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John Nesbitt [4]John W. Nesbitt [1]
  1. An early byzantine lead Seal with the image of the incredulity of Thomas.John Cotsonis & John Nesbitt - 2011 - Byzantion 81:127-137.
    This article is the first publication of a lead seal from a private collection that bears the image of the Incredulity of Thomas. Based upon epigraphy and decorative motifs the seal is assigned to the sixth century. It is the only known sphragistic example of the image of the Incredulity of Thomas and its iconography is compared to other contemporary examples in other media, especially objects of pilgrimage art, among which is a sixth-century gold medallion bearing a similar image, also (...)
     
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  2. The Virgin Aigyptia (the Egyptian) on a Byzantine Lead Seal of Attaleia.John Cotsonis & John Nesbitt - 2008 - Byzantion 78:103-113.
    Among Marian epithets one of the more obscure is the designation "the Egyptian." This article traces the term in modern Greek and Byzantine literature. The investigation centers on an icon reputedly painted by the Apostle Luke while he was living in Egypt. Our researches lead to the city of Attaleia where, according to legend, a Lukan icon had found its way. Textual evidence establishes that around this icon a healing cult of the Virgin Aigyptia flourished in the later 11th century. (...)
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  3. An eleventh-century seal with a representation of patriarch Antony II kauleas.John Nesbitt & John Cotsonis - 2004 - Byzantion 74 (2):517-526.