Title: Saint John, the Golden-mouthed – a Late Mediaeval Iconographical Confusion.The pictorial program in Thott 113, an illuminated French book of hours from c. 1400 in the Royal Library, Copenhagen, is fairly conventional. But instead of the usual evangelist portrait at the beginning of the gospel, St. John is placed on the island of Patmos, where his writing is interrupted by a devil who steals his ink. This motif became popular around the middle of the 15th century in northern France and Flanders, a fact previously noticed by scholars. In this article, however, the motif is connected to Parisian book illumination from a slightly earlier period, i.e. the late 14th or early 15th century, and to some of the illuminators working for Duke Je...
Title: Symbolic and Veristic Identity: Portraiture at the Court of Burgundy 1380-1480In the history ...
Inspired by the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, the present article deals with admiration of L...
Title: Self-glorification, Piety and Superstition. The Iconography of the Architect in the Middle Ag...
A preaching scene in stoneLisbet Bolander A very rare motif in the Western European stone sculpture ...
This review-article presents and discusses a new Danish commentary on the Gospel of John written by ...
Author's version of an article published in the journal: Tidsskrift for teologi og kirke. Also avail...
The Concluding Section of “A Little About the Revelation of Jesus Christ. . . (“Grundtvig-Studier”, ...
Monks and Nuns on Danish Church Walls Some Reflections on the Carmelite Monks in Sæby Church By Kaar...
The apocalyptic beasts in Revelation chap. 13 have been identified with a variety of historical pers...
Title: The King is dead, long live the Holy King! Interpretation of a romanesque figure frieze.The s...
The royal crucifixes so characteristic of the 12th century only gradually gave way to the Gothic suf...
Title: From Heretic to Saint. The Iconography of Giordano Bruno through Four Centuries One of the mo...
Grundvig's Calendar for 1813. Edited with comments by Gustav Albeck. In the Grundtvig Archives, Fasc...
Title: The Painter as an Artist and Allegory. Portrait, fashion and frozen time in the early 16th ce...
Title: The Self-representation in Image and Word of two Late Gothic Artists in ScandinaviaThis artic...
Title: Symbolic and Veristic Identity: Portraiture at the Court of Burgundy 1380-1480In the history ...
Inspired by the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, the present article deals with admiration of L...
Title: Self-glorification, Piety and Superstition. The Iconography of the Architect in the Middle Ag...
A preaching scene in stoneLisbet Bolander A very rare motif in the Western European stone sculpture ...
This review-article presents and discusses a new Danish commentary on the Gospel of John written by ...
Author's version of an article published in the journal: Tidsskrift for teologi og kirke. Also avail...
The Concluding Section of “A Little About the Revelation of Jesus Christ. . . (“Grundtvig-Studier”, ...
Monks and Nuns on Danish Church Walls Some Reflections on the Carmelite Monks in Sæby Church By Kaar...
The apocalyptic beasts in Revelation chap. 13 have been identified with a variety of historical pers...
Title: The King is dead, long live the Holy King! Interpretation of a romanesque figure frieze.The s...
The royal crucifixes so characteristic of the 12th century only gradually gave way to the Gothic suf...
Title: From Heretic to Saint. The Iconography of Giordano Bruno through Four Centuries One of the mo...
Grundvig's Calendar for 1813. Edited with comments by Gustav Albeck. In the Grundtvig Archives, Fasc...
Title: The Painter as an Artist and Allegory. Portrait, fashion and frozen time in the early 16th ce...
Title: The Self-representation in Image and Word of two Late Gothic Artists in ScandinaviaThis artic...
Title: Symbolic and Veristic Identity: Portraiture at the Court of Burgundy 1380-1480In the history ...
Inspired by the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, the present article deals with admiration of L...
Title: Self-glorification, Piety and Superstition. The Iconography of the Architect in the Middle Ag...