Elysium: A Visual History of Angelology is a richly illustrated exploration of how angels have been imagined, described, and depicted across centuries of art, religion, and literature.
Written by scholar and cultural critic Ed Simon, this volume brings together striking imagery and accessible commentary to examine the enduring fascination with celestial beings across Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and beyond.
In popular culture, angels are often reduced to gentle, sentimental figures--but scripture and sacred tradition tell a far stranger story. From the fear-inducing messengers of ancient texts to the complex hierarchies of medieval theology, Elysium traces how angels have embodied humanity's attempts to understand the divine, the unknowable, and the limits of the mortal world.
Drawing on illuminated manuscripts, religious art, literature, and modern visual culture, Simon maps the development of angelic orders and legendary figures such as Michael, Gabriel, and Uriel, while also exploring how artists and writers across cultures have grappled with angelic presence, power, and symbolism. Lavishly illustrated throughout, the book invites readers to encounter angels not as decorative motifs, but as unsettling, awe-inspiring figures that reflect deeper questions about faith, fear, and transcendence.
Elysium is an authoritative and visually arresting reference for readers interested in religious history, myth, art, and the symbolic language of the sacred.
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