Agiosoritissa


The Panagia Agiosoritissa or Hagiosoritissa is the name for a type of Marian icon, showing Mary without the Christ Child, slightly from the side with both hands raised in prayer. The type is known in Latin as Maria Advocata.

Names

The names used for the icon, Hagiosoritissa and, in Russian, Khalkopratiskaya, derive from the church of the Holy Urn in Constantinople's Chalkoprateia district.
In English, the type is also known as Madonna Advocate.

History

The appellation Ἁγιοσορίτισσα is first recorded in Byzantine seals of the 11th century, and it appears minted on coins made under Manuel I Komnenos.
The type was widespread in the Byzantine empire and in the Balkans, but less so in Russia.

Examples

Such an icon is known to have been in the Hagios Demetrios basilica in Thessalonica in the 6th century, but was lost in the Byzantine Iconoclasm.
An early Byzantine icon is preserved in the church of Santa Maria del Rosario on the Monte Mario, Rome.
The Madonna di sant'Alessio in the Santi [Bonifacio ed Alessio|Basilica of the Saints Bonifacio and Alexis] on the Aventine Hill in Rome is also of the type.
An early Russian example is the Theotokos of Bogolyubovo. The church of Santa Maria in Via Lata in Rome has a 13th-century icon of this type.
The treasury of the Basilica of [Our Lady, Maastricht] has an 11th century enamel decorated plaque intended for a reliquary, that depicts an image of the Panagia Agiosoritissa. The high-quality enamel work is very colorful in shades of blue, green, red, yellow, and white accented by meticulously shaped gold cloison patterns. The piece was made in a fine imperial workshop that was located in Constantinople. Mary's facial features are accentuated with gold cloison outlines. She is shown wearing a dark blue maphorion, with her hands clasped in prayer and her face turned towards Jesus.