Difference between revisions of "Category:Joachim (subject)"
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According to Christian (and Islamic) traditions, '''Joachim''' (named ''Imran'' in Islamic tradition) was the husband of [[Anne]], the father of [[Mary of Nazareth]] and the grandfather of [[Jesus of Nazareth]]. | According to Christian (and Islamic) traditions, '''Joachim''' (named ''Imran'' in Islamic tradition) was the husband of [[Anne]], the father of [[Mary of Nazareth]] and the grandfather of [[Jesus of Nazareth]]. | ||
* | * --> [[Joachim (cinema)]] -- [[Joachim (art)]] | ||
==Overview== | ==Overview== |
Latest revision as of 22:42, 28 February 2017
According to Christian (and Islamic) traditions, Joachim (named Imran in Islamic tradition) was the husband of Anne, the father of Mary of Nazareth and the grandfather of Jesus of Nazareth.
- --> Joachim (cinema) -- Joachim (art)
Overview
In the mid-2nd century CE, the Protoevangelium of James first introduced the characters of the parents of Mary of Nazareth, Joachim and Anne. Joachim was described as a rich and pious man of the House of David, living at Sepphoris. However, as Anne was barren, Joachim was deemed to be a sinner by the high Priest and his sacrifice in the Temple was rejected. Joachim spent 40 days in prayer in the desert, and angels appeared to both him and his wife to announce the miraculous birth of Mary.
The figure of Joachim was included in the Golden Legend and remained popular in eastern and western Christian art and liturgy until the 16th century when the Reformation rejected the cult of saints and the Council of Trent restricted the depiction of apocryphal events in the Roman Catholic Church.
Joachim, in literature and the arts
- See Joachim (art) -- Joachim (cinema)
As the husband of Anne and the father of Mary of Nazareth, Joachim is a supporting character in some stories of the Life of Mary. In Christian iconography, he has a more prominent role as the recipient of divine revelation about the birth of Mary of Nazareth and is occasionally present in some representations of the Birth of Mary and the Presentation of Mary at the Temple. In cinema, he was cast only in a few Mary movies.
In no fictional work has Joachim a role of protagonist.
External links
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