Since today is the feast of St Lawrence, we continue our series on the early Christian monuments of Ravenna with the mausoleum of Galla Placidia, which contains one of the most famous ancient images of him. Galla Placidia was the daughter of the Emperor Theodosius, who reigned from 379 until his death in 395; she was born sometime between 388 and 393. For most of her life, she lived in the thick of the very complex dynastic politics of the decaying Roman Empire, married first to Ataulf, the king of the Visigoths, who was assassinated less than two years later (in September of 415), then to the Emperor Constantius III in 417, who died after four years and the birth of their two children. She then remained a widow for the rest of her life, acting as regent for her son, Valentinian III, in the earliest years of his reign, and living in Ravenna, then the de facto capital of the Western Roman Empire. She was also a great and devout benefactor of the Church, and a close collaborator of the bishop of Ravenna, St Peter Chrysologus.
The small building which has long been known as her mausoleum was in point of fact most likely not built as such, but rather as a chapel dedicated to St Lawrence; it is not at all certain that either of the sarcophagi still kept within it (shown below) was originally hers. One of the most interesting signs of the shift from Roman paganism to Christianity is the lack of external decoration, and the concomitant focus on the interior, where pagan religious structures were often very beautifully decorated on the outside, but had a very plain interior. (Photos by Nicola de’ Grandi.)The ancient Romans generally preferred mosaics with blue backgrounds representing the sky, where the later Byzantine tradition preferred gold backgrounds, representing heaven.
At the ends of the two transepts are two different representations of the same set of motifs: deer drinking from a natural water source, in reference to the first words of Psalm 41, “As the hart panteth after the fountains of water; so my soul panteth after thee, O God”; vines, referring to Christ’s words “ I am the vine, you are the branches”, with two Apostles in their midst; at the center of the arches, the XP monogram, decorated with the Greek letters alpha and omega, from Apocalypse 1, 8.
In the central cupola, an empty Cross on a starry background, and the symbols of the four Evangelists at the corners.
One of two sarcophagi preserved within the church, which have no inscriptions to identify their occupants; dated from the later fourth to mid-fifth century.