and the sacrament of baptism was administered in the baptistery.

Pisa Baptistry, begun 1152, completed 1363

Design

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The Lateran Baptistery, Rome, 440

The sacramental importance and sometimes architectural splendour of the baptistery reflect the historical importance of baptism to Christians. Beginning in the fourth century, baptisteries in Italy were often designed with an octagonal plan.[1] The octagonal plan of the Lateran Baptistery, the first structure expressly built as a baptistery, provided a widely followed model. The baptistery might be twelve-sided, or even circular as at Pisa.[2]

In a narthex or anteroom, the catechumens were instructed and made their confession of faith before baptism. The main interior space centered upon the baptismal font (piscina), in which those to be baptized were thrice immersed. Three steps led down to the floor of the font, and over it might be suspended a gold or silver dove. The iconography of frescos or mosaics on the walls were commonly of the scenes in the life of Saint John the Baptist. The font was at first always of stone, but latterly metals were often used.

The Lateran baptistery's font was fed by a natural spring. When the site had been the palatial dwelling of the Laterani, before Constantine presented it to Bishop Miltiades, the spring formed the water source for the numerous occupants of the domus. As the requirements for Christian baptisteries expanded, Christianization of sacred pagan springs presented natural opportunities. Cassiodorus, in a letter written in AD 527, described a fair held at a former pagan shrine of Leucothea, in the still culturally Greek region of southern Italy. This shrine had been Christianized by converting it to a baptistery (Variae 8.33). There are also examples of the transition from miraculous springs to baptisteries from Gregory of Tours (died c. 594) and Maximus, bishop of Turin (died c. 466).[3]

History

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Baptistery in the Basilica of St. John in Ephesus, Turkey

Baptisteries belong to a period of the church when great numbers of adult catechumens were baptized and immersion was the rule. They did not seem to be common before the emperors Gratian, Valentinian, and Theodosius made Christianity the state religion in the Edict of Thessalonica (i.e. before the 4th century). As early as the 6th century, the baptismal font was commonly built in the porch of the church, before it was moved into the church itself. After the 9th century, with infant baptism increasingly the rule, few baptisteries were built. Some of the older baptisteries were so large that there are accounts of councils and synods being held in them. They had to be large because a bishop in the early church would customarily baptize all the catechumens in his diocese and the rite was performed only three times a year, on certain holy days. Baptisteries were thus attached to the cathedral and not to the parish churches. In the Italian countryside a pieve was a church with a baptistery on which other churches without baptisteries depended.

During the months when no baptisms occurred, the baptistery doors were sealed with the bishop's seal, a method of controlling the orthodoxy of all baptism in the diocese. Some baptisteries were divided into two parts to separate the sexes;[4] or sometimes the church had two baptisteries, one for each sex. A fireplace was often provided to warm the neophytes after immersion.

 
The 5th century baptistery of Albenga

Though baptisteries were forbidden to be used as burial-places by the Council of Auxerre (578), they were sometimes used as such. The Florentine Antipope John XXIII (d. 1419) was buried in the Florence Baptistery, facing Florence Cathedral, with great ceremony, and a large and sculpturally important tomb by Donatello and his partner. Many of the early archbishops of Canterbury in England were buried in the baptistery at Canterbury.

According to the records of early church councils, baptisteries were first built and used to correct what were considered the evils arising from the practice of private baptism. As soon as Christianity had expanded so that baptism became the rule, and as immersion of adults gave place to sprinkling of infants, the ancient baptisteries were no longer necessary. They are still in general use, however, in Florence and Pisa.

 
Baptistry, Church of the Good Shepherd (Rosemont, Pennsylvania)

The Lateran Baptistery must be the earliest ecclesiastical building still in use. A large part of it remains as built by Constantine. The central area, with the basin of the font, is an octagon around which stand eight porphyry columns, with marble capitals and entablature of classical form. Outside these are an ambulatory and outer walls forming a larger octagon. Attached to one side, toward the Lateran basilica, is a porch with two noble porphyry columns and richly carved capitals, bases and entablatures.

The circular church of Santa Costanza, also of the 4th century, served as a baptistery and contained the tomb of the daughter of Constantine. This is a remarkably perfect structure with a central dome, columns, and mosaics of classical fashion. Two side niches contain the earliest known mosaics of distinctively Christian subjects. In one is represented Moses receiving the Old Law, in the other Christ delivers to Saint Peter the New Law charter, sealed with the XP monogram.[5]

The earliest surviving structure that was used as a baptistery is the tomb-like baptistery at Dura-Europas.[6] Another baptistery of the earliest times has been excavated at Aquileia. Ruins of baptisteries have also been found at Salona and in Crete.[7] At Ravenna are two noted baptisteries, decorated with fine mosaics. One was built in the mid-5th century, and the other in the 6th. A large baptistery decorated with mosaics was built in the 6th century at Naples.[5]

In the East, the metropolitan baptistery at Constantinople still stands at the side of the former patriarchal Church of Holy Wisdom. Many others, in Syria for example, were found in late 19th and early 20th-century archaeological research, as were some belonging to churches of North Africa. In France the most famous early baptistery is Baptistère Saint-Jean at Poitiers. Other early examples exist at Riez, Fréjus and Aix-en-Provence. In England, a detached baptistery is known to have been associated with Canterbury Cathedral.[5]

Revival in medieval Italy

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Florence Baptistery, built between 1059 and 1128

In most of Europe the early Christian practice of having a distinct baptistery building, useful when large numbers of adult catechumens were being instructed and then baptised in groups by immersion, had lapsed by the Late Middle Ages, when baptisms were normally of infants, and used sprinkling with holy water rather than immersion. Instead, smaller fonts were placed inside the church. But in north Italy separate baptisteries revived, probably largely as an expression of civic pride, placed beside the cathedral, and often with a separate campanile or bell-tower.[8]

Among the more spectacular Romanesque and Gothic examples, the Florence Baptistery was built between 1059 and 1128, the Pisa Baptistery begun 1152 (replacing an older one) and completed in 1363, the Parma Baptistery was begun in 1196, Pistoia in 1303; all these have octagonal exteriors.[9] The Siena Baptistery was begun in 1316, then left incomplete some decades later.[10]

Famous baptisteries

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Famous Italian baptisteries include:

 
The Merovingian Baptistère Saint-Jean, Poitiers

Famous French baptisteries include:

 
Baptistery in Žiča Monastery near Kraljevo, Serbia

Byzantine baptisteries of the Holy Land: Emmaus Nicopolis

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Jensen, Robin M. (2012-06-01). Baptismal Imagery in Early Christianity: Ritual, Visual, and Theological Dimensions. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic. p. 208. ISBN 978-1-4412-3627-2.
  2. ^ Brandt, Olof (2006). "The Lateran Baptistery and the diffusion of octagonal baptisteries from Rome to Constantinople". In Reinhardt Harreither (ed.). Frühes Christentum zwischen Rom und Konstantinopel: Acta Congressus Internationalis XIV Archaeologiae Christianae, Vindobonae 19.-26. 9. 1999. Studi di antichità cristiana 62, Archäologische Forschungen. Vatican City: Pontificio Istituto di Archeologia Cristiana. pp. 221–227. ISBN 9788885991422.
  3. ^ Barnish, S.J.B. (2001). "Religio in stagno: Divinity, and the Christianization of the Countryside in Late Antique Italy". Journal of Early Christian Studies. 9 (3): 387–402. doi:10.1353/earl.2001.0037. ISSN 1086-3184. S2CID 171024168.
  4. ^ Augusti; Coleman, Lyman (1842). The Antiquities of the Christian Church. Translated and compiled from the works of Augusti with numerous additions from Rheinwald, Siegel and others, by Rev. Lyman Coleman. Mainly an abridgement of Augusti's "Handbuch der christlichen Archäologie.". T. Ward & Company. p. 86.
  5. ^ a b c   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainLethaby, W. R. (1911). "Baptistery". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 370.
  6. ^ "Ante pacem : archaeological evidence of church life before Constantine / Graydon F. Snyder". catalog.library.vanderbilt.edu. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  7. ^ Mailis, Athanassios (2006). "The early byzantine baptisteries of Crete". Antiquité Tardive. 14: 291–309. doi:10.1484/J.AT.2.302435.
  8. ^ Osborne, 104–105; White, 59; Honour & Fleming, 279–280
  9. ^ White, 250
  10. ^ White, 234, 236–240
  11. ^ "Baptistère Saint-Jean - Poitiers". Tourisme Vienne. Archived from the original on 28 July 2020. Retrieved 25 May 2016.

References

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  • Hugh Honour and John Fleming, A World History of Art, 1st edn. 1982 (many later editions), Macmillan, London, page refs to 1984 Macmillan 1st edn. paperback. ISBN 0333371852
  • Osborne, Harold (ed), The Oxford Companion to Art, 1970, OUP, ISBN 019866107X
  • White, John. Art and Architecture in Italy, 1250 to 1400, London, Penguin Books, 1966, 3rd edn 1993 (now Yale History of Art series). ISBN 0300055854
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