quinity

English

Noun

quinity (countable and uncountable, plural quinities)

  1. A group or set of five people or things.
    • 1997 Ernst Kantorowicz: Erträge Der Doppeltagung Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt page 100
      His subject is a "strange image" among the llth century drawings of the Winchester school, which he calls a quinity. But what is a quinity? Let me explain it in his own words: "It is a Quaternity of God the Father, the Son, St. Mary, and the Holy Ghost; or, if we add the Infant on the lap of the Virgin, we face the seemingly unique representation of what logically must be called a Quinity".
    • 2001 Kantorowicz: Stories of a Historian
      In 1947, for example, in a wonderful study of the "quinity" of Winchester, Kantorowicz interprets an astonishing sketch in a book of offices (officia) copied in Winchester at the beginning of the eleventh century. He invents the term quinity to describe a curious composition showing the Holy Family, in which there appear two identical representations of the divinity side by side.
    • 2004 Scriptoria in Medieval Saxony: St. Pancras in Hamersleben page 142
      It is thus of particular interest to find the Trinity and the Incarnation combined in one medallion in the so- called Quinity of Winchester, of 1023-1035 (fol.75v- fig. 119)195. The Virgin and Child, who holds a book, is next to the two similar figures of God the Father and God the Son, who are sitting on a bow and also holding books. The Holy Ghost alights on Mary's crowned head, and all but she have crossed haloes.
    • 2008 Queens and Queenship in Medieval Europe: Proceedings of a Conference Held at King's College London, April 1995 page 13
      Plate 3 shows Mary as part of what has been called a heavenly Quinity;40 not the traditional trinity of father, son and holy spirit, but a fivesome where the usual three are joined by Mary and her infant
  2. The state of being five; independence of five things.

Synonyms

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.