Icons
Επιτομή
The icon may well be one of the most important legacies of Byzantium. Icons were pervasive in Byzantine society and the most characteristic products of the Orthodox Church. The funeral portraits known as Fayyum, named after the homonymous oasis in Egypt where they were found, are considered the forerunners of icons, but they were not the only antecedents of icons. In the third century, the Romans were already producing painted panels in the form of tondos, diptychs, and triptychs. The Letter of the Three Patriarchs to the Emperor Theophilos, a text believed to have been written during iconoclasm, lists twelve miraculous icons not made by human hands (acheiropoietai). One such miraculous icon is that of the Virgin Hodegetria, the most renowned and venerated painted panel ever produced in Byzantium. The richest collections of Byzantine icons can be found in the monastery of St Catherine's at Sinai and in the monasteries of Mt Athos. © Oxford University Press 2008. All rights reserved.