This essay deals with two intertwined eschatological motifs of the literary and iconographic culture of early medieval England: the devouring devil, especially in the guise of a dragon, and the mouth of hell, fashioned as the jowls of a zoomorphic monster, arguably a distinctively English adaptation of the anthropomorphic mouth of hell of classical descent. The following analysis will outline the intricate, creative interplay of crucial themes of Christian eschatology and demonology, on which the imagery of the demonic devouring dragon and the mouth of hell can be said to ultimately rely. In particular, it will be argued that the coalescence of these two widespread motifs into the distinctively Anglo-Saxon imagery of the zoomorphic mouth of...
211 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1985.The monastic reform of the te...
Five crosses erected at ninth- and tenth-centuries monasteries in Ireland are decorated with carving...
Fonds audiovisuel du programme "ESCoM-AAR" (Equipe Sémiotique Cognitive et nouveaux Médias - Archive...
This doctoral dissertation examines thedragon figure in English medieval literature. Thisanalysis is...
The image of the serpent is pervasive in the art and literature of Anglo-Saxon England. In Old Engli...
Monsters abound in Anglo-Saxon literature. One type of monster that shows up again and again is the ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis presents a holistic overview of the dramatic, did...
Anglo-Saxon scholars generally define monsters within very narrow parameters: monsters are beings th...
This thesis looks at the role and function of the dragon in the saint's encounter with the monster i...
À l'opposé du Paradis céleste que rejoignent les élus, les artistes romans ont imaginé le monde de t...
327 pagesThis dissertation identifies the presence within early medieval Britain and Ireland of a sp...
(anglicky) The main question of this thesis is whether the Christian church used stories containing ...
This essay deals with the rendition of the most sensational scene of St Margaret’s legend – the one ...
The pages of the Luttrell Psalter are heavily decorated and display a wide variety of images, includ...
Degree Awarded: Ph.D. English Language and Literature. The Catholic University of AmericaMonster Rel...
211 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1985.The monastic reform of the te...
Five crosses erected at ninth- and tenth-centuries monasteries in Ireland are decorated with carving...
Fonds audiovisuel du programme "ESCoM-AAR" (Equipe Sémiotique Cognitive et nouveaux Médias - Archive...
This doctoral dissertation examines thedragon figure in English medieval literature. Thisanalysis is...
The image of the serpent is pervasive in the art and literature of Anglo-Saxon England. In Old Engli...
Monsters abound in Anglo-Saxon literature. One type of monster that shows up again and again is the ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis presents a holistic overview of the dramatic, did...
Anglo-Saxon scholars generally define monsters within very narrow parameters: monsters are beings th...
This thesis looks at the role and function of the dragon in the saint's encounter with the monster i...
À l'opposé du Paradis céleste que rejoignent les élus, les artistes romans ont imaginé le monde de t...
327 pagesThis dissertation identifies the presence within early medieval Britain and Ireland of a sp...
(anglicky) The main question of this thesis is whether the Christian church used stories containing ...
This essay deals with the rendition of the most sensational scene of St Margaret’s legend – the one ...
The pages of the Luttrell Psalter are heavily decorated and display a wide variety of images, includ...
Degree Awarded: Ph.D. English Language and Literature. The Catholic University of AmericaMonster Rel...
211 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1985.The monastic reform of the te...
Five crosses erected at ninth- and tenth-centuries monasteries in Ireland are decorated with carving...
Fonds audiovisuel du programme "ESCoM-AAR" (Equipe Sémiotique Cognitive et nouveaux Médias - Archive...