The pulpit is 415 cm high, 371 wide at the base, and 259.5 deep. The main reliefs measure 33.5 x 44.5 inches, and the single figures such as the Daniel/Fortitude figure 22 inches. The pulpit has a large platform, a regular
hexagon held up by seven columns and currently reached by modern steps in wood. The outer face of the low parapet around this space has five panels in marble
relief, showing scenes from the
Life of Christ; the sixth side allows access. Many have suffered considerable damage, with heads and parts of bodies missing; the
Napoleonic looting of art is usually blamed for this. The seven columns, six at the corners of the hexagon, and one in the centre, have shafts of different lengths. The longer ones have a short base of mouldings, and the others rest on sculpted figures of lions, and in the centre a group of human and animal figures around a larger base. All have capitals at the top of the shaft (their style is discussed below). The main body is made from
Carrara marble, quarried nearby, for which Pisa was the main shipping port. The shafts of the columns and smaller "colonnettes" are of polished
granite or a "variegated red marble". They are perhaps Roman
spolia, perhaps from
Orvieto.
, including Annunciation, Adoration of the Shepherds, and a Washing of the Christ Child''.
Large reliefs The most famous panel is the
Nativity scene, which is combined with an
Annunciation at top left, an
Adoration of the Shepherds at right, and a
Washing of the Christ Child at the bottom. The Virgin Mary appears twice, as does the baby
Jesus. The Jesus in the bath, as usual seeming rather well-developed for a newborn, has lost his head and an arm, and the ox and ass behind the manger holding the other Jesus are cut off at the bottom of the neck. The "massive, reclining figure of the Virgin" in the
Nativity dominates the scene, while the "immediately juxtaposed repetition of her head in that of the Virgin Annunciate creates a strong central accent which was once completed by the now mutilated figure of the Christ Child". There is a clear hieratic progression in the size of the figures, with the reclining figure of the Nativity Virgin the largest. She is far larger than the trio at the bottom and front of the picture space:
Saint Joseph and the two nurses. This hieratic element is much less marked in the other reliefs, though still present. The scenes become progressively more crowded with figures, perhaps suggesting that they were designed in their narrative sequence. The series continues with an
Adoration of the Magi, a
Presentation of Jesus at the Temple,
Crucifixion of Jesus, and finally a
Last Judgment. An
eagle lectern, an eagle with spread wings on which books and papers could be rested, projects at the corner between the
Crucifixion and the
Last Judgement. It is certain, from some remains, that the backgrounds had "strongly patterned vitreous glazes on a
gesso foundation". Some of the figures have inset black pieces for the pupils of the eyes, a common practice, and very likely the whole reliefs were painted in colours.
Middle level Below the
Last Judgement is a carved inscription: ANNO MILLENO BIS CENTUM BISQUE TRICENO HOC OPUS INSINGNE SCULPSIT NICOLA PISANUS LAUDETUR DINGNE TAM BENE DOCTA MANUS (In the year 1260, Nicola Pisano carved this noble work. May so greatly gifted a hand be praised as it deserves). '' '' '', with inscription below, and eagle above Below this there is a zone where six relatively small relief figures, "almost in the round", fill the spaces between the capitals of the columns and "an archivolt formed of trilobe arches with pierced cusps" under the panels. Their subjects are often taken to be the "Christian Virtues" (Charity, Fortitude, Temperance, Prudence, St John the Baptist, and Faith), but there has been a good deal of discussion over this, and even by 2000 "it has not been possible to obtain general consent even about the names of most of these figures". The most famous is the nude male said to represent
Daniel as "Fortitude", who is (all are agreed) clearly based on classical images of
Hercules, in a
contrapposto pose. These figures are joined by arched elements with figures in the
spandrels of the
Four Evangelists, with miniature attributes, and
Old Testament kings and prophets. File:Pisa - Baptisterio - Interior - Presentation in the Temple.jpg|
Presentation in the Temple File:Pisa, battistero, pulpito di Nicola Pisano, foto di Carlo Dell'Orto 04.JPG|Detail of
Last Judgment File:Pisa, battistero, pulpito di Nicola Pisano, foto di Carlo Dell'Orto 01.JPG|Saint
John the Evangelist, with eagle attribute, in a
spandrel File:Baptisterio púlpito 02.JPG|Corner, at the mid-level File:Toscana (6217588765).jpg|The base of the central column == Sources and influences ==