JACQUES DE LÉTIN (1597-1661)
Mount Sinaï or Jabal Musa (2,285 m - 7,496ft)
Egypt
In Moïse au Mont Sinai, oil on canvas (210 × 232 cm), 1655, Museum of Fine Arts, Troyes, France
The painting
This painting as nothing to do with a représentation of Mount Sinais / Djebal Mussa the painter ould see at this time IN this allegoric painting Moses poses with the Tables of the Law, on which the Ten Commandments were written (in French, according to de Létin ! ).
Behind him is representation Mount Sinai (not very realistic!) where he received the Commandments. The building in the background is Saint Catherine's Monastery, at the foot of Mount Sinai. It is one of the oldest monasteries in the world. A beam of light falls on the monastery, through an eye in the rock on the left.
The painter
The French painter Jacques de Létin, also known as Jacques Ninet de Lestin was born in a relatively wealthy family, sensitized to the artistic activity that was still unfolding in Troyes in the early seventeenth century. His father, Jehan de Létin, runs a hotel called L'Image de Saint-Christophe. During his stay in Italy, The young Jacques de Letin met Simon Vouet, with whom he became friend.
After his death and despite his notoriety during his lifetime, Jacques de Letin was quickly forgotten. As early as the end of the seventeenth century, art historians cite him without further comment in the list of artists attached to the style of Simon Vouet. In one of these lists, the name of Jacques de Létin was transformed into "Nicolas de Lestin "by forgetting a comma between Ninet and Lestin. More than two centuries later, it is the historian Albert Babeau who, in 1882, found the identity and right biography of Jacques de Létin.
Many of his works disappeared during the Revolution and since 1940. One can see what remains of his works, notably in the churches of the city o fTtroyes in France : Saint-Pantaléon, Saint-Remi, Sainte-Madeleine and Our Lady of Aix-en-Othe. His Apparition of the Virgin to Saint Robert is kept at the church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Chaource, and Saint-Louis dying of the plague in Tunis in the right arm of the transept of the church Saint-Paul-Saint-Louis in Paris.
But since the beginning of the twenty-first century, when the painter is better known, new works of his hand have been identified. In 2011, the Bordeaux Museum of Fine Arts acquired two paintings by Jacques de Létin representing La Grammaire and La Géométrie. The museum of fine arts of Reims, retains a Lamentation on the dead Christ painted between 1640 and 1645.
The mountain
Mount Sinaï (2,285 m - 7,496ft) or Jabal Mūsā or Gabal Mūsā (in arab : "Moses' Mountain" or "Mount Moses"), also known as Mount Horeb or Jebel Musa (a similarly named mountain in Morocco), is a mountain in the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt that is a possible location of the biblical Mount Sinaï.
The latter is mentioned many times in the Book of Exodus (and other books of the Bible) and in the Quran. According to Jewish, Christian, and Islamic tradition, the biblical Mount Sinai was the place where Moses received the Ten Commandments (depicted in the Jean-Léon Gérôme painting above).
Mount Sinai is a moderately high mountain near the city of Saint Katherine in the Sinai region. It is next to Mount Katherine (2,629m - 8,625 ft), the highest peak in Egypt.
Mount Sinai's rocks were formed in the late stage of the Arabian-Nubian Shield's (ANS) evolution. Mount Sinai displays a ring complex that consists of alkaline granites intruded into diverse rock types, including volcanics. The granites range in composition from syenogranite to alkali feldspar granite. The volcanic rocks are alkaline to peralkaline and they are represented by subaerial flows and eruptions and subvolcanic porphyry. Generally, the nature of the exposed rocks in Mount Sinai indicates that they originated from differing depths.
There are two principal routes to the summit. The longer and shallower route, Siket El Bashait, takes about 2.5 hours on foot, though camels can be used. The steeper, more direct route (Siket Sayidna Musa) is up the 3,750 "steps of penitence" in the ravine behind the monastery.
The summit of the mountain has a mosque that is still used by Muslims. It also has a Greek Orthodox chapel, constructed in 1934 on the ruins of a 16th-century church, that is not open to the public. The chapel encloses the rock which is considered to be the source for the biblical Tablets of Stone. At the summit also is "Moses' cave", where Moses was said to have waited to receive the Ten Commandments.
_______________________________2018 - Wandering Vertexes...
by Francis Rousseau