Whereas historians and heraldists tend to discuss heraldry in terms of the nobility, this thesis demonstrates that heraldic communication was a ubiquitous and versatile element of urban visual culture in the cities of late medieval England and Germany. To understand its role in urban societies – and in contrast to the systematisation and interpretation of armorial design in traditional heraldic scholarship – emphasis is placed on the contemporary perceptions and communicative functions of coats of arms. Whose arms did townspeople see in the urban space? Which meanings did they attribute to their display? For which purposes did they themselves employ heraldry? Were oft-alleged differences between English and German cities reflected in the he...
Civitas Florentiae under the Madonna (or Allegory) of Mercy (Bigallo Museum, Florence, Fresco, post ...
The participants of the first workshop on the history of heralds in Münster (26-28 Mars 2014) In spi...
Heraldry is a well-defined and, almost by definition, narrow subject; a “feudal language,” with codi...
This thesis brings to light the extraordinary artistic transformation of heraldic imagery in German-...
(version française ci-dessous) Krems (A), Gozzoburg (photo: Wolfgang Sauber via Wikimedia Commons) ...
Heraldic Orgies and Social Advancement. Or: Where Actually Is “Top“ in the Late-Medieval City One of...
The purpose of this thesis is to analyze and discuss the changing ways in which the visual art of he...
Sala dos Brasões (photo: HenGomes) Heraldry was an ubiquitous element of state-rooms. Whether in pal...
(version française ; deutsche Fassung) The history of heralds is a largely underexplored one. In spi...
My main interest centres on the political use and appropriation of heraldic symbolism. Although the ...
The purpose of this thesis is to analyze and discuss the changing ways in which the visual art of he...
Medieval culture was intensely visual. Although this has long been recognised by art historians and ...
Even if for us it is clear that the office of arms is much more than coats of arms and blazonry, it ...
457 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.This study examines the devel...
S. Thiry & L. Duerloo (eds.) Heraldic hierarchies. Identity, status and state intervention in Early ...
Civitas Florentiae under the Madonna (or Allegory) of Mercy (Bigallo Museum, Florence, Fresco, post ...
The participants of the first workshop on the history of heralds in Münster (26-28 Mars 2014) In spi...
Heraldry is a well-defined and, almost by definition, narrow subject; a “feudal language,” with codi...
This thesis brings to light the extraordinary artistic transformation of heraldic imagery in German-...
(version française ci-dessous) Krems (A), Gozzoburg (photo: Wolfgang Sauber via Wikimedia Commons) ...
Heraldic Orgies and Social Advancement. Or: Where Actually Is “Top“ in the Late-Medieval City One of...
The purpose of this thesis is to analyze and discuss the changing ways in which the visual art of he...
Sala dos Brasões (photo: HenGomes) Heraldry was an ubiquitous element of state-rooms. Whether in pal...
(version française ; deutsche Fassung) The history of heralds is a largely underexplored one. In spi...
My main interest centres on the political use and appropriation of heraldic symbolism. Although the ...
The purpose of this thesis is to analyze and discuss the changing ways in which the visual art of he...
Medieval culture was intensely visual. Although this has long been recognised by art historians and ...
Even if for us it is clear that the office of arms is much more than coats of arms and blazonry, it ...
457 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.This study examines the devel...
S. Thiry & L. Duerloo (eds.) Heraldic hierarchies. Identity, status and state intervention in Early ...
Civitas Florentiae under the Madonna (or Allegory) of Mercy (Bigallo Museum, Florence, Fresco, post ...
The participants of the first workshop on the history of heralds in Münster (26-28 Mars 2014) In spi...
Heraldry is a well-defined and, almost by definition, narrow subject; a “feudal language,” with codi...