Book Series Architectura Medii Aevi, vol. 8

Memory and Redemption

Public Monuments and the Making of Late Medieval Landscape

Achim Timmermann

  • Pages: 427 p.
  • Size:216 x 280 mm
  • Illustrations:335 b/w, 50 col.
  • Language(s):English
  • Publication Year:2017

  • € 115,00 EXCL. VAT RETAIL PRICE
  • ISBN: 978-2-503-54652-0
  • Paperback
  • Available


Review(s)

“(...) this book provides a work of lasting importance to the study of a rich but neglected series of monuments.” (Jennifer Alexander, in Church Monuments, 34, 2020, p. 218)

BIO

Achim Timmerann teaches medieval and northern Renaissance art and architecture at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He is author of Real Presence: Sacrament Houses and the Body of Christ, c. 1270-1600 (AMA 4, 2009).

Summary

Erected in large numbers from about 1200 onwards, and featuring increasingly sophisticated designs, wayside crosses and other edifices in the public sphere – such as fountains, pillories and boundary markers – constituted the largest network of images and monuments in the late medieval world. Not only were they everywhere, they were also seen by nearly everyone, because large sections of the populace were constantly on the move. Carrying an entire spectrum of religious, folkloric and judicial beliefs, these monuments were indeed at the very heart of late medieval life. This is the first critical study of these fascinating and rich structures written by a medievalist art historian. Focusing on the territories of the former Holy Roman Empire, this investigation considers such important edifices as the towering wayside crosses of Wiener Neustadt and Brno or the elaborate pillories of Kasteelbrakel and Wrocław, though less ostentatious works such as the Bildstöcke of Franconia and Carinthia or the high crosses of Westphalia and the Rhineland are equally examined. In addition, the study looks at the homiletic, literary, devotional and artistic imagination, in which wayside crosses and other such structures helped constitute a spiritual and allegorical landscape that very much complemented and put pressure on the physical landscapes traversed and inhabited by the contemporary public.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

A Short Introduction

Chapter 1: From the Ahenny Crosses to the Zderad Column: Northern Sacroscapes to c. 1500

Part 1: High cross (1), picture stone, and Irminsul: Competing monuments in northern and northwestern Europe to c. 1100

Part 2: High cross (2), discoidal cross, and Bildstock: Monumental landscapes in the Holy Roman Empire, c. 1100–1530

Part 3: Eleanor Cross, high cross (3), and Spinnerin am Kreuz: The great turriform monument in northern Europe, c. 1270–1470

Chapter 2: In the City: Persuasion and Protection

Part 1: The market cross: Commerce and the law.

Excursus: The market crosses of Britain and Ireland

Part 2: The pillory: Degradation through elevation

Part 3: The fountain: Regeneration and civic munificence

Part 4: Lion, Rider, Roland: Making and faking civic history

Part 5: The Stations of the Cross: The city as Jerusalem

Part 6: The cemetery lantern: Illuminating the city of the dead

Chapter 3: On the Road: Perdition and Perpetuity

Part 1: The poor sinner’s cross: Crime, punishment, and redemption, I

Part 2: The penance cross: Crime, punishment, and redemption, II

Part 3: Battle crosses and accident crosses: Disaster, trauma, and remembrance

Part 4: Pilgrimage- and processional crosses, safe conduct- and border stones: Trajectories and boundaries