HISTORY
262 VIRTUAL GALLERY
[UNDER ONGOING AND PERPETUAL CONSTRUCTION!]
Historians are
normally trained to work first (and sometimes next and last) from written
documents. You can be a good historian without paying much attention to
"things", objects, buildings, artefacts and visuals of all kinds. Yet visual
impressions constitute an important and lasting part of our experience
as human beings. I see no reason to believe that things were any different
in the middle ages. To the contrary, the men and women of the period were,
as you must already have noted, much less bounded than we are by writings.
When Koenisgberger says (p. 379), "For every one person, in historical
times, who read a book there were a hundred who listened to music, who
sang and who danced", he could easily and probably should have added some
remark about visual communications. Pre-modern Europeans acted and were
acted upon, we think,through oral rather than literate modes much more
often than we.
We therefore
ignore medieval visuals, at our peril and with real loss. Visible documenta
(check
it out in your dictionary) are just as likely to teach us novel and intriguing
lessons as our texts. And some of you will be even better at "reading"
them than you are with writings. I am not, on the whole. I have been known
to describe myself as challenged in visual perception. (My wife puts it
differently, using some short, sharp words.) But even I may be changing
now that the Web makes first-rate reproductions and pictures so easily
available at our desks.
So please, take your
time over this assignment. Wander through our galleries, seeing what you
see, before you choose your object. And spend some real time looking
hard at them, taking in the detail, puzzling out their message. Of course
you will find much out about your chosen object from books or at other
Web sites. But the real value of the exercize lies in what you can discover
for yourselves through the use of your own eyes. Good luck.
This Virtual Gallery developed
out of an experimental Virtual Museum project in which Cornell was
involved with several other museums and universities. Alas, this has now
ended.
Before
you move on to the aptly named Koenigsberger Kloisters whose resources
are literally world-wide in scope, you ought to check out resources on
campus. You should certainly use the assignment as an excuse to visit the
Johnson
Art Museum, which can claim to be the most neglected resource on campus,
and free
at that. Its current policy sensibly imports loan
objects for temporary exhibition from other collections, such as at the
moment the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. You will find a
small gallery of medieval artefacts on the First Floor. Among a number
of objects well worth a look are the following:
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Wooden Sculpture of St. Anne with Virgin and Child
This was the first medieval artefact displayed to my knowledge on the World
Wide Web, and already publicized in the U.K. Guardian newspaper
in July 1995. You can compare it with another example from the Met of similar
early 16th Century date.
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Marble Virgin and Child, 14th cent.Venice.
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2 Ivory Diptychs, 14th cent. France.
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Alabaster Relief of the Resurrection, 14th cent. England. (Alabaster
objects of this kind were enormously popular and widely sold in the later
middle ages.)
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Illuminated Book of Hours, 15th cent. France.
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Stone Portal sculpture of Lioness with cubs, Bologna, Italy, late
12th cent.
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Painted wooden scultpure of St. George and the Dragon, 15th cent.
Germany. (One knows that so much of the sculpture was painted in bright
colors. This late example suggests how others too must once have looked.)
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Painted wooden altar sculpture of the Crucufixion, 15th cent., Bavaria.
There are, in addition, among the replicas outside the Art History Department
in the basement of Goldwin Smith Hall, a splendid group of Byzantine
and Ottonian Ivories, located in the middle, at the meeting
points of the two display windows. This is almost as close to class as
you can get!
KOENIGSBERGER KLOISTERS
The objects etc.
listed below are an eclectic collection. They represent some of my own
favorite images from those available on the Web at this early stage. Though
they have come out rather biassed towards the earlier middle ages, they
should still give you enough beautiful and/or interesting things to choose
from. You must take each image or set of images on its own terms. Some
allow you to zoom in by clicking again and see a much magnified image.
Others offer a whole series of images for the price of a single one. Just
remember, please, that a number do quite literally come from half a world
away so that today's still archaic technology may take quite a while to
load them onto your browser. Then, relax, enjoy, and maybe study too! Never
forget too that you will be able find much information about your objects
and images and perhaps check your initial theories in things called books
kept in libraries; try Sibley as well as the more obvious Uris and Olin.
The bigger the image, the longer it will take to
download. Some take several, even many, minutes on my machine. But I think
my selections are worth waiting for. Anyway, you cannot skim usefully at
speed through images!
This sign indicates a link
not yet in full working order, one that I want in the Kloisters. Give me
time, and I may restore it. Or better still, find it on the Web and send
me the location details.
Some images (and more) from Manuscript Books.Since
most of these are rather famous, you should be able to find out more about
the one you choose.
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The
Lindisfarne Gospels [cf. Koenigsberger, pl. 2. 9]
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The
Book of Kells Some
more images. There is a CD-Rom
facsimile
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The
Caedmon MS, c. 1000. One of the 4 great MSS which give us (virtually)
all our Old English verse, and some fine drawings too.
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Beowulf The
British Library offers no online images, now that the CD-Rom is available!
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Page
from Carolingian Miniscule "Terence", c. 825
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Page
from Beatus' Apocalypse, Spain mid-tenth century
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Otto
III's Gospel Book: 4 Nations Reverence the Emperor [cf.
Koenigsberger, pl. 2. 5]
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Saint
Dunstan's Classbook, late 10th cent. You can look at the whole
book, from the Bodleian Library, Oxford [link below], leaf by leaf.
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The
Oxford MS of "La Chanson de Roland", 1st half 12th cent.
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The Eadwine Psalter There is a fine facsimile in book
form. Online, though, you can see some good bits, including a page to introduce
you to chiromancy
(?!), a splendid scene
from Genesis, an equally fine Besieged
Psalmist (Ps. 37), and a b/w illustration of the way three
versions of the psalter sit side by side.
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St.
Bernard at his writing Check out the details!
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The
Bayeux Tapestry [cf. Koenigsberger, pl. 3. 3]. There are
various versions of part or whole of this on the Web. The best, if you
have a decent computer and room for a Shockwave plug-in, is Osprey's,
which is almost like seeing the marvellous real thing.But see Lynn
Nelson's lecture for hints on how to use this and other resources.
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Magna
Carta, 1215
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Miniature
from Bible Moralisee, Paris c. 1230
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13th
cent. Miscellany, including Bestiary in French verse, from England.
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Collection
of Musical Treatises, from Yorkshire, ? 1372
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There is a whole collection of MSS of the "Romance
of the Rose" to browse through. Or
try a heavily illuminated copy, France
late 15th cent., made for mother of a future king, and a
somewhat earlier, illustrated one from France,
c. 1348.
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John
of Worcester's Chronicle, bef. 1140. He may have written
this in his own hand in his own monastery. Do check out the nightmares
of king Henry I on pp. 382-3!
Searching for Manuscript Images through Large Data Bases:
Some fine "things", including buildings:
-
Ravenna, Italy has an uniquely surving group of Byzantine
churches with mosaics (5th cent.) Tour
the
city (Choose "English"!) and then try one
set of views or another of San
Vitale. and its mosaic
apse, watching out for the images of Justinian
and Theodora [cf. Koenigsberger, pl. 1. 3].
-
The Treasure of Sutton Hoo (7th cent.) The
Sutton
Hoo Society is one excellent introduction to the site, the Sutton
Hoo Room and Current
Archaeology offer good alternatives.
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The
Oseburg Ship (9th cent.) [cf. Koenigsberger, pl. 2. 4].
and
another image.
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The Lindau Gospels (8th cent) [cf. Koenigsberger,
pl. 2. 1], The Morgan
Library shows both covers, which can be seen elsewhere along with decorated
opening page.
-
Carolingian
Equestrian Statue of Emperor ? Charlemagne [cf. Koenigsberger,
pl. 2. 2]
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Utrecht
Psalter (9th cent.) and other Illuminated
MSS of the Carolingian Renaissance
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Byzantine
Mathematical Text Book, 888. Can you identify the Euclid
theorems?
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The
Gero Crucifix (c. 975). Adam
Veil gives it some context.
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The Benedictional
of Aethelwold, Bishop of Winchester (c. 975/80)
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Chess
(12th Century style)
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Abbey
Church of Hildesheim, c. 1010/33 and its splendid bronze doors (be
sure to scan the series).
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Autun Cathedral, with the sculptures of Giselbertus(c.
1130) Both are quite special. Overview
here. I have an Eveon
my own pages, and a better one here;
can she not have been observed from life?
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Church
of Ste. Madeleine, Vezelay, take-off point for the Second
Crusade (c. 1130); St. Bernard preached in front of the tympanum (below),
and may well have used it as his text.
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Church
of St. Pierre, Moissac
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The
Winchester Bible (late 12th cent.)
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The
Gloucester Candlestick (1104/13)
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The
Cloisters Cross, perhaps from Bury St. Edmunds (?3rd quarter 12th
cent.)
Ask me about this and the fine book on the anti-Jewish
program that inspired it.
Some places to tour
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Monte Gargano
on the heel of southern Italy was one of the great pilgrimage sites. It
was in fact where the Norman conquerors of the south are said to have met
up with each other. When I hitch-hiked there as a student, people were
still making votive offerings (drawings of a cart accident that had caused
a broken leg, and metal impressions of sick hearts, hands, eyes etc.) to
secure the aid of the saint (Archangel Michael) in providing a cure!
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The
City and Cathedral of Canterbury, England
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Castles on the
Web A vast collection of different castles to choose from. Some
further individual examples are:
The Bastidesof South-Western France
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Twelfth Century Crusader Map of Jerusalem
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Hezekiah
and the Water Clock, from a Bible Moralisee, Paris,
1235/45,
also available here. You can probably learn about the Bibles
Moralisee in DMA, or through some of the many studies in Olin.
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The
`Vein Man', from Late 13th cent. English anatomical MS, also
available here
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The
Gough Map of Great Britain (14th cent.) You need to click
your way through the copyright agreement, on to page 2, & then on a
thumbnail copy.
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Illuminated
MS of Mystery Play, from 14th cent. France.
Some Books of Hours:
There are undoubtedly lots more fine images of medieval artifacts out there
on the Web. If you have the time and the inclination (as the Leaning Tower
of Pisa once said), go have a look for yourself. A short cut, though still
very
slow indeed to load, is the admirable and rather comprehensive
Medieval
Art Slide List from the University of California at Berkeley.
Two other slide lists open to your view are Paul Szarmach's groups of
images selected to illustrate the Old English poems, The
Battle of Maldon and Dream
of the Rood; the latter is especially recommended for its
images of the 8th Century Ruthwell Cross and its in-church
location.
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