The motif of the apocalyptic woman is applied in a variety of ways to Mary. Early representations of Ecclesia (10-12c) show her as the apocalyptic woman with the dragon. It is true that the visual elements, half moon, stars, sun, are borrowed from Revelations 12,1. The figure stands on a personalized half moon. The Katharinenthal Gradual of 1312 shows an image of transition, where the same feminine figure contains or bears the attributes of the Church, Mary and the Apocalyptic Woman. It is only in the 14/15c that a lateral transfer takes place, meaning Mary occupies now in iconography the place of the Church and inherits some of its attributes. The motif of the luna is very old (~820, MS 99 Paris, Valenciennes) and is not used in the beginning as an attribute of Mary but of the Church. No doubt that we have here also the idea of victory of ecclesia over synagoga. She is standing on the waning moon which points out that the Old Testament and synagoga are the foundations of the Church. Mary as the God-bearer is identified with ecclesia. The latter is identified with the symbol of the waning moon. The same contrast is used to signify ecclesia and synagoga. The moon contrasts here the sun as symbol of fulfillment, in other words, the New Testament, more specifically Jesus Christ himself, the sol invictus. John the Baptist is sometimes connected with the waning moon (Baptisry of Östr Hoby, Sweden, 12c) to explicate his role as the last prophet of the waning Old Testament which is regarded, simultaneously, as a promise of the New Testament. Ecclesia is virginal and "dying" in the encounter with Christ, the bridegroom she is maternal and lifegiving in her spousal relation with the redeemer, and resplendent in her grace-filled existence. the three phases of the moon: dying (waning), generating (waxing) and giving birth (full moon) a valid representation of the Church (ecclesia). Patristic times saw in the symbol of the moon, or the mysterium lunae, i.e. Biblical references use the moon symbol to highlight cosmic events, divine epiphanies and the ephemeral nature of human life and history (see, for example, Isaiah 30,26 60,19 Revelations 21,23). It was later transferred to Diana (Artemis), offspring of the earth mother, and known not only as virgin but also as protectress of the newborn and symbol of fertility in her own right. The half moon was the attribute of Luna and more specifically of Selene. It pinpoints changing seasons, ebb and tide (and related inundations as harbingers of fertility), and the feminine menstrual cycle. Q: What is the meaning of the crescent moon that Mary is sometimes pictured standing upon?Ī: The so called Luna, half moon, or sickle of the moon, also waning and waxing moon, is a sign of fertility, related to life and death, and thus a popular symbol in many religions.
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