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A medieval prayer wheel surfaces, but how it was used is anyone’s guess
Crux Now ^ | May 3, 2015 | David Van Bieman

Posted on 05/04/2015 1:54:46 PM PDT by NYer

NEW YORK — The directions, if a little stilted, look familiar: “The Order Of The Diagram Written Here Teaches The Return Home.”

Think Parcheesi or Sorry.

But then think again. The board is not cardboard or plastic; it’s 1,035-year-old vellum. And there are no dice — just prayers.

Care to play?

In April, Manhattan’s Les Enluminures Gallery, a dealer in medieval manuscripts, put a book on sale with a first page so rare that only five of its kind are known to exist. In fact, the book itself is rare, with a massive ancient carved-oak cover and sturdy clasps of worked copper. Dating back to the year 980, it contains just the Gospels, the four accounts of Jesus’ life.

The volume’s commissioning was unusual. It appears to have been ordered up by a woman for women: An abbess in Liesborn, Germany, named Berthildis, had it made for the highborn ladies who had traded the medieval court for her convent.

But its true mystery dates more than a century later, when someone opened the Gospels, which would have been used primarily for display and oath-taking, to its blank first page, set a compass needle in the center and began drawing concentric circles.

Call it the Liesborn Prayer Wheel.

The wheel’s outermost circle consists of the instructions we’ve read, but in medieval Latin. The next is labeled “Seven Petitions” and contains seven quotations from the Lord’s Prayer (“Daily Bread,” “Will Be Done,” “Kingdom Come.”) In the third circle, seven “Gifts Of The Holy Spirit” (“Wisdom, Understanding, Counsel.”) run clockwise in red, interspersed with seven events in Christ’s life (Incarnation, Baptism, Passion, Day of Judgment) in black. The fourth segment contains seven groups blessed in Jesus’ Beatitudes (“Meek, Poor in Spirit, Mourn”) and — opposite each — their rewards (“Inherit the Earth,” “Kingdom of Heaven,” “Be Comforted”). Finally, at the center, surrounding the pinhole of the compass, is the word “DEUS,” or God.

If much of life in the High Middle Ages seems foreign to us, the detailed workings of the wheel — along with four others like it that have survived to the present — are a real riddle.

Schematic prayer guides were more common in later centuries, said Lauren Mancia, a medievalist at Brooklyn College who has examined the Liesborn Wheel.

“Monks and nuns in the Central Middle Ages often get a bad rap for unsystematic thinking — doing all this prayer by rote, mumbling, and not caring about the sense,” said Mancia. “This diagram suggests that they’re not just mumbling; they’re using a mnemonic device to remember and internalize, or even to make an inner journey.”

However, the path of that journey is not obvious.

Clearly the nun was supposed to find her way from the Lord’s Prayer to God; but how? Did she read her way around one wheel and move in to the next? Or did she drill downward along each of the wheel’s “spokes,” and then start again on the next spoke? Or were the seven events in Christ’s life the key to the diagram, connecting its prayers to the Gospels that make up the rest of the book?

Was it more of an instruction, or a meditative aid? Was it a one-shot exercise or meant to be repeated again and again? And what to make of the black and red stipples that show up seemingly randomly on the diagram, making it look a bit like the Marauder’s Map in the Harry Potter books?

Perhaps some directions got lost. The Gospels is missing its flyleaf, the protective page before the first page. Maybe the full instructions for prayer were inked there. Or maybe they were intentionally omitted. Medieval labyrinths included dead ends to make the experience less boring and more memorable, and to stimulate further creative entry into the meditation.

That would mean the nuns reading that book would be almost as clueless and curious as we are.

Les Enluminures’ asking price on the Gospels is a hefty $6.5 million, but speculation on how to use the prayer wheel is free.


TOPICS: History; Prayer; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: book; epigraphyandlanguage; faithandphilosophy; godsgravesglyphs; medieval; middleages; prayer
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To: FateAmenableToChange

lol..Evil Dead, Tree scene the best.


21 posted on 05/04/2015 2:31:20 PM PDT by dp0622 (Frankie Five Angels: Look, let's get 'em all -- let's get 'em all now, while we got the muscle.)
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To: St_Thomas_Aquinas
It either points to ancient aliens, Jesus’ girlfriend, or sinister albino monks.

It's aliens, of course.

Why is there any doubt?

22 posted on 05/04/2015 2:32:57 PM PDT by NorthMountain ("The time has come", the Walrus said, "to talk of many things")
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To: NYer
Ask Giorgio where it came from ...


23 posted on 05/04/2015 2:34:54 PM PDT by NorthMountain ("The time has come", the Walrus said, "to talk of many things")
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To: FateAmenableToChange
All of them that were any good.

Bruce. :sigh:

One of the stars who's name guarantees that I will watch the movie at least once.

24 posted on 05/04/2015 2:38:39 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Proud Infidel, Gun Nut, Religious Fanatic and Freedom Fiend)
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To: dp0622; Harmless Teddy Bear

I’m a sap for Army of Darkness. Steam powered whirlyblade car of doom. “Did you say the words?” Consistently getting three shots out of a double barreled Remington without reloading. Just awesome.


25 posted on 05/04/2015 2:46:28 PM PDT by FateAmenableToChange
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To: NYer

“The labyrinth has its origins in ancient pagan rituals, most famously at Knossos in ancient Crete, where one was located in the basement of a palace where the mythic man-eating Minotaur was said to roam. According to ancient lore, the hero Theseus journeyed through the labyrinth to slay the evil Minotaur. Theseus’ doubled-headed ax was called a ‘labrys,’ from which the word labyrinth was derived. Ceremonies re-enacting this myth as a ritual labyrinth walk are still performed today. Other labyrinths have been tied to fertility rites and goddess worship (M. Tooley, September 2000). Modern disciples of the labyrinth propose that ancient Christians used the labyrinth as a means of spiritual meditation. Scholars insist there is absolutely no evidence of labyrinth walking by Christians (M. Tooley, September 2000, Maze Craze. www.touchstonemag.com ). http://www.letusreason.org/Nam30.htm


26 posted on 05/04/2015 2:50:28 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: FateAmenableToChange

very conservative but live in idiotic Cuomoville where guns equal jail.
I guess that three shots is impossible?


27 posted on 05/04/2015 2:57:51 PM PDT by dp0622 (Frankie Five Angels: Look, let's get 'em all -- let's get 'em all now, while we got the muscle.)
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To: NYer

That looks like modern English and spelling. 980 AD? nope.


28 posted on 05/04/2015 6:25:58 PM PDT by heartwood
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To: dp0622

Yep.


29 posted on 05/04/2015 9:17:00 PM PDT by windcliff
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To: NYer

"The Navigators" Topical Memory System wheel diagram. - a more modern take-off....

30 posted on 05/05/2015 8:14:23 AM PDT by fishtank (The denial of original sin is the root of liberalism.)
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To: fishtank

31 posted on 05/05/2015 8:14:56 AM PDT by fishtank (The denial of original sin is the root of liberalism.)
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To: colorado tanker; StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; decimon; 1010RD; 21twelve; 24Karet; ...
Thanks colorado tanker.

32 posted on 05/06/2015 2:23:16 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (What do we want? REGIME CHANGE! When do we want it? NOW!)
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To: NYer

the assumption is it worked

what if it didn’t


33 posted on 05/06/2015 2:25:06 PM PDT by bert ((K.E.; N.P.; GOPc.;+12, 73, ..... Obama is public enemy #1)
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To: the OlLine Rebel

I agree this would have been in Latin back then and it would have been most likely in illuminated manuscript. I can’t believe it is medieval.


34 posted on 05/06/2015 2:51:00 PM PDT by rdl6989
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To: the OlLine Rebel

Oops, then I read further down the thread to the answer to the mystery.


35 posted on 05/06/2015 2:52:01 PM PDT by rdl6989
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To: NYer
The most interesting element: The Return Home
36 posted on 05/06/2015 6:19:59 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: RnMomof7

It’s not a maze. It’s a study aid.


37 posted on 05/06/2015 6:23:23 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: heartwood

Read first, then post. It’s a translation into English from Latin. It’s a mock up.


38 posted on 05/06/2015 6:24:01 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: bert

Ask the Devil to let you tell me. ;-]


39 posted on 05/06/2015 6:24:43 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: Tax-chick

I agree. That is plainly not old.


40 posted on 05/09/2015 2:55:55 PM PDT by ConservativeMind ("Humane" = "Don't pen up pets or eat meat, but allow infanticide, abortion, and euthanasia.")
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