Toupha
The toupha or toufa (
One of the most famous touphas is that which surmounted the crown or helmet of the bronze equestrian statue of the emperor Justinian I atop the column of Justinian, erected by said emperor, which stood in the Augustaion square of Constantinople.[2][3] The toupha was made of gilded bronze, with a design of peacock-feathers. It is known primarily from a life-drawing of the statue made in the 15th century; the entire monument was later demolished. Particularly imposing in size, the head-dress fell from the statue in the 9th century and was remounted by an acrobat.[2] A rope was stretched between the roof of Hagia Sophia and the summit of the column, by means of an arrow. Along this line, one could tightrope-walk to the statue.[3] The emperor Theophilus rewarded the tightrope-walker with 100 gold nomismata for this exploit.
In colloquial language, toupha or typha came to mean a "tiara", and the 12th-century historian, Joannes Zonaras, even records that a verb, typhoomai ("to be filled with extreme arrogance"), was derived from it.
See also
[edit]- Media related to Toupha at Wikimedia Commons
- War bonnet
Bibliography
[edit]- Boeck, Elena. The Bronze Horseman of Justinian in Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021.
- Lehman, Phyllis Williams. "Theodosius of Justinian?: A Renaissance Drawing of a Byzantine Rider." In The Art Bulletin, vol. 41, no. 1 (1959): 39-57
- Toupha, vol. 3, page 2100, of Alexander Kazhdan (ed.), Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, 3 vols., Oxford University Press, 1991 (ISBN 0195046528)
References
[edit]- ^ Kazhdan, Alexander. "Toupha". Oxford Reference.
- ^ a b Lehmann, Phyllis Williams (1959). "Theodosius or Justinian?: A Renaissance Drawing of a Byzantine Rider". The Art Bulletin. 41 (1): 39–57.
- ^ a b Boeck, Elena (2021). The Bronze Horseman of Justinian in Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 122–36.