Black Madonna
The terms Black Madonna and Black Virgin refer to statues or paintings in Western Christendom of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Infant Jesus, where both figures are depicted with dark skin. Examples of the Black Madonna can be found both in Catholic and Orthodox countries.
The paintings are usually icons, which are Byzantine in origin or style, some of which were produced in 13th or 14th-century Italy. Other examples from the Middle East, Caucasus or Africa, mainly Egypt and Ethiopia, are even older. Statues are often made of wood but are occasionally made of stone, painted, and up to tall. They fall into two main groups: free-standing upright figures or seated figures on a throne. About 400–500 Black Madonnas have been recorded in Europe, with the number related to how they are classified. There are at least 180 Vierges Noires in Southern France alone. There are hundreds of copies made since the medieval era. Some are displayed in museums, but most are in churches or shrines and are venerated by believers. Some are associated with miracles and attract substantial numbers of pilgrims.
Black Madonnas come in different forms. Speculations behind the basis of the dark hue of each individual icon or statue vary greatly and some have been controversial. Explanations range from the Madonnas being made from dark wood, Madonnas that have turned darker over time, due to factors such as aging or candle smoke, to a study by Jungian scholar Ean Begg into the potential pagan origins of the cult of the black Madonna and child or the intent to reflect the darker-skinned populations indigenous to certain parts of the world.
Another suggestion is that dark-skinned representations of pre-Christian deities were re-envisioned as the Madonna and child.
Studies and research
Research into the Black Madonna phenomenon is limited. Begg links a refrain from the Song of Solomon to the Queen of Sheba. This passage has been translated variously as "I am black, but comely", or "Dark am I, yet lovely", among other translations. Recently, however, interest in this subject has gathered more momentum.Important early studies of dark-skinned holy images in France were by Camille Flammarion, Marie Durand-Lefebvre, Emile Saillens, and Jacques Huynen.
The first notable study in English of the origin and meaning of the Black Madonnas appears to have been presented by Leonard Moss at a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science on December 28, 1952. Moss divided the images into three categories: dark brown or black Madonnas with physiognomy and skin pigmentation matching that of the indigenous population; various art forms that have turned black as a result of certain physical factors such as deterioration of lead-based pigments, accumulated smoke from the use of votive candles, and accumulation of grime over the ages, and miracle-worker Madonnas, the focus of the study, Black Madonnas found in areas of a Roman legion and, therefore, not a reflection of the current population's skin colour.
In the cathedral at Chartres, there were two Black Madonnas: Our Lady of the Pillar, a 1508 dark walnut copy of a 13th-century silver Madonna, standing atop a high pillar, surrounded by candles; and Notre Dame de Sous-Terre, a replica of an original destroyed during the French Revolution. Restoration work on the cathedral resulted in the painting in 2014 of Notre Dame de Pilar, to reflect an earlier 19th-century painted style. The statue is no longer a "Black Madonna" and the restoration was severely criticized for wiping away the past.
Some scholars have chosen to explore the significance of the dark-skinned complexion to pilgrims and worshippers rather than focusing on whether this depiction was intentional. By virtue of their unusual presence, the Black Madonnas have sometimes acted to make their shrines revered pilgrimage sites. Monique Scheer attributes the importance of the dark-skinned depiction to its connection with authenticity. The reason for this connection is the perceived age of the figures.
List of Black Madonnas
Africa
- Algeria, Algiers: "Our Lady of Africa"
- Côte d’Ivoire, Yamoussoukro: Madonna and child inside Basilica of [Our Lady of Peace].
- Senegal, Popenguine: "Notre-Dame de la Délivrance"
- South Africa, Soweto: "The Black Madonna"
Asia
Japan
- Tsuruoka City, Yamagata Prefecture: the Tenshudō Catholic Church features a Black Madonna statue from France dating to the Meiji Era.
The Philippines
- Antipolo, Rizal: Nuestra Señora de la Paz y Buen Viaje de Antipolo
- Ermita, City of Manila: Nuestra Señora de Guía
- Santa Ana, City of Manila: Nuestra Señora de los Desamparados
- Parañaque: Nuestra Señora del Buen Suceso
- Lapu-Lapu City: Nuestra Señora de Regla
- Naga, Camarines Sur: Nuestra Señora de Peñafrancia
- Piat, Cagayan: Nuestra Señora de la Visitación de Piat
- Joroan, Tiwi, Albay: Nuestra Señora de la Salvación
India
- Dhori Mata
- Korvi Mata, Dediapada, Gujarat
Turkey
- Trabzon: Sümela Monastery
Europe
Austria
- Lavanttal, Carinthia, Austria: St. Andrä im Lavanttal „Schwarze Madonna von Loreto" Basilica Maria Loreto
Belgium
- Brugge, "Our Lady of Regla"
- Brussels: "De Zwerte Lieve Vrouwe", St. Catherine Church
- Halle : Sint-Martinusbasiliek
- Liège: La Vierge Noire d'Outremeuse,
- Lier: Onze Lieve Vrouw ter Gratiën
- Scherpenheuvel-Zichem: Our Lady of Scherpenheuvel
- Tournai: Our Lady of Flanders in Tournai Cathedral
- Verviers: "Black Virgin of the Recollects", Notre-Dame des Récollets Church,
- Walcourt:
Croatia
Czech Republic
- Brno: Assumption of Virgin Mary Minor Basilica, St Thomas's Abbey, Brno
- Cesky Krumlov Monastery Museum
- Prague: The Madonna of Breznice; The Black Madonna in The Church of Our Lady Under the Chain The Black Madonna on the House of the Black Madonna.
France
- Aix-en-Provence, : Notre-Dame des Graces, Cathédrale Saint-Sauveur d'Aix
- Arconsat:
- Aurillac : Notre-Dame des Neiges
- Beaune: Our Lady of Beaune
- Besançon: Our Lady de Gray
- Besse-et-Saint-Anastaise, : Saint-André Church, Notre-Dame de Vassivière
- Bourg-en-Bresse : 13th century
- Chartres, : crypt of the Cathedral of Chartres, Notre-Dame-de-Sous-Terre
- Clermont-Ferrand,
- Cusset: the Black Virgin of Cusset
- Dijon, : Church of Notre-Dame of Dijon
- Douvres-la-Délivrande,, "Notre-Dame de la Délivrande"
- Dunkerque, : Chapelle des Dunes
- Guingamp, : Basilica of Notre Dame de Bon Secours.
- La Chapelle-Geneste, : Notre-Dame Cathedral, statue of 1848
- Le Havre,: statue near the Graville Abbey
- Le Puy-en-Velay: In 1254 when passing through on his return from the Holy Land Saint Louis IX of France gave the cathedral an ebony image of the Blessed Virgin clothed in gold brocade. It was destroyed during the Revolution, but replaced at the Restoration with a copy that continues to be venerated.
- Liesse-Notre-Dame : Notre-Dame de Liesse, statue destroyed in 1793, copy of 1857
- Limeuil : Sainte Catherine d'Alexandrie á Limeuil. This XVII century statue was broken and thrown in the Dordogne during the French Wars of Religion but recovered and returned to the church.
- Marseille, : Notre-Dame-de-Confession, Abbey of St. Victor; Notre-Dame d'Huveaune, Saint-Giniez Church
- Mauriac, Cantal: Notre Dame des Miracles
- Mende : Cathedral
- Menton, : St. Michel Church
- Meymac : Meymac Abbey
- Molompize: Notre-Dame de Vauclair
- Mont-Saint-Michel: Notre-Dame du Mont-Tombe
- Myans : Sanctuaire Notre-Dame de Myans
- Paris, : Notre-Dame de Bonne Délivrance, in the motherhouse of the Sisters of St. Thomas of Villanova
- Quimper : Eglise de Guéodet, nommée encore Notre-Dame-de-la-Cité
- Riom, : Notre-Dame du Marthuret
- Rocamadour, : Our Lady of Rocamadour
- Saint-Germain-Laval: Chapelle Notre-Dame-de-Baffy
- Sainte Marie :
- Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer Avignon: Annual Roma pilgrimage and festival celebrating Sara, the patron saint of the Roma
- Soissons : statue of the 12th century
- Tarascon, : Notre-Dame du Château
- Thuret,
- Toulouse: The basilica Notre-Dame de la Daurade in Toulouse, France had housed the shrine of a Black Madonna. The original icon was stolen in the fifteenth century, and its first replacement was burned by Revolutionaries in 1799 on the Place du Capitole. The icon presented today is an 1807 copy of the fifteenth century Madonna. Blackened by the hosts of candles, the second Madonna was known from the sixteenth century as Our Lady La Noire
- Tournemire, Château d'Anjony, Our Lady of Anjony
- Vaison-la-Romaine : statue on a hill
- Vichy : Saint-Blaise Church
Germany
- Altötting : Gnadenkapelle
- Beilstein : Karmeliterkirche St. Joseph
- Bielefeld
- Düsseldorf-Benrath : Pfarrkirche St. Cäcilia
- Hirschberg an der Bergstraße : Wallfahrtskirche St. Johannes Baptist
- Schloss Hohenstein, Upper Franconia
- Köln : St. Maria in der Kupfergasse
- Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim : Schloss- und Wallfahrtskirche Mariä Himmelfahrt
- Mainau : Schlosskirche St. Marien
- Munich : Theatine Church; St. Boniface's Abbey
- Rastatt : Einsiedelner Kapelle
- Regensburg : Regensburg Cathedral
- Remagen : Kapelle Schwarze Madonna
- Spabrücken
- Stetten ob Lontal, Niederstotzingen
- Windhausen in Boppard-Herschwiesen
- Wipperfürth : St. Johannes, Kreuzberg
- Wuppertal-Beyenburg
Greece
Hungary
Ireland
Italy
- Biella : Black Virgin of Oropa, sanctuary of Oropa
- Canneto Valley near Settefrati : Madonna di Canneto
- Casale Monferrato : Our Lady of Crea. In the hillside Sanctuary at Crea, a cedar-wood figure, said to be one of three Black Virgins brought to Italy from the Holy Land c. 345 by St. Eusebius.
- Castelmonte, Prepotto
- Gubbio, Italy: The Niger-Regin square, discovered carved in the cave of Sibilla Eugubina on Mount Ingino, is considered to be a word square form of the "Black Queen". Seemingly of neo-Templar origin, it is dated between 1600–1800 CE, was discovered in 2003, and destroyed by vandalism in 2012.
- Loreto : Basilica della Santa Casa
- Montevergine : Mamma Schiavona located at Sanctuary of Montevergine
- Naples : Santuario-Basilica SS Carmine Maggiore
- Pescasseroli : Madonna di Monte Tranquillo
- Positano : Located in the church of Santa Maria Assunta, the story of how it got there—sailors shouting "Posa, posa!" —gave the town its name.
- San Severo : "La Madonna del Soccorso", St. Severinus Abbot and Saint Severus Bishop Faeto. Statue in gold garments, object of a major three-day festival that attracts over 350,000 people to this small town.
- Seminara : Maria Santissima dei poveri
- Tindari : Our Lady of Tindari
- Torre Annunziata : Madonna della Neve
- Venice : Madonna della Salute, Santa Maria della Salute
- Viggiano : Santuario Madonna del Sacro Monte
Kosovo
- Vitina-: Church of the Black Madonna, where Mother Teresa is believed to have heard her calling.
Lithuania
Luxembourg
- Esch-sur-Sûre
- Luxembourg City: Grund
- Luxembourg City: St. John's Church
Macedonia
- Kališta, Monastery: Madonna icon in the Nativity of Our Most Holy Mother of God church
- Ohrid, Church: Madonna with the child
Malta
- Ħamrun: Our Lady of Atoċja, a medieval painting brought to Malta by a merchant in the year 1630, depicting a statue found in Atocha, a parish in Madrid, Spain, and widely known as Il-Madonna tas-Samra.
Poland
- Częstochowa: Our Lady of Czestochowa
- * In the United States, the National Shrine of Our Lady of Czestochowa, in Doylestown, Pennsylvania houses a reproduction of the Black Madonna of Częstochowa. A second shrine to Our Lady of Częstochowa is located near Eureka, Missouri.
- * In Israel there are two reproductions of the Black Madonna of Częstochowa: One in St. Peter's Church in Tel Aviv, and another in the Abbey of the Dormition in Jerusalem.
- Głogówek: Our Lady of Loretto
Portugal
Romania
- : Maica Domnului Siriaca –
- Cacica: Madona Neagra – Biserica Cacica
- Bucuresti: Madona Neagra – Biserica Dichiu
Russia
- Kostroma : Theotokos of St. Theodore also known as Our Lady of St. Theodore, in Theophany Monastery
- Our Lady of Wladimir, from the 12th century
- Black Virgin of Taganrog, Taganrog Old Cemetery
Serbia
Slovenia
Spain
- Andújar : Nuestra Señora de la Cabeza, named after the mountain, Cerro de la Cabeza or Cerro de Cabezo.
- Chipiona : la Virgen de Regla or Nuestra Señora de Regla, considered by some as the custodian of the Rule of Saint Augustine
- Coria : Virgen de Argeme
- El Puerto de Santa María : Virgen de los Milagros
- Guadalupe : Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe
- Jerez de la Frontera : Nuestra Señora de la Merced
- Madrid : Nuestra Señora de Atocha
- Lluc, Majorca : Mare de Déu de Lluc, Lluc Monastery
- Monistrol de Montserrat : Mare de Déu de Montserrat or "La Moreneta" in the Benedictine abbey of Santa Maria de Montserrat
- Ponferrada : Virgen de la Encina
- Salamanca : Virgen de la Peña de Francia
- Santiago de Compostela : A replica of "La Moreneta"
- Rianxo : Virgen de Guadalupe
- Tenerife : Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria, or "La Morenita"
- Toledo : Virgen Morena, statue of La Esclavitud de Nuestra Señora del Sagrario in the Cathedral of Toledo
- Torreciudad : Our Lady of Torreciudad
Sweden
- Lund Cathedral Attached to a marble pillar in the crypt: Black madonna with child
- Skee Kyrka, Skee, Bohuslän former Norwegian province. Black madonna with beheaded child
Switzerland
- Einsiedeln : Our Lady of the Hermits
- * In the United States, a reproduction of Our Lady of the Hermits was gifted to the St. Meinrad Archabbey located in St. Meinrad, Indiana
- Sonogno, Valle Verzasca : Santa Maria Loretana
- Uetikon upon Lake : Catholic Church Saint Francis of Assisi
- Metzerlen-Mariastein : Mariastein Abbey
- Ascona : Black Chapel
- Lugano : Chiesa di Santa Maria di Loreto
Ukraine
United Kingdom
- St. Mary Willesden : The original Shrine of Our Lady of Willesden.
- Our Lady of Częstochowa
North America
Costa Rica
Cuba
- Regla, Havana Province: Nuestra Señora de Regla
Mexico
Trinidad and Tobago
United States
- Pacific, Missouri: Black Madonna Shrine and Grottos
- Doylestown, Pennsylvania: National Shrine of Our Lady of Czestochowa
- Jersey City, New Jersey: Our Lady of Czestochowa
- New York City, New York: Cathedral of St. John the Divine
- New York City, New York: Church of St. Ignatius Loyola
- Detroit, Michigan: Shrine of the Black Madonna Church
- Chicago, Illinois: Monastery of the Holy Cross
- Westport, Connecticut: Church of the Assumption
- Cheektowaga, New York: Our Lady of Czestochowa Roman Catholic Church
- North Tonawanda, New York: Our Lady of Czestochowa Church
- Tulsa, Oklahoma: Our Lady of the Heights
Canada
- Windsor, Ontario -Black Madonna chapel located at Italian banquet hall Ciociaro club.
South America
Brazil
- Aparecida, São Paulo: Our Lady of Aparecida or Our Lady Appeared in the Basilica of the National Shrine of Our Lady of Aparecida