Flagellation of Christ
The Flagellation of Christ, in art sometimes known as Christ at the Column or the Scourging at the Pillar, is an episode from the Passion of Jesus as presented in the Gospels. As such, it is frequently shown in Christian art, in cycles of the Passion or the larger subject of the Life of Christ. Catholic tradition places the Flagellation on the site of the Church of the Flagellation. It is the second Sorrowful Mystery of the Rosary and the sixth station of John Paul II's Scriptural Way of the Cross. The column to which Christ is normally shown to be tied, and the rope, scourge, whip or birch are elements in the Arma Christi. The Basilica di Santa Prassede in Rome is one of the churches claiming to possess [|the original column or parts of it].
In art, the subject was first depicted as one of a series of Passion scenes, but from the 15th century onwards it was also painted in individual works. The most-discussed single work is the enigmatic Flagellation of Christ on a small panel in Urbino by Piero della Francesca, the precise meaning of which has eluded generations of art historians. At the same time, Christ at the Column or Christ at the Stake developed as an image of Christ alone tied to a column or stake. This was most popular in Baroque sculpture, and also related to the subject, not found in the canonical Gospels, of Christ in the Dungeon. It is often difficult to distinguish between these two subjects, and between Christ at the Column and a Flagellation.
Gospels
at the hands of the Romans is mentioned in three of the four canonical Gospels: John 19, Mark 15, and Matthew 27, and was the usual prelude to crucifixion under Roman law. None of the three accounts is more detailed than John's "Then Pilate took Jesus and had him flogged". Luke's comparable account in Luke 22 is of the High Priest of Israel's guards beating and mocking Jesus. In the Passion of Christ, the episode precedes the Mocking of Christ and the Crowning with Thorns, which according to the Gospels happened at the same time or immediately afterwards. Unlike the flogging, these were not part of the normal Roman judicial process.Relics
Alleged pieces of the Column or Pillar of the Flagellation, also called the Scourging Post, are kept at different locations.- Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem:
- *Greek Orthodox Chapel of the Derision in the ambulatory
- *Chapel of the Apparition in the Franciscan area, originally in the Cenacle
- Santa Prassede in Rome.
- St. George's Cathedral, in Istanbul.
In art
File:Nuestro_Señor_Padre_Jesús_Desmayado1.jpg|200px|thumbnail|left|1863 Philippines "Jesús Desmayado"
Pontius Pilate is sometimes shown watching the scene, and his wife's servant may approach him with her message, and in the later Middle Ages, probably under the influence of Passion plays, the number of men beating Christ may be three or four, increasingly caricatured in the North as grotesque figures in the dress of contemporary mercenaries. Sometimes another figure, who may be Herod, is present. The Flagellation was at the hands of those working for Pontius Pilate, but the floggers may sometimes wear Jewish hats. Following the Maestà of Duccio, the scene may take place in public, before an audience of the Jewish people.
The Franciscans, who promoted self-flagellation as a means of identification with the suffering of Christ, were probably responsible for a number of large Italian processional crosses in which the Flagellation occupies the back of the cross, with a Crucifixion on the front. These were presumably sometimes followed in processions by flagellants, who could see Christ suffering in front of them.
Notable examples
Single works:- Flagellation of Christ, 1455–1460
- Christ at the Column, c. 1475
- The Flagellation of Christ, 1607
- Christ at the Column, 1607
- Maestà
- Scrovegni Chapel by Giotto
In film and music
Modern filmmakers have also depicted Christ being flogged. It is a significant scene in Mel Gibson's 2004 The Passion of the Christ. In Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange, Alex imagines himself as a Roman soldier flogging Jesus. On the album The Dying Truth, the death-doom metal band Cianide, wrote a song entitled "Scourging at the Pillar", about the flogging of Jesus Christ.