R
residentcheese
Guest
Hello,
Last fall I read a highly abridged version of War and Peace, and am now half way through Anna Kerenina. In both I read many references to “the holy pictures” usually in a room or maybe carried by someone.
What are these holy pictures? Are they standard picture owned by every Russian Orthodox, or are they pictures of Christ and saints, like icons, that everyone just happens to have? It just seems that when characters enter a room, special attention is made by the narrator to point out that they looked around for “the holy picture” or “the hly pictures”
I am assuming, for the sake of my reading, it is a picture of Christ, maybe crucified.
Thanks
Matthew
P.S. I put it in this forum because I wasn’t sure where it should go. All I know is Russia is mostly Eastern Orthodox.
Last fall I read a highly abridged version of War and Peace, and am now half way through Anna Kerenina. In both I read many references to “the holy pictures” usually in a room or maybe carried by someone.
What are these holy pictures? Are they standard picture owned by every Russian Orthodox, or are they pictures of Christ and saints, like icons, that everyone just happens to have? It just seems that when characters enter a room, special attention is made by the narrator to point out that they looked around for “the holy picture” or “the hly pictures”
I am assuming, for the sake of my reading, it is a picture of Christ, maybe crucified.
Thanks
Matthew
P.S. I put it in this forum because I wasn’t sure where it should go. All I know is Russia is mostly Eastern Orthodox.