As an academic archaeologist, I may have a useful answer. I presume by your question, \"If Hagia Sophia and Hagia Irene were restored to the Church, what would the iconostasis be like?\" you mean what did the original iconostasis look like?
You may want to check out these two websites that will give you a visual image:
http://george.papagiannakis.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/ijac2.jpg
and
http://www.udel.edu/ArtHistory/nees/209/images/8-02.jpg
However, another good way to find out is to consult primary sources. These can be found in such books as:
Mango, C. 2004. The Art of the Byzantine Empire, 312-1453: Sources and Documents. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
In that book Paulus Silentiarius\' Description of St. Sophia from 563 A.D. says:
\"Not only upon the walls which separate the priest from the choir of singers has he set plates of naked silver, but the columns, too, six sets of twain in number...he has...artfully hollowed out discs...within which it [the tool the artist uses for carving] has engraved the figure of the immaculate God...Elsewhere it has carved the host of winged angels...Nor has the artist forgotten the images of those who abandoned the mean labors of their life [i.e. the disciples]...art has depicted the Mother of Christ...the carver\'s tool has incised one symbol that means many words, for it combines the names of teh Empress and Emperor: It is like a shield with a boss in whose middle part has been carved the sign of the cross. And the screen gives access to the priests through three doors. For on each side the workman\'s hand has made a small door.\"
You may also want to consult books such as:
Lowden, J. 1997. Early Christian and Byzantine Art. London: Phaidon Press Ltd.
and
Rodley, L. 1994. Byzantine Art and Architecture: an Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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