A templon (from the Greek τέμπλον, meaning "temple") is a chancel screen or barrier in Byzantine and Eastern Orthodox church architecture that physically and symbolically separates the nave, where the laity congregate, from the sanctuary, the sacred altar area reserved for clergy during liturgical rites.[1][2] It originated in early Christian basilicas of the 4th to 6th centuries as low, often Π-shaped enclosures that marked the boundary of the holy space, evolving to facilitate ritual visibility while maintaining hierarchical division between the earthly and divine realms.[1][3]The templon's development accelerated in the Middle Byzantine period (9th to 15th centuries), transitioning from rudimentary stone partitions to more sophisticated open colonnades that allowed partial views of the Eucharist, thereby enhancing the participatory yet reverent experience of the liturgy.[2][3] By the 10th century, it incorporated monumental icons—typically of Christ, the Virgin Mary, and saints—positioned above the barrier, which marked the beginning of its transformation into the fuller iconostasis seen in later Orthodox traditions and still used today.[1] This evolution reflected broader theological emphases on mediation between the human and divine, with the templon serving as a permeable threshold rather than an impermeable wall.[2]Architecturally, the templon typically consists of vertical posts or colonnettes supporting a horizontal architrave or lintel, often framed by closure slabs in the lower sections featuring carved geometric, floral, or vine motifs in marble or stone.[1] While primarily constructed from durable marble in monumental churches like Hagia Sophia, wooden variants appeared in smaller or regional contexts, such as in Cappadocia or the Balkans.[1][4] Its decorative program, including frescoes and reliefs, underscored its role in visual theology, guiding worshippers' contemplation of sacred mysteries without direct access to the altar.[2][4]
Introduction
Definition and Purpose
The templon is a chancel barrier or screen in Byzantine and Eastern Orthodox church architecture that separates the nave, designated for the laity, from the sanctuary, known as the bema or altar area.[5][6] This structure functions primarily as a physical and visual partition, designed to preserve the liturgical mystery by partially concealing the sacred rites performed by the clergy from the congregation's direct view.[6][7] Openings within the templon, such as railings or arches, permit auditory access to the liturgy and limited visual glimpses, thereby fostering a sense of participation while upholding the sanctity of the rituals.[5][6]Symbolically, the templon embodies the division between the earthly realm of the faithful in the nave and the divine realm of the sanctuary, serving as a threshold that both separates and connects these spaces.[7][6] It reinforces the sacredness of the holy area by isolating the clergy during the performance of rites, enhancing the mystical and eschatological dimensions of worship.[6][7] Over time, the templon evolved from a more open, partial enclosure to a denser, more opaque barrier, reflecting shifts in liturgical emphasis on enclosure and reverence.[5][7]Unlike the later iconostasis, which is a fully developed, icon-covered wall that more completely obscures the sanctuary, the templon precedes it as a simpler screen focused on architectural separation rather than extensive iconographic elaboration.[5][7] This distinction underscores the templon's foundational role in maintaining the balance between accessibility and mystery in Eastern Christian worship.[6]
Etymology
The term templon derives from the Late Greektémp lon (τέμπλον), meaning a temple or shrine, which entered the language as a loanword from Latin templum, denoting a consecrated space or sacred enclosure marked out for religious observation and augury.[8] This etymological root emphasizes the templon's role in delineating holy ground, akin to ancient practices of bounding areas for divine interaction.[9]Scholars have noted possible conceptual links between the templon and the Temple of Jerusalem, where veils and barriers partitioned the sanctuary from profane areas, serving as a model for Byzantine sacred partitioning to evoke similar distinctions between the divine and the earthly.[10]The terminology evolved from early Christian cancelli—Latin for lattice-like screens enclosing the presbytery, borrowed from Greekkankelloí (κάγκελλοι), denoting latticed barriers—to the more ornate Byzantine templon by the sixth century, particularly in eastern contexts.[11] In SlavicOrthodox traditions, this progressed to iconostasis, a compound Greek term meaning "image-stand," reflecting the addition of icons atop the structure.[11]Etymological debates among scholars center on the precise adaptation of templon for church screens, though the loan from Latin remains the dominant explanation for its ecclesiastical application.[11]
Historical Development
Origins and Influences
The templon emerged in the Eastern Roman Empire during the 5th century AD as a barrier separating the nave from the sanctuary in Christian churches, with proto-forms appearing as early as the 4th century in low chancel screens known as cancelli. These early structures, often constructed from wood or marble, served to delineate sacred space while allowing visual and auditory access to liturgical rites. Archaeological evidence from regions like Palestine and Syria indicates that such barriers were widespread by the mid-5th century, evolving from simple railings to more defined screens with columns and lintels.[12][3]Key influences on the templon's development stemmed from Jewish traditions, particularly the veils and barriers of the Second Temple in Jerusalem that concealed the Holy of Holies, as well as Torah arks and screens in synagogues designed to protect sacred scrolls. Early Christian architects adapted these elements to emphasize ritual secrecy and hierarchical access, mirroring the Temple's spatial divisions between profane and divine realms. In the Holy Land, chancel screens in 4th-6th century churches often featured motifs like crosses and symbolic representations of Golgotha, reflecting this syncretic heritage from nearby synagogues.[12][13]Classical Roman and Greek precedents also shaped the templon, drawing from cancelli—lattice-like screens used in public buildings and judicial spaces to regulate crowds and entry— as well as the spatial divisions (templa) in theaters that separated performance areas from spectators. Post-Constantine liturgical practices further propelled this evolution, with barriers becoming standardized in the 4th and 5th centuries to enhance visibility of sacraments while restricting lay access, influenced by Syrian and Palestinian regional traditions. Recent scholarship highlights these eastern Mediterranean roots, underscoring the templon's role in adapting pre-Christian spatial concepts to Christian worship.[3][12][14]
Early Examples
The earliest documented templon dates to 463 AD at the Monastery of St. John Stoudios in Constantinople, where a basilica dedicated to John the Baptist featured a chancel barrier of marble screens and columns arranged in a π-shaped configuration around the altar, with one large central door and two smaller side doors.[15] This structure marked an initial implementation of the templon as a physical divider in liturgical spaces, separating the nave from the sanctuary while allowing controlled access during services.A prominent example from the mid-6th century is found in the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, built between 532 and 537 AD under Emperor Justinian I. The templon there comprised 12 silver-plated marble columns, each approximately 4.94 meters tall, positioned with six across the front and three on each side to form a low architrave enclosing the sanctuary on three sides.[16] Contemporary accounts, including those by Procopius in his De Aedificiis, highlight the architectural integration of this barrier, emphasizing its role in enhancing the church's majestic interior without fully obstructing views of the altar.Other 6th-century sites provide additional evidence of early templon use, such as the Church of St. Polyeuktos in Constantinople, constructed around 524–527 AD by Anicia Juliana, where architectural remains suggest a similar marble-based screen system typical of the period.[17] In Syria, fragments from basilicas like Qalb Loze, a 5th–6th-century structure in northern Syria, indicate templon elements integrated into wide-aisled basilical plans, reflecting regional adaptations of the barrier for liturgical separation.[18]Early templons shared consistent characteristics: they were low in height, typically reaching waist to chest level to maintain visual and auditory connection between the congregation and the sanctuary; constructed with open colonnettes supporting an architrave, allowing passage through intercolumnar spaces; devoid of icons, focusing instead on structural simplicity; and often supplemented with curtains for temporary closure during sacred rites.[3] These features prioritized functional division over ornate enclosure, aligning with the liturgical needs of the era.Archaeological findings continue to illuminate these proto-forms, as seen in a 2023 study of the City Basilica at Patara in Lycia, which uncovered templon fragments—including stylobates, bases, slabs, and columns—dating to the late 5th to early 6th century and linking directly to contemporary Byzantine liturgical arrangements.[19] The motifs and dimensions of these pieces, such as carved crosses and geometric patterns on slabs, underscore the templon's role in early Christian worship spaces across Anatolia.
Evolution to Iconostasis
Following the end of Iconoclasm in 843 AD, the templon underwent significant transformations beginning in the 9th century, with the Second Council of Nicaea in 787 AD initiating icon veneration by ending the first Iconoclastic period. During the Iconoclastic periods (726–843 AD), icons were removed from templons, resuming and expanding their integration only after the final restoration in 843 AD. This led to the templon's evolution from low, open colonnades—typically waist-high marble screens—to more substantial forms with colonnettes supporting architraves, as seen in early Byzantine examples like those in the Holy Land, where visibility into the sanctuary was still maintained for liturgical participation.[12][20] These changes reflected a broader post-Iconoclastic restoration of sacred art, emphasizing permanence over the temporary barriers of earlier periods.[21]From the 9th to 14th centuries, the templon further developed with the addition of icons, known as proskynetaria, placed in the intercolumnar spaces and on architraves, gradually increasing opacity through the use of curtains or veils during services. Heightened structures emerged around the 11th century in regions like Greece and Asia Minor, rising to chest or shoulder level, which partially obscured the altar while allowing glimpses during key rituals.[12] By the 12th to 13th centuries, in monastic contexts such as Mount Athos, barriers reached near-full nave height, incorporating carved marble or wooden elements that supported icons of Christ, the Virgin, and saints, transforming the templon into a more symbolic divider between the earthly nave and divine sanctuary.[5] This period saw a functional shift toward greater concealment, aligning with evolving liturgical practices that prioritized mystery and hierarchical separation.[22]In the 15th to 16th centuries, the templon standardized as the iconostasis in SlavicOrthodox churches, particularly in Russia and Wallachia, featuring tiered rows of icons that fully walled off the sanctuary. In Russia, icons were notably absent from barriers until the late 14th century, after which wooden structures with multiple registers—depicting feasts, hierarchs, and the Deesis—became common by the 15th century, often extending to the ceiling.[20] Wallachian examples lagged slightly, with icons emerging only in the early 16th century, initially in single-row designs influenced by late Byzantine Balkan traditions, evolving to two-row formats by mid-century amid regional political changes.[23] This standardization was heavily shaped by the Palaiologan Renaissance, which revived classical motifs and expressive iconography, spreading from Constantinople to Slavic lands through artistic exchanges.[24]Several interconnected factors drove this evolution, including liturgical emphases on theosis—or human divinization through contemplation—which favored icon-filled barriers as aids to spiritual ascent, alongside monastic reforms like hesychasm that promoted silent prayer before images.[7] Cultural exchanges further contributed, such as Venetian Renaissance influences in Greek and Balkan regions during the late 15th and 16th centuries, introducing decorative elements to templon-derived structures.[23] Recent analyses, including a 2017 study on regional timelines, highlight how these developments varied, with icons delayed in peripheral areas like Russia and Wallachia until the 14th and 16th centuries, respectively, underscoring the templon's adaptation to local theological and artistic contexts.[21]
Architectural Features
Design Elements
The templon features a basic structure composed of low parapet walls, which are topped by colonnettes or piers supporting an architrave.[5] This assembly forms a barrier separating the nave from the sanctuary, positioned at the entrance to the apse and aligned with the synthronon, the tiered seating for bishops and clergy.[5] In its early forms, the templon typically reached a height of 1-2 meters, allowing visibility into the sanctuary while maintaining spatial division.[5] Over time, this height increased, contributing to the evolution toward the taller iconostasis.[3]The templon's openings are designed to facilitate liturgical processions and movements, centered on a primary central opening through which processions and the Eucharist elements pass.[3] These are typically flanked by two side openings reserved for deacons, forming a triple arcade configuration that can vary from three to five bays depending on the church's scale.[5]Decorative motifs on the templon include carved crosses, acanthus leaves, and geometric patterns, which adorn the parapet walls and architrave to emphasize symbolic and aesthetic elements.[5] Following the end of Iconoclasm in the 9th century, the design incorporated spaces for icons or frescoes, integrating visual representations of sacred figures into the barrier's framework.[5]Functional adaptations of the templon include slots or provisions for hanging curtains, known as the katapetasma, which could be drawn across the openings to provide temporary closure during the Eucharist, enhancing the ritual's sanctity by limiting visibility.[25] This use of curtains dates back to at least the 6th century in Eastern Christian practices and complemented the templon's open structure.[25]
Materials and Variations
In early Byzantine templons, marble was the predominant material, often sourced from Proconnesian quarries near Constantinople and fashioned into slabs, posts, and decorative panels. These white, fine-grained marbles were valued for their durability and aesthetic qualities, enabling intricate carvings of crosses, acanthus motifs, and geometric patterns. For instance, in the 5th-century City Basilica at Patara, templon posts and capitals were carved from marble blocks measuring approximately 108–110 cm in height, with monolithic shafts and Corinthian-style capitals featuring acanthus leaves.[26] Similarly, 10th–11th-century marble panels from Constantinople workshops served as bases for templons and low chancel barriers, emphasizing the material's role in imperial ecclesiastical architecture.[27]From the post-12th century onward, wood emerged as a primary material, particularly for its portability, ease of carving, and availability in forested regions, allowing for more elaborate and transportable screens. Wooden templons facilitated the integration of painted or gilt icons into frames, marking a shift from rigid stone barriers to dynamic structures that supported evolving liturgical practices. In peripheral areas like Wallachia and Russia, where marble was scarce, wood became standard; Russian adaptations of the Byzantine templon, evolving into full-height iconostases by the 15th century, relied on timber for multi-tiered designs that accommodated extensive icon tiers, often gilded for visual splendor. The earliest surviving wooden examples date to the 14th century, reflecting local adaptations prioritizing functionality over monumental permanence.[28][29]For prestige, templons occasionally incorporated metal elements, such as copper repoussé sheeting or silver-gilt plating on beams and frames, enhancing their sanctity and imperial associations. A 10th–11th-century copper repoussé covering for a templon beam, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, exemplifies this technique, where thin metal sheets were hammered into relief scenes for overlay on wooden or stone supports. Bronze and silver elements were rarer but used in elite contexts to denote hierarchy and divine radiance.[30]Construction techniques varied by material and context, often employing monolithic columns carved from single marble blocks to ensure structural integrity and aesthetic unity. In the Patara basilica, templon colonnettes integrated shafts and capitals monolithically, fixed into limestone stylobates via dowels, forming a stable Π-shaped barrier. Reused spolia—ancient Roman fragments like column bases and capitals—were commonly incorporated, recycling pagan-era materials into Christian screens to symbolize continuity and triumph, as seen in broader Byzantine practices where such elements were Christianized with crosses. In rock-cut churches of Cappadocia, templons were directly hewn from soft volcanic tuff stone, creating integral screens without separate assembly, adapted to the cave-like environments of 9th–11th-century monastic complexes.[26][31][32]Temporal variations reflect resource availability and artistic evolution: early templons (5th–7th centuries) were typically low marble screens, around 1–1.5 meters high, prioritizing openness while demarcating space. By the later Byzantine period (12th–15th centuries), wooden frames with gilt icon integrations raised heights and added tiers, evolving into the multi-tiered post-Byzantine iconostases common in Orthodox traditions. Preservation poses ongoing challenges, with marble prone to erosion from environmental exposure; recent scholarship on the Patara templon, including a 2023 analysis of excavated remains, highlights worn stylobate blocks and proposes reconstructions based on comparative fragments to address fragmentation and decay. While 3D modeling has advanced such efforts in related sites, Patara's study emphasizes analog reconstruction to mitigate further deterioration.[19][26]
Notable Examples and Regional Adaptations
Byzantine and Early Examples
One of the most prominent early examples of a templon is found in the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, constructed in the 6th century under Emperor Justinian I. The templon featured twelve marble columns covered in silver, standing approximately 4.94 meters tall, with intervening slabs of marble also sheathed in silver and bearing carved monograms of Justinian and his consort Theodora. These elements, now lost but documented through historical accounts and archaeological references, underscored the imperial patronage and luxurious materiality of Justinianic church architecture, integrating the barrier into the church's grand spatial hierarchy.[33]The Monastery of Stoudios (Hagios Ioannes Studios) in Constantinople provides crucial archaeological evidence for even earlier templon development, dating to its construction in 463 CE as a basilica dedicated to John the Baptist. Surviving fragments reveal an early parapet design, consisting of low marble slabs forming a simple barrier between the nave and sanctuary, which marked the transition to more structured screens in subsequent Byzantine churches. This 5th-century implementation reflects pre-Justinianic basilical forms, where the templon served as a modest yet functional divider in monastic liturgical spaces.[34][35]In the rock-cut churches of Cappadocia, such as those in the Göreme Open-Air Museum from the 10th to 12th centuries, templons were ingeniously carved directly into the tuff cave walls, adapting the barrier to the natural topography. These integrated screens often featured painted imitation curtains—vibrant, aniconic patterns in red and white, averaging 75 cm long and 15 cm wide, positioned as borders below figural frescoes on naos or apse walls—evoking draped veils that symbolically separated the sacred from the profane. Examples like the Dark Church (Karanlık Kilise) illustrate how such frescoed elements enhanced the templon's role in enclosed, monastic environments, blending architectural permanence with illusory textile motifs rooted in Roman and biblical traditions.[36][37]St. Mark's Basilica in Venice, begun in the 11th century, incorporates a marble templon with Byzantine-style arcades, exemplifying the cultural and artistic transfer from Constantinople facilitated by Venetian-Crusader interactions during the period. The structure's arcaded screen, influenced by eastern prototypes, adapted the templon form to a Western context while retaining its function as a sanctuary divider, as seen in the basilica's multi-domed interior modeled after Byzantine imperial churches.[38]These Byzantine and early templons exemplify core standards of the tradition, emphasizing barriers that mediated visibility, access, and ritual performance in the Divine Liturgy. Recent studies, including those from Dumbarton Oaks, highlight their contextual role in dramatizing thresholds—through curtains hung on hooks or painted simulations—that drew on scriptural imagery like the Tabernacle to regulate light, movement, and divine presence, thereby structuring communal worship in both imperial and monastic settings.[39]
Post-Byzantine and Peripheral Regions
In post-Byzantine Russia, the templon evolved into a solid, multi-tiered iconostasis that fully separated the nave from the sanctuary, marking a departure from the open Byzantine barriers. This shift began in the 15th century, influenced by the theological legacy of the 14th-century hesychast controversy, with large deisis panels emphasizing theological balance, and culminated in the 16th century with six-tier wooden structures lacking open arches, such as forefathers, patriarchs, prophets, feasts, deisis, and local icons rows.[7] The Cathedral of the Annunciation in Moscow, rebuilt in the 1480s, exemplifies this development through its high, wooden iconostasis incorporating earlier 14th-century elements by Theophanes the Greek, reflecting Moscow's emerging role as a religious center after Constantinople's fall.[7]In the Balkans, particularly Wallachia during the 16th century, iconostases adapted as hybrid marble-wood screens under Ottomansuzerainty, blending late-Byzantine Balkan traditions with Ottoman-inspired motifs and Latin Renaissance influences from Veneto-Greek sources.[23] These variations, seen in structures like the Cotmeana church's initial wooden iconostasis later replaced by masonry, incorporated sculpted elements and inscriptions, as analyzed in studies reconstructing lost prototypes through extant icons and components.[23] Recent scholarship from 2016–2021, including examinations of iconographic programs, highlights how these fusions preserved Orthodox liturgical functions amid cultural exchanges.[23]Surviving templons in the Greek islands, such as those at the Panayia Katapoliani on Paros from the 8th–9th centuries, demonstrate post-Iconoclasm persistence through marble closure slabs featuring cruciform monograms and inscriptions tied to imperial patronage.[40] These elements, including early Christian templon screens, maintained visual and symbolic barriers in insular settings, resisting full enclosure even after the empire's fragmentation.[41]In peripheral Anatolian regions like Cappadocia's extensions, 11th-century templon architraves adapted to rock-cut and rural church environments, as evidenced by the Yamanlar Mountain example near Izmir with rhombus motifs integrated into geometric and floral designs.[42] This rare artifact, dated to the Middle Byzantine period, parallels broader peripheral decorative traditions from the 5th–13th centuries, emphasizing functional simplicity in non-imperial contexts.[42]Recent excavations in Lykia, such as at Patara's City Basilica in 2023, have uncovered templon fragments including marble posts and epistyles, enabling reconstructions that reveal three-bay arrangements with ciborium supports, underscoring adaptations in late antique to early Byzantine peripheral sites.[19] Ongoing regional scholarship in Turkey and Eastern Europe focuses on preservation efforts, integrating archaeological data from these findings to document templon evolution and liturgical roles amid modern conservation challenges.[19]