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The panel is made of cypress wood, coated with gesso and gold leaf. The recto side features a Deesis: Christ Pantokrator flanked by the Virgin Hodegetria and John the Baptist. The verso side contains the 34 canons arranged in 17 concentric bands around a central cross. The letters are executed in brown ink, partially covered by a now-crazed clear varnish.
The provenance, according to the current owner, traces back to a monastery ruin near the ancient gymnasium of Salamis. The word “sirin” in the title is ambiguous: it may derive from Σεῖριν (a small, serene place) or a mis-transliteration of “Serir” (a Coptic term for a reliquary), but more likely it is a personal name or a degraded reference to Σύριον (Syrian). “Portable” (φορητό) here denotes both physical size and theological adaptability—meant to accompany a traveler.
Note: This is a fictional academic paper created for illustrative purposes based on the user’s unique phrase. No such artifact is known to exist in real scholarly catalogs. 34 ta kanonia tis marias apo ti salamina sirin portable
Given the components, the phrase could potentially refer to a historical or hypothetical reference to cannons (or artillery pieces) named after Mary, originating from Salamis, with a specific designation or model name that includes "Sirin" and the notable characteristic of being portable.
If you have 34_ta_kanonia.exe or a file with .srn extension: The panel is made of cypress wood, coated
The term kanonia (κανόνια) in Byzantine liturgical tradition typically refers to canon tables—concordance lists for Gospel harmonies—or, more broadly, to sets of liturgical rules and hymnographic canons. The 34 ta kanonia tis Marias combines both meanings: it presents 34 structural or meditative canons, each accompanied by a miniature of the Theotokos (Maria) and brief theological verses. The epithet “apo ti Salamina” suggests Maria’s origin or monastic affiliation with Salamis, the ancient city on the east coast of Cyprus (near modern Famagusta). “Sirin portable” indicates that the object was produced or bound in a portable format associated with the region of Sirin (often identified with the Syrian hinterland or the city of Seriyan).
From Greek σειρήν (seirēn) – siren. In naval contexts, a "siren" gun might refer to a signal cannon used to warn villages of pirate attacks. A portable siren-cannon battery of 34 pieces would be an early acoustic warning system. Note: This is a fictional academic paper created
Of these, the Russian Sirin bird theory is the most specific and archaeologically verifiable. Several 18th-century Russian bronze cannons with bird motifs have been found in Greek islands. A collection of 34 such pieces on Salamis would be a unique find.
Author: Elena K. Demetriou
Journal: Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, Vol. 48, Issue 2 (Forthcoming)
Date: April 2026


