The Shellal Mosaic in the Australian War Memorial : style and imagery
Abstract
The so-called "Shellal mosaic", at the Australian War
Memorial, Canberra, is the floor of a sixth century, Byzantine
church, discovered in the western Negev area of what is
Israel.
It is one of many such mosaic pavements dating from the
fourth to the sixth century A.D, scattered around the
Mediterranean area. A large concentration of such pavements,
bearing very similar designs of birds and animals on a ground of
a vine trellis issuing from an amphora,
are found in Palestine.
These all be dated, by inscription or by archaeological
can
means, to within the early Byzantine period, between about 515
and 575 A.D. Many fall directly within the period of rule of
Justinian (527-565 A.D): the Shellal floor, dated to 561-2, is
one of these. The fact that almost identical designs are found
in early Christian churches, as well as in synagogues and private
houses, raises the question as to whether they carry iconographic
meaning or whether they are purely decorative continuations of
earlier pagan artistic tradition.
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