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Title: | De Isis a María: un ejemplo de sincretismo religioso. Evolución iconográfica de la Diosa Madre desde el antiguo Egipto hasta el cristianismo |
Author: | Urios de la Iglesia, José Ramón |
Tutor: | García Zamacoma, Carlos |
Abstract: | The Virgin Mary, one of the main pillars of the Christian religion, is not an ex nihilo creation of this religion, but had its origin in previous divinities that we can go back to the Egyptian Isis. Both her characteristics as a divine mother and the iconography that has represented her over more than four millennia lead us to conclude that the mother of Jesus is an example of religious syncretism from which no religious corpus is exempt. From the first Egyptian dynasties, passing through Ptolemaic Hellenism, Roman civilization and the Byzantine Empire, it has reached our days as a vitally important character in Western culture. One of its most common representations, the "lactating Isis", in which she breastfeeds her son Horus, was assumed by later civilizations until it became the Christian "Virgin of the milk", also known in Byzantine times as Galaktotrophoussa. This particular iconography has undergone very few changes throughout its entire history. |
Keywords: | Isis Mary syncretism mother goddess Galaktotrophoussa |
Document type: | info:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesis |
Issue Date: | 15-Feb-2023 |
Publication license: | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/ |
Appears in Collections: | Treballs finals de carrera, treballs de recerca, etc. |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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juriosTFM0223memoria.pdf | Memoria del TFM | 2,42 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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