This article explores the interactions between script, relics, and space, focusing on five inscribed slabs found in the twentieth century in the crypt of Salerno Cathedral. These slabs list the names of more than fifteen saints whose mortal remains had been concealed in the Cathedral crypt in March 1081. Exploring the ways in which these artefacts have defined the sacred topography of the built environment and the relations between the inscribed names and relics, it considers how script could have enhance the presence of these holy figures, acting as proxies for their mortal remains
This paper throws light on one of the important invisibilia in the Ustinow collection in Oslo: a mar...
The sanctuaries of southeast Italy have produced many votives, mainly small items of little intrinsi...
In ecclesiastical buildings, the door and its decoration have a specific symbolic meaning as a thres...
This article examines impression relics associated with Saints Peter and Paul: the apostolic knee pr...
Session 645: Names in Sacred Spaces: Studying the Intentions and Effects of the Act of Writing One's...
This article explores the materiality of early medieval devotion to the saints. It argues that, even...
2015-04-18The period between 1080 and 1140 saw an explosion in monastic construction throughout West...
In 1049, the monastic community of Saint Emmeram in Regensburg discovered within its abbey church th...
The relics of Turku Cathedral are remains belonging to the bodies of holy persons, different from ou...
International audienceHagiographical cycles on altars, shrines, paintings and sculptures are accompa...
Session 203: Relics at the Interface between Textuality and Materiality, c. 400-c. 1200, II: Inscrib...
Session 203: Relics at the Interface between Textuality and Materiality, c. 400-c. 1200, II: Inscrib...
This essay investigates the reception, ceremonial display and storage of a newly imported set of Byz...
This article re-examines the annular crypt of S. Vincenzo Maggiore , part of the late eighth-/early ...
The paper discusses a group of monumental crucifixes from the 13th-century East Adriatic and Italy, ...
This paper throws light on one of the important invisibilia in the Ustinow collection in Oslo: a mar...
The sanctuaries of southeast Italy have produced many votives, mainly small items of little intrinsi...
In ecclesiastical buildings, the door and its decoration have a specific symbolic meaning as a thres...
This article examines impression relics associated with Saints Peter and Paul: the apostolic knee pr...
Session 645: Names in Sacred Spaces: Studying the Intentions and Effects of the Act of Writing One's...
This article explores the materiality of early medieval devotion to the saints. It argues that, even...
2015-04-18The period between 1080 and 1140 saw an explosion in monastic construction throughout West...
In 1049, the monastic community of Saint Emmeram in Regensburg discovered within its abbey church th...
The relics of Turku Cathedral are remains belonging to the bodies of holy persons, different from ou...
International audienceHagiographical cycles on altars, shrines, paintings and sculptures are accompa...
Session 203: Relics at the Interface between Textuality and Materiality, c. 400-c. 1200, II: Inscrib...
Session 203: Relics at the Interface between Textuality and Materiality, c. 400-c. 1200, II: Inscrib...
This essay investigates the reception, ceremonial display and storage of a newly imported set of Byz...
This article re-examines the annular crypt of S. Vincenzo Maggiore , part of the late eighth-/early ...
The paper discusses a group of monumental crucifixes from the 13th-century East Adriatic and Italy, ...
This paper throws light on one of the important invisibilia in the Ustinow collection in Oslo: a mar...
The sanctuaries of southeast Italy have produced many votives, mainly small items of little intrinsi...
In ecclesiastical buildings, the door and its decoration have a specific symbolic meaning as a thres...