#29393
    brads
    Participant
    @brads

    hi everone!… i got this tatoo on my back around 10 yrs ago… its a cross with a dragon wrapped round and the artist(who i since lost all touch with) said it was croatian in origin but thats about all… im really eager to know more about this designs origins and symbolism…. can anybody help? im thinking of having more work done to my back in the near future and would like to expand on this style of imagery… any info on where this design comes from and what it represents would be great…thanks!

    #61701
    KnightHawk
    Participant
    @knighthawk

    Google failed me…or more likely, since Google is God and all, I failed to clearly ask for what I wanted.

    One thing I did notice though is that the cross bar is so far down that that bad boy looks like an inverted cross, which is Satanic imagery. Hell, Dragons, due to his mention in Revelations in paving the way for the antichrist, are only third in line down the Satanic imagery list, right behind inverted crosses and demons with renaissance icon halos.

    Basically, you’re a devil worshiper!

    Diabolus est meus pelagus vir dude vir!

    Love. Peace. Metallica.

    #61708
    Chance666
    Participant
    @chance666

    Brads,

    This is what I could find, I hope this helps!

    P.S. I really like your work would love to see more!!!

    A part of the altar partition with the name of prince Muncimir
    from Uzdolje near Knin

    one.gif

    A stone beam and a triangular gable that used to belong to the upper part of an altar partition.

    The triangular gable was reconstructed and put together out of several stone elements. Along the outer edge, the decoration on the front gable furtherly consists of three-branched arches crossing each other, and of tallied bands in the form of a rope bordering the central field holding a cross filled with three-branched hurdle and two stylized birds on the sides, with clusters in their beaks. All the remaining free space is filled with rosettes and little flowers.

    There is an inscription running by the lower edge of the beam and the gable reading as follows:

    OCTIGENT(orum) (non) AGINTA ET Q(ui)N Q(ue) (a)NNORUM D(omi)NI FERE T(…?) DENI(…?) (h)IC BENE CO(m)P(o)S(u)IT OPUS PRINCEPS NA(m)Q(ue) MUNCYMIR

    Which may be translated as:

    In the year of Our Lord eight hundred ninety five … Prince Muncimir (had) this piece made.

    The monument is of extreme importance for Croatian history. Apart from Prince Muncimir’s name, it also mentions the year of his ruling: 895. Prince Muncimir, who ruled at the end of the 9th and beg. of the 10th c., probably had a residence in Uzdolje, including St. John’s Church that he had redecorated as his own pious endowment, and equipped with pre-Romanesque liturgical movables, one among them being also this outstanding monument.

    :::::::::::::::::::::

    Prince Viseslav’s baptismal font

    two.gif

    three.jpg

    Prince Viseslav’s baptismal font is an extremely significant monument because it brings testimony of the time when Croats adopted Christianity.

    The front side of the hexagonal font made of a single piece of marble holds a cross filled with three-branched hurdle. The end of each side has a tallied little column with a capital appearing to support the upper part consisting of a row of plastic astragals and an edging with the following inscription carved in:

    HEC FONS NEMPE SUMIT INFIRMOS, UT REDDAT ILLUMINATOS, HIC EXPIANT SCELERA SUA, QUOD DE PRIMO SUMPSERUNT PARENTE, EFFICIANTUR CHRISTICOLE SALUBRITER COFITENDO TRINUM PERENNE. HOC IOANNES PRESBITER SUB TEMPORE VUISSASCLAVO DUCI OPUS BENE COMPOSUIT DEVOTE, IN HONORE VIDELICET SANCTI IOANNIS BAPTISTE, UT INTERCEDAT PRO EO CLIENTULOQUE SUO.

    The inscription may be translated as:

    This font, namely, takes the weak and enlightens them. Here, they wash their sins away, received from their first parent, to become Christians and profess the eternal Trinity to their own salvation. This work was piously created by father John, under Prince Viseslav, and in the honour of St. John the Baptist, so that he may intercede for him and his protégé.

    The inscription is of a devotional character with a pronounced pledging component, written in metrical form.

    As regards the style of its decorations, the font has all the features of transitional style towards mature hurdle later appearing as the principal ornament of stone-built church movables. There are several theories as to its period of origin, the most frequently accepted being the one dating the font’s creation, as well as Prince Viseslav’s period of ruling, back to around 800.

    :::::::::::::::::::::::

    four.jpg

    Choir screen panel from Split, containing pentagram and interlace patterns, 11th century.

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