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In my hypothesis, the great interest toward this iconographical solution, similar to the famous
Hodegetria image, can be explained in several ways:
1) On a practical side, Hodegon became increasingly popular as a burial place for
Constantiopolitan nobility. The funerary function of the Hodegetria icon was already present in the
demand of John Komnenos for the Hodegetria procession to his tomb in Pantokrator Monastery.
Later, Theodore Balsamon described at least two tombs situated on the monastery’s territory (one
of them belonged to Stephanos Komnenos), while in Palaiologan time, Andronikos III choose
Hodegon as the place for his own tomb. Finally, a donation act of the Sinianoi family (1390) shows
that even the members of low nobility could expect to be buried there. Not having children, the
Sinianoi passed to the monastery their house in Constantinople expecting the brotherhood to build
in return a tomb for the couple and commemorate them twice a week.
2) Underlined in histories about Hodegon, widely-spread in Palaiologan time, as well as
in hymnography, the symbolic and theological meaning of Hodegetria as a guide started to be
understood as a guide to salvation through her role as petitioner to Christ. Nikephoros Kallistos
Xanthopoulos called her “conductor to divine rest” and “the guide on the way to your Son,” while
the palladium of Trebizond, equally Hodegetria icon, was called “showing the way to the good ones.”
Moreover, Byzantine church hymns called directly in many instances Mary “a guide to salvation”
(πρὸς σωτηρίαν ὁδηγοῦσα). In funerary images, this motif of guidance was expressed in the Virgin’s
gesture of open arm directing the supplicant to look at Christ-child.
3) From a social point of view, the veneration of Hodegetria icon became more widespread, that
is, more popular among lower classes. The number of laics belonging to the Hodegon confraternity
raised and, from the late-14
th
century on, one can encounter several people with either non-noble or
low-noble origin having the surname of Hodegetrianos. Possibly after the dedication of the month
of August to Hodegetria in 1297 and re-establishing the public veneration of the icon under the
Palaiologoi, the cult of the image spread throughout the empire and lead to the establishing of
numerous churches with dedication to Hodegetria. The size and importance of these foundations
varied from family chapels on distant Byzantine periphery to the rich and spacious ensembles, as
the one in Mystras.
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