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Tree: Symbol, Allegory, and Mnemonic Device in Medieval Art and Thought [Microfilm]

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  • Formāts: Microfilm, 271 pages, illustrations (black and white, and colour)
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Jun-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Brepols N.V.
  • ISBN-10: 2503548393
  • ISBN-13: 9782503548395
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  • Formāts: Microfilm, 271 pages, illustrations (black and white, and colour)
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Jun-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Brepols N.V.
  • ISBN-10: 2503548393
  • ISBN-13: 9782503548395
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
With its vital character - growing, flowering, extending its roots into the ground, and its branches and leaves to the sky - the tree is a polyvalent metaphor, a suggestive symbol, and an allegorical subject. During the Middle Ages, a number of iconographic schemata were based on the image and structure of the tree, including the Tree of Jesse and the Tree of Virtues and Vices. From the late eleventh century onwards such formulae were increasingly used as devices for organizing knowledge and representing theoretical concepts. Despite the abstraction inherent in these schemata, however, the semantic qualities of trees persist in their usage. The analysis of different manifestations of trees in the Middle Ages is highly instructive for visual, intellectual, and cultural history. Essays in this volume concentrate on the formative period for arboreal imagery in the medieval West, that is, the eleventh to fifteenth centuries. Using a range of methodological strategies and examining material from different media, ranging from illuminated manuscripts to wall painting, stained glass windows, and monumental sculpture, the articles in this volume show how different arboreal structures were conceived, employed, and appropriated by their specific contexts, how they functioned in their original framework, and how they were perceived by their audience.
Illustrations
vii
Colour Plates xiii
Preface xvii
Introduction 1(12)
Pippa Salonius
Andrea Worm
Stirps Jesse in capite ecclesiae: Iconographic and Liturgical Readings of the Tree of Jesse in Stained-Glass Windows
13(22)
Marie-Pierre Gelin
Arbor autem humanum genus significat: Trees of Genealogy and Sacred History in the Twelfth Century
35(34)
Andrea Worm
Arbor genealogiae: Manifestations of the Tree in French Royal Genealogies
69(26)
Marigold Anne Norbye
The Medieval Tree of Porphyry: An Organic Structure of Logic
95(22)
Annemieke R. Verboon
Visualizing Salvation: The Role of Arboreal Imagery in the Speculum humanae salvationis (Kremsmunster, Library of the Convent, Cod. 243)
117(26)
Susanne Wittekind
Two Trees in Paradise? A Case Study on the Iconography of the Tree of Knowledge and the Tree of Life in Italian Romanesque Sculpture
143(16)
Ute Dercks
The Tree as Narrative, Formal, and Allegorical Index in Representations of the Noli me tangere
159(28)
Barbara Baert
Liesbet Kusters
Quasi lignum vitae: The Tree of Life as an Image of Mendicant Identity
187(26)
Ulrike Ilg
Arbor Jesse -- Lignum vitae: The Tree of Jesse, the Tree of Life, and the Mendicants in Late Medieval Orvieto
213(30)
Pippa Salonius
Select Bibliography 243(6)
Index 249