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JESSE , in the See also: Bible, the See also: father of See also: David (q.v.), and as such often regarded as the first in, the genealogy of Jesus Christ (cf
.
Isa.. xi
.
1, to)
.
Hence the phrase " See also: tree of Jesse " is applied to a design representing the descent of Jesus from the royal See also: line of David, formerly a favourite ecclesiastical See also: ornament
.
From a recumbent figure of Jesse springs a tree bearing in its branches the, chief figures in the line of descent, and terminating in the figure of Jesus, or of the Virgin and See also: Child
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There are remains of such a tree in the See also: church of St Mary at
See also: Abergavenny, carved in See also: wood, and supposed to have once stood behind the high altar
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Jesse candelabra were also made
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At See also: Laon and See also: Amiens there are sculptured Jesses over the central west doorways of the cathedrals
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The design was chiefly used in windows
.
The See also: great See also: east window at See also: Wells and the window at the west end of the See also: nave at See also: Chartres are See also: fine examples
.
There is a 16th-century Jesse window from Mechlin in St See also: George's, See also: Hanover Square, See also: London
.
The Jesse window in the choir of Dorchester Abbey, See also: Oxfordshire, is remarkable in that the tree forms the central mullion, and many of the figures are represented as statuettes on the branches of the upper See also: tracery; other figures are in the stained See also: glass; the whole gives a beautiful example of the combination of glass and carved stonework in one design
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