This article examines the representation of the Miracle of the Harvest, a rare pictorial motif on thirteenth century works, which was carved on four baptismal fonts by the Hegwald workshop operating on Gotland. The unique pictorial representations of this legend on the Hegwald fonts indicates that the workshop was most likely operating around the year 1200 or in the early decades of the thirteenth century and not, as Johnny Roosval suggested in 1918–1925, in the late eleventh or early twelfth centuries. Central to the development of the Romanesque font industry on Gotland was the arrival of the monks from the Cistercian monasteries of Clairvaux and Cîteaux in France, to Alvastra, Nydala (both on the Swedish mainland) and to the Baltic islan...
This article presents an investigation of a 14th-century polychrome wood crucifix from the Marttila ...
The introduction of watermills in Southern Scandinavia has often been linked to the advent of the Ci...
Perhaps paradoxically, of all medieval churches in Europe, those that became Lutheran during the six...
Title: Patroni Regni Svecie – The Patron Saints of SwedenThis article presents the Swedish “national...
The article presents a supplement to two earlier texts in the periodical Ale 2020: 2–3 on Lyngsjö in...
This article explores themes connected to the spiritual and the material, especially in connection w...
This article discusses the iconography of the Virgin Mary cycle on the corpus and the inner wings of...
Abstract - The Cornfield Miracle in Context 1150 - 1450 The thesis discusses the legend of the so-ca...
Title Baptismal Fonts made of Scandinavian Rock in Sweden and Northern GermanyThe article provides a...
In 1384 a host miracle occurred in the Alpine church of Sankt Oswald in Seefeld. The perpetrator was...
The advent of a new religious faith is always a valuable historical tool. Shits in religion uncover ...
This article discusses artisans and people doing manual work in the French-speaking areas of Western...
The title of the article: S’Villanorum de Malmøghae, refers to an inscription on a seal from a lette...
This article is a survey of Swedish church art from the Reformation, introduced in 1527 by Gustav Va...
Þingeyrar Abbey was founded in 1133 and dissolved in the wake of the Lutheran Reformation (1550), to...
This article presents an investigation of a 14th-century polychrome wood crucifix from the Marttila ...
The introduction of watermills in Southern Scandinavia has often been linked to the advent of the Ci...
Perhaps paradoxically, of all medieval churches in Europe, those that became Lutheran during the six...
Title: Patroni Regni Svecie – The Patron Saints of SwedenThis article presents the Swedish “national...
The article presents a supplement to two earlier texts in the periodical Ale 2020: 2–3 on Lyngsjö in...
This article explores themes connected to the spiritual and the material, especially in connection w...
This article discusses the iconography of the Virgin Mary cycle on the corpus and the inner wings of...
Abstract - The Cornfield Miracle in Context 1150 - 1450 The thesis discusses the legend of the so-ca...
Title Baptismal Fonts made of Scandinavian Rock in Sweden and Northern GermanyThe article provides a...
In 1384 a host miracle occurred in the Alpine church of Sankt Oswald in Seefeld. The perpetrator was...
The advent of a new religious faith is always a valuable historical tool. Shits in religion uncover ...
This article discusses artisans and people doing manual work in the French-speaking areas of Western...
The title of the article: S’Villanorum de Malmøghae, refers to an inscription on a seal from a lette...
This article is a survey of Swedish church art from the Reformation, introduced in 1527 by Gustav Va...
Þingeyrar Abbey was founded in 1133 and dissolved in the wake of the Lutheran Reformation (1550), to...
This article presents an investigation of a 14th-century polychrome wood crucifix from the Marttila ...
The introduction of watermills in Southern Scandinavia has often been linked to the advent of the Ci...
Perhaps paradoxically, of all medieval churches in Europe, those that became Lutheran during the six...