!!!Early Christianity
!!Masks of Mautern
     
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[{Image src='Wissenssammlungen/Musik-Lexikon/Masken_von_Mautern/030101a.jpg' height='250' 
alt='mask' caption='© Magistrat der Stadt Krems/Donau MA V' width='167'}]
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[{Image src='Wissenssammlungen/Musik-Lexikon/Masken_von_Mautern/030101b.jpg' height='250' 
alt='mask' caption='© Magistrat der Stadt Krems/Donau MA V' width='167'}]
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[{Image src='Wissenssammlungen/Musik-Lexikon/Masken_von_Mautern/030101c.jpg' height='250' 
alt='mask' caption='© Magistrat der Stadt Krems/Donau MA V' width='375' popup='false'}]
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[{Image src='Wissenssammlungen/Musik-Lexikon/Masken_von_Mautern/030101d.jpg' height='250' 
alt='mask' caption='© Magistrat der Stadt Krems/Donau MA V' width='167'}]
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It was only at the beginning of the 20th century that clay masks and
mask fragments dating from the 2nd c. A.D. were discovered near the
town of Mautern on the Danube.

The first  pictures shows a complete mask in the
shape of a calf's head. 

The mask in in the second figure is supposed to be a
devil ("Teufelsfratze") with animal ears and horns but otherwise human.

The fragment of a mask shown in figure three looks like a pig's head,

the one in the last picture has human features.

The masks may have been destined for heathen
masquerades at the beginning of the new year that the church had
prohibited, or for the period of Lent. These are the so-called
calf-and-deer imitations ("Kälbchen- und Hirschlein-Darstellen") and
the "Monstra" (devil's mask). Similar animal masks can be found all around
the world, especially during periods of a changing season. (E. Stadler)
 
 
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© Magistrat der Stadt Krems/Donau MA V - Kulturverwaltung. Körnermarkt 14, A-3500 Krems/D.
[{Metadata Suchbegriff='' Kontrolle='Nein'}]

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