The statue dates from 1544. After storm damage it was rebuilt in 1790-1791. The
Louis XVI style basin was designed by
Niklaus Sprüngli. The statue represents Moses bringing the
Ten Commandments to the
Tribes of Israel. Moses is portrayed with
two groups of rays of light projecting from his head, which represent which tells that after meeting with God the skin of Moses' face became radiant. The twin rays of light come from a longstanding tradition that Moses instead grew
horns. Most commentators have simply said that Jerome mistranslated קָרַ֔ן (
qāran) as “horned” rather than “radiant.” But Bena Elisha Medjuck, a McGill University Department of Jewish Studies graduate student, offered a more complex explanation in his 1988 thesis “Exodus 34:29-35: Moses’ ‘Horns’ in Early Bible Translation and Interpretation.”[1] Medjuck explains that Jerome was well-acquainted both with the variant meanings of
qāran and with the prevailing translation of his contemporary Jewish scholars – with whom he consulted. Jerome chose the “horned” translation as metaphor faithful to the text: a depiction of Moses’ strength and authority, and a glorification of the Lord. Jerome even explained this in his accompanying commentary. Horns were almost universally viewed by ancient civilizations as symbols of power, not as the negative or demonic symbols they became for Christians thousands of years later. For example, both Alexander the Great and Attila the Hun were described as wearing horns. Mellinkoff reminds us that horned helmets were often worn by priests and kings, with the horns connoting that divine power and authority had been bestowed upon them. The correct interpretation of these two words is that Moses was enlightened, that "the skin of his face shone" (as with a
gloriole), as the
KJV has it. The
Septuagint correctly translates the Hebrew phrase as , "his face was glorified"; but
Jerome translated the phrase into
Latin as
cornuta esset facies sua "his face was horned". With apparent Biblical authority, and the added convenience of giving Moses a unique and easily identifiable visual
attribute (something the other Old Testament prophets notably lacked), it remained standard in Western art to depict Moses with small horns until well after the mistranslation was realized in the
Renaissance. In this depiction of Moses, the error has been identified but the artist has chosen to place horns of light on Moses's head to aid in identification. ==References==