Difference between revisions of "Despoiling Egypt in Art/0/en"

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(Original Author: Neima Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky)
(Original Author: Neima Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky)
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<div class="overview">
 
<div class="overview">
 
<h2>Introduction</h2>
 
<h2>Introduction</h2>
<p>The two images shown here depict the Biblical episode of despoiling the Egyptians mentioned in Shemot 3:22, 11:2 and 12:35–36 – see <a href="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt" data-aht="page">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</a>.  Both are from 14th century Catalonian illuminated Haggadot, one known as the Golden Haggadah<fn>This Haggadah is in the British Museum, and many of its folios can be viewed <a href="http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?MSID=19108&amp;CollID=27&amp;NStart=27210" rel="external">online</a>.  It received its name due to the extravagant use of gold-leaf in its pages of miniatures.  Its <a href="MoreArtwork" data-aht="subpage">Sister Haggadah</a> (the name was coined by Bezalel Narkiss because of its similarity to the Golden Haggadah) is also located in the British Museum and pages from it can be accessed <a href="http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?MSID=19290&amp;CollID=96&amp;NStart=2884" rel="external">online</a>.</fn> and the other as the Brother Haggadah.<fn>This Haggadah is also in the British Museum, and many of its folios can be viewed <a href= "http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?MSID=19258&amp;CollID=96&amp;NStart=1404" rel="external">online</a>.  It was so named by Bezalel Narkiss due to its similarity in both iconography and style to the <a href="MoreArtwork" data-aht="subpage">Rylands Haggadah</a> (viewable online <a href="http://enriqueta.man.ac.uk/luna/servlet/view/search;jsessionid=1D0CE28E87438574844645CC2AF8DA9C?QuickSearchA=QuickSearchA&amp;q=haggadah&amp;sort=Reference_Number%2CPage%2CCurrent_Repository&amp;search=Search" rel="external">here</a>).</fn>  Neither artist's identity is known, and it is also uncertain whether they were Jewish or Christian.<fn>In both Haggadot there are many allusions to Midrashic motifs, but see below that the depiction of the despoiling of Egypt in the Golden Haggadah (as well as in its Sister Haggadah) does not cast the Jews in a favorable light.  It should be noted that in the Brother Haggadah (and similarly in the Rylands Haggadah) Hebrew Biblical verses are contained within the artwork itself.</fn>  In both paintings, the despoiling is depicted in the bottom half of a dual-pane image, with the top half of the panel portraying one of the plagues.  The juxtaposition suggests a connection between the two scenes.  The artists, though, differ in their choice of plague and hence in their interpretation of the entire episode, reading the nature, timing, and motivation of the transfer of wealth in very different ways.</p>
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<p>The two images shown here depict the Biblical episode of despoiling the Egyptians mentioned in Shemot 3:22, 11:2 and 12:35–36 – see <a href="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt" data-aht="page">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</a>.  Both are from 14th century Catalonian illuminated Haggadot, one known as the Golden Haggadah<fn>This Haggadah is in the British Museum, and many of its folios can be viewed <a href="http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?MSID=19108&amp;CollID=27&amp;NStart=27210">online</a>.  It received its name due to the extravagant use of gold-leaf in its pages of miniatures.  Its <a href="MoreArtwork" data-aht="subpage">Sister Haggadah</a> (the name was coined by Bezalel Narkiss because of its similarity to the Golden Haggadah) is also located in the British Museum and pages from it can be accessed <a href="http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?MSID=19290&amp;CollID=96&amp;NStart=2884">online</a>.</fn> and the other as the Brother Haggadah.<fn>This Haggadah is also in the British Museum, and many of its folios can be viewed <a href= "http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?MSID=19258&amp;CollID=96&amp;NStart=1404">online</a>.  It was so named by Bezalel Narkiss due to its similarity in both iconography and style to the <a href="MoreArtwork" data-aht="subpage">Rylands Haggadah</a> (viewable online <a href="http://enriqueta.man.ac.uk/luna/servlet/view/search;jsessionid=1D0CE28E87438574844645CC2AF8DA9C?QuickSearchA=QuickSearchA&amp;q=haggadah&amp;sort=Reference_Number%2CPage%2CCurrent_Repository&amp;search=Search">here</a>).</fn>  Neither artist's identity is known, and it is also uncertain whether they were Jewish or Christian.<fn>In both Haggadot there are many allusions to Midrashic motifs, but see below that the depiction of the despoiling of Egypt in the Golden Haggadah (as well as in its Sister Haggadah) does not cast the Jews in a favorable light.  It should be noted that in the Brother Haggadah (and similarly in the Rylands Haggadah) Hebrew Biblical verses are contained within the artwork itself.</fn>  In both paintings, the despoiling is depicted in the bottom half of a dual-pane image, with the top half of the panel portraying one of the plagues.  The juxtaposition suggests a connection between the two scenes.  The artists, though, differ in their choice of plague and hence in their interpretation of the entire episode, reading the nature, timing, and motivation of the transfer of wealth in very different ways.</p>
 
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<subcategory name="Identity of the Objects">Identity of the Objects
 
<subcategory name="Identity of the Objects">Identity of the Objects
<p>B. Narkiss<fn>See The Golden Haggadah, (Rohnert Park, California, 1997): 46.</fn> identifies the looted objects depicted in the Golden Haggadah as Christian liturgical vessels, a chalice and a ciborium.<fn>A ciborium is a covered container used for storing the Eucharistic hosts, i.e. the equivalent for bread of the chalice for wine.  Cf. the 1st century Roman historian Pompeius Trogus (the original work is not extant but is summarized in Justin's Epitome – see 36:2) who writes that Moshe "carried off by stealth the sacred utensils of the Egyptians."</fn>  This choice relates to an unknown in the Shemot narrative.  What exactly were the "gold and silver vessels" and for what purpose were they given?  Were they ritual objects loaned to the Israelites for their three day holiday to worship Hashem<fn>See <a href="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt" data-aht="page">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</a> for Rashbam Shemot 3:22 who proposes that the Egyptians gave gifts of jewelry and clothing so the nation would have what to wear when they sacrificed.</fn> or even the golden and silver Egyptian idols themselves?<fn>Cf. the Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Bo 13 which interprets the despoiling as the Egyptian idols first melting down and then being taken.  See <a href="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt" data-aht="page">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</a>.</fn>  Or, were they perhaps simply cooking and eating utensils loaned for the journey,<fn>As per Artapanus and R. Yosef Bekhor Shor – see <a href="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt" data-aht="page">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</a>.  Cf. Veronese, in his <a href="http://www.gci.org/files/images/b2/_0303160501_018.jpg" rel="external">engraving</a>, who has the Israelites carrying more mundane articles, including pots and pans.</fn> or, alternatively, valuables given as reparations for years of unpaid wages?<fn>See Julie Harris, <a href="http://spertus.academia.edu/JulieHarris/Papers/1226156/Polemical_Images_in_the_Golden_Haggadah_BL_add_27210_" rel="external">"Polemical Images in the Golden Haggadah,"</a> Medieval Encounters, 8 (2002): 105–122, who suggests that by associating the vessels with contemporary Christian objects, the Golden Haggadah's artist is identifying his Christian neighbors with the oppressive Egyptians.  [She also notes that a folio later, the pursuing Egyptians are dressed as contemporary Spanish knights.]  According to her reconstruction, the Haggadah was created in a period when tensions between Jewish money lenders and their Christian borrowers were running high.  As trade was denied to the Jewish community and loans went unpaid, many Jews saw themselves as similar to their ancestors, looking to take back what was rightfully owed to them.</fn></p>
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<p>B. Narkiss<fn>See The Golden Haggadah, (Rohnert Park, California, 1997): 46.</fn> identifies the looted objects depicted in the Golden Haggadah as Christian liturgical vessels, a chalice and a ciborium.<fn>A ciborium is a covered container used for storing the Eucharistic hosts, i.e. the equivalent for bread of the chalice for wine.  Cf. the 1st century Roman historian Pompeius Trogus (the original work is not extant but is summarized in Justin's Epitome – see 36:2) who writes that Moshe "carried off by stealth the sacred utensils of the Egyptians."</fn>  This choice relates to an unknown in the Shemot narrative.  What exactly were the "gold and silver vessels" and for what purpose were they given?  Were they ritual objects loaned to the Israelites for their three day holiday to worship Hashem<fn>See <a href="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt" data-aht="page">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</a> for Rashbam Shemot 3:22 who proposes that the Egyptians gave gifts of jewelry and clothing so the nation would have what to wear when they sacrificed.</fn> or even the golden and silver Egyptian idols themselves?<fn>Cf. the Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Bo 13 which interprets the despoiling as the Egyptian idols first melting down and then being taken.  See <a href="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt" data-aht="page">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</a>.</fn>  Or, were they perhaps simply cooking and eating utensils loaned for the journey,<fn>As per Artapanus and R. Yosef Bekhor Shor – see <a href="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt" data-aht="page">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</a>.  Cf. Veronese, in his <a href="http://www.gci.org/files/images/b2/_0303160501_018.jpg">engraving</a>, who has the Israelites carrying more mundane articles, including pots and pans.</fn> or, alternatively, valuables given as reparations for years of unpaid wages?<fn>See Julie Harris, <a href="http://spertus.academia.edu/JulieHarris/Papers/1226156/Polemical_Images_in_the_Golden_Haggadah_BL_add_27210_">"Polemical Images in the Golden Haggadah,"</a> Medieval Encounters, 8 (2002): 105–122, who suggests that by associating the vessels with contemporary Christian objects, the Golden Haggadah's artist is identifying his Christian neighbors with the oppressive Egyptians.  [She also notes that a folio later, the pursuing Egyptians are dressed as contemporary Spanish knights.]  According to her reconstruction, the Haggadah was created in a period when tensions between Jewish money lenders and their Christian borrowers were running high.  As trade was denied to the Jewish community and loans went unpaid, many Jews saw themselves as similar to their ancestors, looking to take back what was rightfully owed to them.</fn></p>
 
</subcategory>
 
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Version as of 08:14, 20 January 2015

Despoiling Egypt in Art

PDF Version

Introduction

The two images shown here depict the Biblical episode of despoiling the Egyptians mentioned in Shemot 3:22, 11:2 and 12:35–36 – see Reparations and Despoiling Egypt. Both are from 14th century Catalonian illuminated Haggadot, one known as the Golden Haggadah1 and the other as the Brother Haggadah.2 Neither artist's identity is known, and it is also uncertain whether they were Jewish or Christian.3 In both paintings, the despoiling is depicted in the bottom half of a dual-pane image, with the top half of the panel portraying one of the plagues. The juxtaposition suggests a connection between the two scenes. The artists, though, differ in their choice of plague and hence in their interpretation of the entire episode, reading the nature, timing, and motivation of the transfer of wealth in very different ways.

Contrasting Images

The Golden Haggadah

The image is divided horizontally into two connected scenes. The top half focuses exclusively on the Egyptians as they grope in the dark during the Plague of Darkness. Paroh sits to the left, disoriented, supporting himself on the picture's panel. To his right, other Egyptians are depicted in a variety of poses, all equally helpless. The bottom half of the image turns to the actions of the Israelites during the same time period as they loot precious possessions from their unknowing neighbors. One carries away an entire box while two others reach to take golden chalices. A fourth figure looks on as he grasps his own treasure to his chest.4

The Brother Haggadah

Here, too, the picture is divided into two halves, but with the top half depicting the Plague of the Firstborns rather than the Plague of Darkness. On the right, two figures (presumably Moshe and Aharon) are pointing, perhaps warning of the plague to come. In the middle, a distraught Paroh speaks to his courtiers, a dead body in a dungeon visible underneath them.5 The left side of the image is lined with corpses, the upper four are human and the fifth is that of an animal. The bottom pane moves to the next episode in the Biblical text, the transfer of the articles of gold, silver and clothing.6

Relationship to the Biblical Text

The artists' choices reflect certain ambiguities in the Biblical text and different possible interpretive stances:

Timing of the Episode

The Golden Haggadah sets our scene during the Plague of Darkness,7 while the Brother Haggadah8 places it after the final Plague of the Firstborns. In the Biblical account, the timing of the story is ambiguous, as the episode is spoken of both in Shemot 11 after the Plague of Darkness and again in Shemot 12 immediately prior to the Exodus – see Reparations and Despoiling Egypt for the dispute among the commentators.

Despoliation, Loans, or Gifts?

The Golden Haggadah uniquely9 portrays the Israelites as exploiting their masters' helplessness during the Plague of Darkness and stealing from the Egyptians. The Golden Haggadah thus completely inverts the Midrashic theme which highlights the Israelites' honesty in not looting the Egyptians' homes during the Plague of Darkness.10 In contrast, the Brother Haggadah depicts a knowing exchange, where it appears that the articles are being given very willingly.

The respective captions capture the difference between the Haggadot's understandings of the episode. The Golden Haggadah selects the words "וַיְנַצְּלוּ אֶת מִצְרָיִם" even though this does not match its chronological ordering of the events,11 because these words are the most apt description of its perspective. However, the Brother Haggadah instead opts for the more positive account of "וַה' נָתַן אֶת חֵן הָעָם בְּעֵינֵי מִצְרַיִם"‎.12 This, of course, raises the question of both the meaning of and relationship between these two phrases in the Biblical text itself. Did the nation deceive the Egyptians or was this a friendly transaction? Why were the Egyptians willing to give of their possessions anyway? Was this related to the deaths of firstborns and a desire to hasten the Israelite departure? For an in depth analysis, see Reparations and Despoiling Egypt.

Identity of the Objects

B. Narkiss13 identifies the looted objects depicted in the Golden Haggadah as Christian liturgical vessels, a chalice and a ciborium.14 This choice relates to an unknown in the Shemot narrative. What exactly were the "gold and silver vessels" and for what purpose were they given? Were they ritual objects loaned to the Israelites for their three day holiday to worship Hashem15 or even the golden and silver Egyptian idols themselves?16 Or, were they perhaps simply cooking and eating utensils loaned for the journey,17 or, alternatively, valuables given as reparations for years of unpaid wages?18

"וּבְכָל אֱלֹהֵי מִצְרַיִם אֶעֱשֶׂה שְׁפָטִים"

Interestingly, an allusion to this idea may perhaps be found in both Haggadot. The portrayal of the looted vessels as liturgical objects in the Golden Haggadah may relate to the notion that through the Exodus, Hashem emerged as the victor in His battle with the powerless Egyptian gods. In the Brother Haggadah, this idea is perhaps embodied in the dead animal which appears under the column of human corpses. This is perhaps meant to represent the death of the Egyptian consecrated animals which they worshipped as gods.19