Isabelle Dolezalek is the recipient of the 2018 ICMA Annual Book Prize. Roger II’s famous mantle and other royal garments from twelfth- and thirteenth-century Sicily prominently display Arabic inscriptions. While the phenomenon is highly unusual in the context of Latin Christian kingship, the use of inscriptions as a textile ornament was common and imbued with political functions in the Islamic courts of the medieval Mediterranean. This case study of the inscribed garments from Norman Sicily draws attention to the diverse functions of Arabic textile inscriptions using various contextual frames. Such a contextual approach not only highlights the specificities of the Norman textile inscriptions and emphasises the practical and political choic...
Tekstili Bliskog istoka činili su značajan dio kulture, ekonomije, ceremonija, ali i politike u isla...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the twelfth century, a group of poets at the Norman c...
Twelfth-century Latin panegyrist Peter of Eboli famously described the multicultural atmosphere of t...
This article applies recent methodological approaches to a case study of two Mediterranean objects f...
The creation of the Norman kingdom of Sicily under Roger II of Hauteville (1130-1154) was accompanie...
Of all the remains of the twelfth-century Norman kingdom of Sicily, none is more fascinating to the ...
The subject of this article is the mantle of the kings of Sicily, now in the Kunsthistorisches Museu...
The subject of this article is the mantle of the kings of Sicily, now in the Kunsthistorisches Museu...
Elaborate and sensational gifts were the hallmark of Mamluk diplomacy. In firm control of the mediev...
Over the past years, textiles have again become subjects of a range of studies in the field of medie...
This dissertation explores notions of ornamentation and issues of materiality in early and high medi...
A small but distinct group of early Byzantine textiles from Egypt (dating between the fourth and six...
This dissertation explores notions of ornamentation and issues of materiality in early and high medi...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the twelfth century, a group of poets at the Norman c...
Tekstili Bliskog istoka činili su značajan dio kulture, ekonomije, ceremonija, ali i politike u isla...
Tekstili Bliskog istoka činili su značajan dio kulture, ekonomije, ceremonija, ali i politike u isla...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the twelfth century, a group of poets at the Norman c...
Twelfth-century Latin panegyrist Peter of Eboli famously described the multicultural atmosphere of t...
This article applies recent methodological approaches to a case study of two Mediterranean objects f...
The creation of the Norman kingdom of Sicily under Roger II of Hauteville (1130-1154) was accompanie...
Of all the remains of the twelfth-century Norman kingdom of Sicily, none is more fascinating to the ...
The subject of this article is the mantle of the kings of Sicily, now in the Kunsthistorisches Museu...
The subject of this article is the mantle of the kings of Sicily, now in the Kunsthistorisches Museu...
Elaborate and sensational gifts were the hallmark of Mamluk diplomacy. In firm control of the mediev...
Over the past years, textiles have again become subjects of a range of studies in the field of medie...
This dissertation explores notions of ornamentation and issues of materiality in early and high medi...
A small but distinct group of early Byzantine textiles from Egypt (dating between the fourth and six...
This dissertation explores notions of ornamentation and issues of materiality in early and high medi...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the twelfth century, a group of poets at the Norman c...
Tekstili Bliskog istoka činili su značajan dio kulture, ekonomije, ceremonija, ali i politike u isla...
Tekstili Bliskog istoka činili su značajan dio kulture, ekonomije, ceremonija, ali i politike u isla...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the twelfth century, a group of poets at the Norman c...
Twelfth-century Latin panegyrist Peter of Eboli famously described the multicultural atmosphere of t...