Medieval Coins and Seals: Constructing Identity, Signifying Power showcases these objects as intrinsic and highly significant aspects of medieval visual culture, and contributes to an understanding of the many ways in which they functioned as conveyors of meaning in Western European, Islamic, and Byzantine cultures from the fifth to the fifteenth century. The essays presented here, by art historians, numismatists, sigillographers, and historians on a wide variety of coins and seals, afford fresh insight into these tantalizing relics of medieval art and the vibrant cultural roles they played at the time of their creation. Through their images and inscriptions, they conveyed complex cultural attitudes by means of sophisticated visual strategies carefully constructed to further the subjective agendas of rulers and − in the case of seals − of aristocrats, ordinary individuals, towns, corporations, and government officials. The messages conveyed by these tightly controlled objects were, above all, ones of authority, identity, and legitimacy, with goals or subtexts that included the politics of self- presentation; the construction of personal, civic, national and cultural identity; the advertisement of dynastic succession; and much more. As forceful modes of visual discourse designed to carry calculated, at times propagandistic, communications to broadly dispersed audiences, coins and seals actively served during these centuries as sociocultural agents that helped mold public opinion (as they had in antiquity), and thereby shaped the medieval world.

Table des matières :
Susan Solway – Introduction
Part One: Crossroads in Medieval Studies: Sigillography, Numismatics, and Art History
Brigitte Miriam Bedos-Rezak – Medieval Identity: A Sign and a Concept
Lucia Travaini – Coins, Images, Identity, and Interpretations: Two Research Cases—a Seventh-Century Merovingian Tremissis and a Fifteenth-Century Ducat of Milan
Part Two: Striking Identity and Minting Politics in Medieval Europe and the Middle East
Guido Berndt – Strategies of Representation: Minting the Vandal Regnum
David J. Wasserstein – Coins as Agents of Cultural Definition in Islam
Lisa Mahoney – A Byzantine Pedigree: The Design of Coins and Seals in the Latin East
Wayne Sayles – Classical Revival in Twelfth-Century Jazira: Religion–Humanism on Contemporary Coins
Susan Leibacher Ward – Reflections of Coinage: The Imago Clipeus on the West Façade of Le Mans
Part Three: Medieval Women: Coining Identity and Sealing Power
Liz James – Displaying Identity and Power? The Coins of Byzantine Empresses between 804 and 1204
Anna Gannon – Money, Power, and Women: An Inquiry into Early Anglo-Saxon Coinage
Erin L. Jordan – Swords, Seals, and Coins: Female Rulers and the Instruments of Authority in Thirteenth-Century Flanders and Hainaut
Kay Slocum – Bede’s Ladies: Images of Anglo-Saxon Holy Women on Thirteenth-Century Seals
Sue Johns – Seals, Gender, Identity, and Social Status in the Late Twelfth and Early Thirteenth Centuries in Wales ()
Part Four: Sealing Civic, Urban, Rural and Corporate Identity in Western Medieval Europe
John Cherry – Seals of Cities and Towns: Concepts of Choice?
Elizabeth New – The Common Seal and Communal Identity in Medieval London
John McEwan – The Formation of a Sealing Society: London in the Twelfth Century
Markus Späth – Art for New Corporations: Seal Imagery of French Urban Communities in the Thirteenth Century
Phillipp Schofield – Seals and the Peasant Economy in England and Marcher Wales, ca. 1300
Part Five: Miniature yet Mighty: Coins, Seals, Medieval Art and Material Culture
James Robinson – Medieval Seals: Image and Truth
Jesse D. Hurlbut – The Mystic Lamb of Ghent: Alderman’s Seal, Altarpiece, and Tableau Vivant
Janet E. Snyder – Vestiary Identity in Twelfth-Century Seals
Susan Solway – Ancient Coins and their Afterlife: Numismatic Passages into Medieval Art and Material Culture
John Cunnally – Muslim Coins of the Crusader Period in a Renaissance Collection: Premature Medievalism or Mistaken Identity
Informations pratiques :
S. Solway (ed.), Medieval Coins and Seals: Constructing Identity, Signifying Power, Turnhout, Brepols, 2015. IV+547 p., 269 b/w ill. + 42 colour ill., 216 x 280 mm. ISBN: 978-2-503-54344-4. Prix : 175,00 euros.
Source : Brepols






Vous devez être connecté pour poster un commentaire.