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Showing posts with label Mount Gerizim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mount Gerizim. Show all posts

Sunday, November 1, 2020

MOUNT GERIZIM BY FÉLIX BONFILS

 

FÉLIX BONFILS (1831-1885) Mount Gerizim (881m - 2,890 ft) Palestine  In Mount Gerizim from Mount Ebal - Maison Bonfils, Oregon State University

FÉLIX BONFILS (1831-1885)
Mount Gerizim (881m - 2,890 ft)
Palestine

In Mount Gerizim from Mount Ebal - Maison Bonfils, Oregon State University

The mountain
Mount Gerizim or Garizim or Ar-garízim in Hebrew, Jabal Jarizīm in Arabic is a West Bank mountain near Nablus, in the historic region of Samaria. This mountain is a holy place for the Samaritans, who can argue that it is mentioned several times in the Torah. The height of Mount Gerizim is 881 meters, very steep on its northern flank and covered with brush at the top. It is one of the highest mountains in the West Bank and Israel. At his feet springs a spring of fresh water.
Around -330 BC. AD, the Samaritan population built a temple at the top of the mountain that became the religious center of Samaritanism, like the Temple of Jerusalem for Judaism. This temple will be built a little before1 the conquest of Alexander the Great, or just after. The temple is then surrounded by fortifications (according to the Book of the Maccabees). However, it will be destroyed by King Hasmonean John Hyrcan I in the 2nd century BC (circa -108 BC) According to archaeological excavations and ancient sources, a temple dedicated to Zeus is built on the site. during the time of Emperor Hadrian. From its conversion to Christianity, the Byzantine Empire attempted to forcibly convert minorities (heterodox Christians or non-Christians) to its version of Christianity. Thus, the Emperor Zeno (born in 427 - reign from 474 to his death in 491) attacks the Jews and the Samaritans. During his reign, the Samaritan temple is destroyed a second time (in 484, it seems), and this, in a definitive way. It will never be rebuilt.
When Christianity became the dominant religion in the Roman Empire, the Samaritans were denied access to Mount Gerizim. A church, protected by ramparts, was built at the top. This was one of the causes of the Samaritan revolt under the leadership of Julianus ben Sabar in the sixth century, a revolt whose repression will be so terrible that the Samaritans, then very numerous in the north of Palestine, became a small residual population. Despite the destruction of the temple, the mountain has remained the religious center of the Samaritans until today. This is how the Samaritan high priest is to reside around Mount Gerizim. This one is chosen within the priestly family (or "house") which is "supposed to descend from the son of Aaron, brother of Moses".


The photographer
Félix Bonfils wasborn in Saint-Hippolyte-du-Fort (France). He moved to Beirut in 1867 where he opened with his wife and his son Adrien, the photographic workshop Maison Bonfils, he renamed in 1878 F. Bonfils and Co..
Bonfils photographed in Lebanon, Egypt, Palestine, Syria and Greece as well as in Constantinople from 1876.
He was very active as soon as he arrives in Lebanon: his catalog mentions more than 15,000 prints in the early 1870s, made from nearly 200 negatives, and 9,000 stereoscopic views.
His works became famous thanks to tourists from the Middle East who brought his photographs as souvenirs. His views could be purchased individually, but they were also available as albums.
However, these photographs, produced by the workshop, could sometimes be the work of his son Adrien or assistants of the company.
In 1876 he returned to Alès (France), where he opened another studio around 1881. The one of Beirut was not closed. His wife Marie-Lydie and his son kept it opened and active after this death in 1885. This establishment was still very active in 1905, when a fire destroyed it.
The Bonfils business continued for several decades after the death of its founder. It was bought in 1918 by Abraham Guiragossian, a partner since 1909, who kept its name. It is mentioned in the Blue Guide in 1932.

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2020 - Wandering Vertexes
A blog by Francis Rousseau