Buch, Englisch, 344 Seiten, Format (B × H): 296 mm x 211 mm, Gewicht: 1098 g
Reihe: The British Archaeological Association Romanesque Transactions
Buch, Englisch, 344 Seiten, Format (B × H): 296 mm x 211 mm, Gewicht: 1098 g
Reihe: The British Archaeological Association Romanesque Transactions
ISBN: 978-0-367-75255-2
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
This book addresses the complex question of the significance of regions in the creation of Romanesque, particularly in relation to transregional and pan-European artistic styles and approaches. The categorization of Romanesque by region was a cornerstone of 19th- and 20th-century scholarship, albeit one vulnerable to the application of anachronistic concepts of regional identity. Individual chapters explore the generation and reception of forms, the conditions that give rise to the development of transregional styles and the agencies that cut across territorial boundaries. There are studies of regional styles in Aquitaine, Castile, Sicily, Hungary, and Scandinavia; workshops in Worms and the Welsh Marches; the transregional nature of liturgical furnishings; the cultural geography of the new monastic orders; metalworking in Hildesheim and the valley of the Meuse; and the links which connect Piemonte with Conques.
The Regional and Transregional in Romanesque Europe offers a new vision of regions in the creation of Romanesque relevant to archaeologists, art historians, and historians alike.
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The epistemological, political, and practical issues affecting regional categories in French Romanesque architecture
Claude Andrault-Schmitt
Hans Kubach’s treatment of regions in the study of Romanesque architecture
Eric Fernie
Did Zodiaque’s regional portrayal create a false impression as to the nature of Romanesque?
Philip Bovey
Romanesque sculpture in Aquitaine:a history of the marginalisation of a widely imitated regional sculptural style
Marcello Angheben
The baldachin-ciborium: the shifting meanings of a restricted liturgical furnishing in Romanesque art
Manuel Castiñeiras
Hildesheim as a nexus of metalwork production, c. 1130–1250
Gerhard Lutz
‘Mosan’metalwork and its diffusion in the Rhineland, France, and England
Aleuna Macarenko
Winchester’s Holy Sepulchre Chapel and Byzantium: iconographic transregionalism?
Cecily Hennessy
Transregional dynamics, monastic networks: Santa Fede in Cavagnolo, Conques, and the geography of Romanesque art
Michele Luigi Vescovi
Tiron on the edge: cultural geography, regionalism and liminality
Sheila Bonde and Clark Maines with John Sheffer
Four Romanesque Cistercian abbeys in Lesser Poland: the context of their foundation
Tomasz Weclawowicz
The Cathedral of Catania and the creation of the Norman County of Sicily: transregional and transalpine models in the architecture of the late 11th century
Tancredi Bella
‘School’ or 'masons’ workshop'?: reflections on the so-called Wormser Bauschule and on the definition of regional style
Wilfried E. Keil
Towards an anatomy of a regional workshop: the Herefordshire School revisited
John McNeill
Crossing the Pyrenees: migration, urbanization, and transregional collaboration in Romanesque Aragon
Julia Perratore
Transregionalism and particularity in the Romanesque woodcarving of 12th-Century Catalonia
Jordi Camps i Sòria
Romanesque woodcarvers and plasterers in the Abruzzi: the Mediterranean connection
Gaetano Curzi
A country without regions?: the case of Hungary
Béla Zsolt Szakács
Reassessing the problem of Scandinavian Romanesque
Benjamin Zweig
The creation of Castilian identity under Alfonso VIII and Leonor Plantagenet
Elizabeth Valdez del Álamo