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AUREOLE AUREOLA (diminutive of Lat. a...

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Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 924 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AUREOLE

AUREOLA (diminutive of
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Lat. aura, air)
  , the radiance of luminous cloud which, in paintings of sacred personages, is represented as surrounding the whole figure . In the earliest periods of Christian
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art this splendour was confined to the figures of the persons of the Godhead, but it was afterwards extended to the Virgin Mary and to several of the saints . The aureola, when enveloping the whole
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body, is generally oval or elliptical in form, but is occasionally circular or
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quatrefoil . When it is merely a luminous disk round the head, it is called specifically a nimbus, while the combination of nimbus and aureole is called a glory . The strict distinction between nimbus and aureole is not commonly maintained, and the latter
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term is most frequently used to denote the radiance round the heads of saints, angels or persons of the Godhead . The nimbus in Christian art appeared first in the 5th century, but practically the same
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device was .known still earlier, though its
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history is obscure, in non-Christian art . Thus (though earlier
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Indian and Bactrian coins do not show it) it is found with the gods on some of the coins of the Indian kings
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Kanishka, Huvishka and Vasudeva, 58 B.C. to A.D . 41 (Gardner's Cat. of Coins of Greek and Scythic Kings of Bactria and India, Brit .
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Mus . 1886, plates 26-29) . And its use has been traced through the Egyptians to the Greeks and Romans, representations of Trajan (arch of
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Constantine) and Antoninus
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Pius (
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reverse of a medal) being found with it . In the circular form it constitutes a natural and even
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primitive use of the idea of a
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crown, modified by an equally
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simple idea of the emanation of
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light from the head of a
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superior being, or by the meteorological phenomenon of a
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halo .

The

probability is that all later associations with the symbol refer back to an early astrological origin (cf .
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MITHRAS), the person so glorified being identified with the sun and represented in the sun's image; so the aureole is the Hvareno of Mazdaism . From this early astrological use the form of " glory " or " nimbus " has been adapted or inherited under ne* beliefs .

End of Article: AUREOLE AUREOLA (diminutive of Lat. aura, air)
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