This article is missing information about the history of the development of the Coptic cross. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(October 2021)
The typical form of the "Coptic cross" used in the Coptic Church is made up of two bold lines of equal length that intersect at the middle at right angles. Each line terminates in three points, representing the Trinity of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Altogether, the cross has 12 points symbolizing the Apostles, whose mission was to spread the Gospel message throughout the world.[3]
This form of Coptic cross is widely used in the Coptic church and the Ethiopian and Eritrean churches, and so this form of the cross may also be called the "Ethiopian cross" or "Axum cross".[citation needed] Bertran de la Farge dates it to the 4th century and cites it as a predecessor of the Occitan cross.[4][better source needed]
Old Coptic crosses often incorporate a circle,[5][better source needed] as in the form called a "Coptic cross" by Rudolf Koch in his The Book of Signs (1933). Sometimes the arms of the cross extend through the circle (dividing it into four quadrants), as in the "Celtic cross".[citation needed]
In 1984, a modern variant of the Coptic Cross composed of three bars intersecting at right angles in three dimensions was given as a gift by the Coptic Orthodox Church and mounted on the top of the All Africa Conference of Churches building since the Coptic Church is considered to be the mother church in Africa.[6]
One of the forms of the Coptic cross, which is referred to as the Ethiopian Coptic cross,[8] was worn by Stevie Ray Vaughan.[9]Keith Richards[10] also wears an Ethiopian Coptic Cross.
Gallery
Illuminated early form of Coptic Cross at the end of the 4th–5th century Coptic Codex Glazier
5th-century liturgical Coptic relief featuring the Coptic crux ansata