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Architectural Representation in Medieval Textual and Material Culture / ed. by Karl Kinsella, Hannah M. Bailey, Daniel Thomas.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Places and Spaces, Medieval to ModernPublisher: Leeds : ARC Humanities Press, [2023]Copyright date: ©2023Description: 1 online resource (212 p.)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9781802700763
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 809/.93357 23
LOC classification:
  • PN56.A73 A73 2023
Other classification:
  • online - DeGruyter
Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- Introduction ARCHITECTURAL REPRESENTATION IN MEDIEVAL TEXTUAL AND MATERIAL CULTURE -- Chapter 1 DESIGNING THE REGENSBURG SPIRE AND HARBURG TABERNACLE: THE GEOMETRIES OF TWO GREAT GERMAN GOTHIC DRAWINGS -- Chapter 2 WILFRID’S RESTORATION OF THE CHURCH AT YORK AND THE PERMANENCE OF SACRED BUILDINGS IN POST- CONVERSION NORTHUMBRIA -- Chapter 3 HEAVEN- ROOFS AND HOLY ALTARS: ENVISIONING A SEVENTH- CENTURY ENGLISH CHURCH IN ALDHELM’S CARMINA ECCLESIASTICA 3 -- Chapter 4“BEATEN DOWN AND BUILT ANEW”: SAINT ERKENWALD AND OLD ST. PAUL’S -- Chapter 5 CASTLE VIEWSCAPES IN LITERATURE AND LANDSCAPES -- Chapter 6 ARCHITECTURAL ALIGNMENT IN EARLY MEDIEVAL ENGLISH SETTLEMENTS: ZONING, MEANING, AND FUNCTION -- Chapter 7 UNDERNEATH THE ARCHES: PETER OF EBOLI AND THE ORDERLY ARCHITECTURE OF NORMAN SICILY -- Chapter 8READING THE SAINT’S CHURCH: A NORTHERN PERSPECTIVE -- Select Bibliography -- Index
Summary: Exploring the work of writers, illuminators, and craftspeople, this volume demonstrates the pervasive nature of architecture as a category of medieval thought. The architectural remnants of the past—from castles and cathedrals to the lowliest village church—provide many people with their first point of contact with the medieval period and its culture. Such concrete survivals provide a direct link to both the material experience of medieval people and the ideological and imaginative worldview which framed their lives. The studies collected in this volume show how attention to architectural representation can contribute to our understanding of not only the history of architectural thought but also the history of art, the intersection between textual and material culture, and the medieval experience of space and place.

Frontmatter -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- Introduction ARCHITECTURAL REPRESENTATION IN MEDIEVAL TEXTUAL AND MATERIAL CULTURE -- Chapter 1 DESIGNING THE REGENSBURG SPIRE AND HARBURG TABERNACLE: THE GEOMETRIES OF TWO GREAT GERMAN GOTHIC DRAWINGS -- Chapter 2 WILFRID’S RESTORATION OF THE CHURCH AT YORK AND THE PERMANENCE OF SACRED BUILDINGS IN POST- CONVERSION NORTHUMBRIA -- Chapter 3 HEAVEN- ROOFS AND HOLY ALTARS: ENVISIONING A SEVENTH- CENTURY ENGLISH CHURCH IN ALDHELM’S CARMINA ECCLESIASTICA 3 -- Chapter 4“BEATEN DOWN AND BUILT ANEW”: SAINT ERKENWALD AND OLD ST. PAUL’S -- Chapter 5 CASTLE VIEWSCAPES IN LITERATURE AND LANDSCAPES -- Chapter 6 ARCHITECTURAL ALIGNMENT IN EARLY MEDIEVAL ENGLISH SETTLEMENTS: ZONING, MEANING, AND FUNCTION -- Chapter 7 UNDERNEATH THE ARCHES: PETER OF EBOLI AND THE ORDERLY ARCHITECTURE OF NORMAN SICILY -- Chapter 8READING THE SAINT’S CHURCH: A NORTHERN PERSPECTIVE -- Select Bibliography -- Index

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Exploring the work of writers, illuminators, and craftspeople, this volume demonstrates the pervasive nature of architecture as a category of medieval thought. The architectural remnants of the past—from castles and cathedrals to the lowliest village church—provide many people with their first point of contact with the medieval period and its culture. Such concrete survivals provide a direct link to both the material experience of medieval people and the ideological and imaginative worldview which framed their lives. The studies collected in this volume show how attention to architectural representation can contribute to our understanding of not only the history of architectural thought but also the history of art, the intersection between textual and material culture, and the medieval experience of space and place.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.

In English.

Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 06. Mrz 2024)