Language:
English
Year of publication:
2020
Titel der Quelle:
AJS Review
Angaben zur Quelle:
44,2 (2020) 269-285
Keywords:
Mahzor Worms
;
Christianity and antisemitism History To 1500
;
Jewish art and symbolism History
;
Mahzorim Illustrations
;
Hunting
Abstract:
Hunting scenes are common in Jewish illuminated manuscripts and are understood as allegories of the Jew, usually represented as a hare or a deer, being persecuted by the Christian, shown as a hunter and his dogs. This article will discuss a hunt scene from the Worms Maḥzor, an Ashkenazic illuminated prayer book produced in 1272, probably in Würzburg. At the top of folio 130r, an illumination of the piyyut (liturgical poem) “ʾAyelet ʾahavim” (the loving hind, or doe) for Shavuot displays a deer being hunted by a devilish hunter and his dogs. Examining the illustration in the context of contemporary textual evidence, I shall demonstrate that the deer in the Worms Maḥzor portrays the Torah itself being persecuted by the hunter, who can be understood not only as a Christian or Esau, but also as Jesus.
DOI:
10.1017/S0364009420000057
URL:
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