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El. knyga: Lost Artefacts from Medieval England and France: Representation, Reimagination, Recovery

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Surviving accounts of the material culture of medieval Europe - including buildings, boats, reliquaries, wall paintings, textiles, ivory mirror cases, book bindings and much more - present a tantalising glimpse of medieval life, hinting at the material richness of that era. However, students and scholars of the period will be all too familiar with the frustration of trying to piece together a picture of the past from a handful of fragments. The "material turn" has put art, architecture, and other artefacts at the forefront of historical and cultural studies, and the resulting spotlight on the material culture of the past has been illuminating for researchers in many fields. Nevertheless, the loss of so much of the physical remnants of the Middle Ages continues to thwart our understanding of the period, and much of the knowledge we often take for granted is based on a series of arbitrary survivals.

The twelve essays in this book draw on a wide array of sources and disciplines to explore how textual records, from the chronicles of John of Worcester and Matthew Paris and inventories of monastic treasuries and noble women to Beowulf and early English riddles, when combined with archaeological and art-historical evidence, can expand our awareness of artistic and cultural environments. Touching on a broad range of issues around how we imaginatively reconstruct the medieval past and a variety of objects, both precious and ephemeral, this volume will be of fundamental interest to medieval scholars, whatever their disciplinary field.

Contributors: Katherine Baker, Marian Bleeke, Deirdre Carter, Laura Cleaver, Judith Collard, Joshua Davies, Kathryn Gerry, Karl Kinsella, Katherine A. Rush, Katherine Weikert, Beth Whalley, Victoria Yuskaitis

Contemporary descriptions of objects no longer extant examined to reconstruct these lost treasures.

Recenzijos

This volume succeeds in its goal of calling attention to the many lost treasures of the medieval world and proposing strategies to reclaim them. * COMITATUS * Lost Artefacts is certainly required reading for anyone who works on medieval textual records of objects as well as images of works of art that are no longer extant. * SPECULUM *

List of Illustrations
vii
List of Abbreviations
xi
Acknowledgements xii
Introduction 1(12)
Kathryn Gerry
Laura Cleaver
1 Hoard Fever: Objects Lost and Found, Beowulf and Questions of Belonging
13(14)
Joshua Davies
2 Lost Craft: Tracing Ships in the Early Medieval Riddling Tradition
27(13)
Beth Whalley
3 Typological Exegesis and Medieval Architecture in Honorius Augustodunensis's Gemma animae
40(18)
Karl Kinsella
4 Lost Objects and Historical Consciousness: The Post-Conquest Inventories at Ely
58(19)
Katherine Weikert
5 Fire! Accounts of Destruction and Survival at Canterbury and Bury St Edmunds in the Late Twelfth Century
77(13)
Laura Cleaver
6 Reweaving the Material Past: Textual Restoration of Two Lost Textiles from St Albans
90(24)
Kathryn Gerry
7 Matthew Paris, Metalwork and the Jewels of St Albans
114(22)
Judith Collard
8 Illustrating the Material Past: A Pictorial Treasury in the Later Medieval Manuscripts from St Albans Abbey
136(22)
Deirdre Carter
9 Lost and Found: Gothic Ivories in Late Medieval French Household Records
158(21)
Katherine A. Rush
10 Ivories in French Royal Inventories, 1325-1422: Precious Objects of the Gothic Age?
179(49)
Marian Bleeke
11 Parisian Painters and their Missing Œuvres: Evidence from the Archives
228(15)
Katherine Baker
12 The Mythical Outcast Medieval Leper: Perceptions of Leper and Anchorite Squints
243(19)
Victoria Yuskaitis
Bibliography 262(24)
Index of Manuscripts 286(2)
General Index 288
Laura Cleaver is Senior Lecturer in Manuscript Studies at the Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London. Her research focuses on manuscripts made in England and France in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries and on the sale of pre-modern manuscripts in the early twentieth century. Kathryn Gerry centres her research on the cult of saints and monastic culture in Anglo-Norman England. She has published on medieval manuscripts and the so-called minor arts, curated exhibitions at the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, and the Bowdoin College Museum of art, Brunswick, Maine, and has taught at several colleges and universities in the US; she is currently Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History at Bowdoin College. Laura Cleaver is Senior Lecturer in Manuscript Studies at the Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London. Her research focuses on manuscripts made in England and France in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries and on the sale of pre-modern manuscripts in the early twentieth century. Kathryn Gerry centres her research on the cult of saints and monastic culture in Anglo-Norman England. She has published on medieval manuscripts and the so-called minor arts, curated exhibitions at the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, and the Bowdoin College Museum of art, Brunswick, Maine, and has taught at several colleges and universities in the US; she is currently Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History at Bowdoin College. KATHERINE WEIKERT is Senior Lecturer in Early Medieval History at the University of Winchester.