The Ironist

Differing Perspectives

The Celestial Bureaucracy: Hierarchies of Angels

In her third post, Dr. Hara tells us how Seraphim came to outrank Cherubim, and Archangels ended up near the bottom.

In the previous essay, we traced the angel’s transformation from local guardian spirit to cosmic warrior under the influence of Zoroastrian dualism. Yet the question remained: how was this celestial army to be organized? Who outranked whom? What distinguished a Seraph from a Cherub, an Archangel from a mere Angel? The answer came from an unlikely convergence of Jewish apocalyptic literature, ecstatic prophecy, and a mysterious sixth-century Syrian theologian.

The Book of Enoch, written between roughly 200 and 100 BC, survives only in an Ethiopic translation from a lost Greek original, recovered at the end of the eighteenth century and translated by the scholar R.H. Charles in 1912. Enoch introduced the fallen angels – those celestial beings who ‘lusted after the daughters of men’ and brought about the Fall of mankind, establishing the participation of the Prophet Enoch in the glory of the Divine. But more significantly for our purposes, Enoch named and ranked the seven Archangels, assigning each a precise domain: “Uriel is over the world and over the Tartars. Raphael is over the spirit of men. Raquel takes vengeance on the world of the luminaries. Michael, one of the holy angels, to wit, he that is set over the best part of mankind and over chaos. Saraqael is set over the spirits, who sin in the spirit. Gabriel is over Paradise and the serpents and the Cherubim. Remiel, whom God set over those who rise.”

This was a celestial bureaucracy with clear lines of authority. The fallen angels were chained to the Tartarus without mercy, despite Enoch’s plea to the mighty God. And Enoch’s apocalyptic vision of the divine throne drew on the same ecstatic phraseology as Ezekiel and Isaiah: “And I looked and saw a lofty throne: its appearance was a crystal and the wheels thereof as the shining sun, and there was the vision of cherubim. And from underneath the throne came streams of flaming fire so I could not look thereon. And the Great Glory sat thereon, and His raiment shone more brightly than the sun and was whiter than any snow. None of the angels could enter and could behold. Ten thousand times ten thousand stood before Him, yet He needed no counsellor.”

Compare closely the seven Assyro-Babylonian Amesh-Spentas we encountered in the previous essay with Enoch’s seven Archangels, and their functions converge: the Creator in both cases is the pure Spirit of Light, so radiant that even Enoch, the Elect of God, cannot look upon Him. Likewise, St. John in the Book of Revelations refers to the “seven stars” which the Son of God holds in his right hand – a common apocalyptic preoccupation with astrological images that again echoes the planetary symbolism of the older Persian tradition.

Lucifer Devouring the Damned, 13th c. Baptistery San Giovanni, Florence
The Last Judgement, Mosaic from the Cathedral of Torchello, 12th c.

What kind of an Ironist are You?

Take the quiz and find out.

Subscribe now

When the Book of Revelations was incorporated into the canonical texts, the domain of Lucifer and its hierarchy was fast established in Western iconography around the ninth century. The mosaic from the Cathedral of Torchello, dating from the twelfth century, shows demons painted dark blue or black mercilessly carrying the damned to the eternal fire of Hell. By the thirteenth century, the extraordinary mosaic attributed to Coppo di Marcovaldo in the San Giovanni Baptistery in Florence – Lucifer Devouring the Damned – had given the Western imagination its most terrifying vision of the infernal.

Celestial Hierarchies, fresco, Mystras, 11th c.

It fell to a figure known as Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite to impose final order on this host. Drawing on the ecstatic visions of Ezekiel, Isaiah, Enoch, and other apocalyptists, Pseudo-Dionysius systematized the Amesh-Spentas and Enoch’s Archangels into the nine orders of the Celestial Hierarchies – a scheme of a fixed universe initiated by the One as the source of Light, with subordinate Angels forming what we might call the Bureaucracy of the Divine. His definition is precise: “Hierarchy is, in my opinion, a holy order and knowledge and activity which, so far as is attainable, participates in the Divine Likeness, and is lifted up to illuminations given it from God, and correspondingly towards the imitation of God.”

Throne and Seraphim, (detail) wall painting, Monastery Philanthropinon, Ioannina, 1542-60

Furthermore, as Umberto Eco observed, Pseudo-Dionysius contributed the idea of the Sublime Beauty of the Cosmos as the “diffusion of wisdom” – symmetry of numbers, order and proportions becoming ontological principles, as well as moral and aesthetic ones. “Theology has given to the Celestial Beings nine interpretive names,” writes Pseudo-Dionysius, “and among these our divine initiator distinguishes three threefold Orders.” Nearest to God stand “the most holy Thrones and many-eyed and many-winged ones, named in the Hebrew tongue Cherubim and Seraphim.” The second triad contains the Powers, Virtues, and Dominions. The last and lowest choirs of the Celestial Intelligences are the Angels, Archangels, and Principalities.

Cherubim and Seraphim, mosaic, Cathedral of Cefalu, Sicily, 1148

Each order received distinctive visual form. Isaiah’s vision of the Seraphim – “burning ones” – gave Christian art its most extraordinary celestial being: “I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up; and His train filled the sanctuary. Above him stood the Seraphim; each had six wings; with two he covered his face, and with two he covered his feet, and with two he flew.” In Christian iconography, the Seraphim inflame mortals toward Divine love; they are painted in red, their three pairs of wings are red, their swords red as flame.

The Cherubim – from karabu or Kuribu, meaning “propitious, blessed” in Akkadian – are possessors of wisdom. In Ezekiel’s dream, they serve as the chariot of Yahweh: “and he rode upon a cherub and did fly: and he was seen upon the wings of the wind.” In Christian iconography, they carry a single pair of blue wings and are richly garbed as Orthodox bishops. Both Cherubim and Seraphim appear together in the magnificent mosaic of the Cathedral of Cefalu in Sicily, dating from 1148. A rare finding of seven four-winged female terracotta idols, buried at the foundation of the palace of the Assyrian King Adad-nirari III (810–783 BC), may represent early Cherubim figures; their function was apotropaic, and they were called apkallu – the seven sages.

Apkallu, seven four-winged female idols, from terracotta, buried at the foundation of the palace of the Assyrian King Adad-nirari III, 810-783 BC.
Thrones. Painted ceiling of the church at Debre Berhan, Ethiopia

Ezekiel also described the Thrones as wheels of fire – “their appearance and their work was as it were a wheel in the middle of a wheel” – moving through a firmament the color of a “terrible crystal,” around a throne like sapphire on which God sits, suffused in the radiance of the rainbow. Some scholars have suggested that the four-faced god Marduk may have inspired this vision. Their resemblance to the winged sun, the symbol of Ahura-Mazda, is mostly evident.

Four-faced god Marduk, bronze. Neribtu, 1900-1800 BC
The symbol of Ahura-Mazda

The lower orders receive plainer dress. Dominions, Virtues, and Powers wear long albs, golden girdles, and green stoles, carrying golden staves in their right hands and the seal of God in their left. The lowest orders – Principalities, Archangels, and Angels – dress in soldier’s garb with golden belts and carry lance-headed javelins and hatchets.

Seraphim from the Angels’ Liturgy, wall painting, Monastery Philanthropinon, Ioannina, 1542-60
Archangel Michael- ivory 6th c
Archangel Michael: marble plaque 12th c
Archangel Michael: icon, 11th c

The Archangel Michael will adorn the walls of Greek Orthodox monasteries for centuries to come. A monumental example is the seventeenth-century fresco from the monastery of Xeropotamou on Mount Athos, where Michael chains Satan in a scene of triumphant violence — the celestial bureaucrat become warrior, the hierarchy made flesh and fire.

In the next and final piece, we will turn to how individual angelic figures – Gabriel, Michael, Raphael – were depicted across the Byzantine centuries, and how artists navigated the paradox of rendering beings whose very nature transcends visual form.

Contributed by

Dr. Hara Papatheodorou

Author

  • Dr. Hara Papatheodorou was born in Athens. She studied in Montreal, Canada, and in her return to Athens, she taught Art History and the Visual Arts for a number of years at the American College of Greece (DEREE), in Athens.

    She earned her degrees in Fine Arts and Art History from McGill University, in Montreal, Canada, where she taught as well.

    Her doctorial research dealt with The Iconography of Angels in the Byzantine Art, and was accomplished at the University of Ioannina, in Greece.

    She is a practicing artist with many international exhibitions and distinctions for her art. In 1972 won the Silver Medal, in Brussels. In 1973, she was among the finalists for the Grand Prize of Rome, and she is an Associate Member of the French Artists. She has exhibited twice in The Salon of May, at the Grand Palais de Champs Elysee, in Paris.

    She has written many articles on Greek artists, and has participated in a number of conferences, referred to art history aesthetics.  Among them were Essex University in UK (2004), where she delivered a topic on Fairytales in Art: The Shock of the Marvelous, at the Piraeus University in Greece (2008) and The American Women’s Club in Athens (2008), where she delivered a topic on Women, Art and Society: The Dinner Party, dealing with the discrimination on women artists.

    She has recently retired from teaching, but she continues to lecture locally as well as abroad. One of her recent lecture on Body and Death: When I touch your Body with my Hands, was delivered in February 2009, at the American College of Greece. It was part of a Philosophical Seminar on Death and Metaphysics, and her research dealt with the depiction of death in the art of 20th-21st century Art.

    She has traveled extensively in Africa, Central Asia, Europe, North America and Mexico, as well as in India, where she lived for a number of years.

    She resides in Athens, Greece, where she paints and exhibits her work. She is publishing shortly a book on a deceased Greek artist Paschalis Haralampides. Apart from her research on Art History Aesthetics, she writes artistic fairytales, like Fairytales of the Brush, which will be published soon.

    She has a son and two lovely grandchildren, who live in London.

More Irony

From San Blas to Oxford: A Review of Shooting Up

From San Blas to Oxford: A Review of Shooting Up

A missionary family raises four boys in one of Madrid's most drug-ravaged neighbourhoods. Jonathan Tepper's memoir traces an extraordinary journey. Jonathan Tepper’s Shooting Up is much more than the account of four brothers in a missionary family growing up in Spain...

WORDS, WORDS, WORDS III

WORDS, WORDS, WORDS III

Polonius: What do you read, my lord? Hamlet: Words, words, words. Polonius: What is the matter, my lord? Hamlet: Between who? Polonius: I mean, the matter that you read, my lord. (Hamlet, II, ii) As part of The Ironist’s continuing series of articles on language and...

Guardians Before God: The Sumerian Origins of Angels

Guardians Before God: The Sumerian Origins of Angels

Dr Hara's research on the winged messengers of Western faith starts with these wingless creatures guarding Sumerian doorways. This is the story of angels and how they learned to fly... When we think of angels, we conjure images refined by centuries of Christian art:...

RAMBLINGS #10 – Goodbye Mt. Parnassos, Hello War

RAMBLINGS #10 – Goodbye Mt. Parnassos, Hello War

A drive down from myth-haunted Mt. Parnassus into the passes, graveyards, and battlefields Picture Credits: Edward Dodwell, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons   It is said that Zeus, the great philanderer, lay with Mnemosyne (Memory), a Titan, for a marathon...

WORDS, WORDS, WORDS II: Inspiration

WORDS, WORDS, WORDS II: Inspiration

This is the second essay by Peter on the intricacies of the English language. Here, he writes on where inspiration comes from, and why no amount of effort can quite summon it. My first piece in the English language series talked about the quality of writing that...

The Last Puritan

The Last Puritan

Alexander Montgomery writes a fleeting, intimate glimpse of Glenn Gould, the genius and the strange solitude of his greatness. Glenn Gould’s sitting in Fran’s Deli, St. Clair East, and I sit here, watching him from the pub across the street. There he is, the bastard,...

The Awkward One: Rediscovering Mary Bennett

The Awkward One: Rediscovering Mary Bennett

About the most forgettable Bennet sister and a retelling of Pride and Prejudice... “There are few people whom I really love, and still fewer of whom I think well. The more I see of the world, the more am I dissatisfied with it; and every day confirms my belief of the...

The Little Tanagra: Part 2

The Little Tanagra: Part 2

Previously in Part 1, Hara writes about young Arsinoe growing into a woman of remarkable talents at the sanctuary of Artemis at Brauron. But longing for freedom, she begins to plan her escape.     Arsinoe took longer each day to return from her...