Lamp with Griffin-Head Handle

Cleveland Museum of Art

Lamp with Griffin-Head Handle

Date
300s–400s CE
Medium
bronze
Culture
Byzantium, Syria(?), Byzantine period
Department
Medieval Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

Bronze oil lamps with griffin-head handles and Christian symbolic decoration were common from the 4th through the 6th centuries and have survived in considerable numbers all over the Mediterranean world. The popularity of griffins, ancient mythological creatures with the body of a lion and head and wings of an eagle, is probably rooted in their traditional role as powerful guardian figures and protectors. On this Early Byzantine bronze lamp, the griffin seems to have functioned similarly as a guardian of the flame and a keeper of the light. The decoration of an everyday utilitarian object with both pagan and Christian symbols of protection may mark an effort to enhance its power.

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