107-220 Art and Culture in Medieval North Europe | |
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Note | Formerly available as 107-120. Students who have completed 107-120 are not eligible to enrol in this subject. |
Availability | 2nd and 3rd year |
Credit Points | 12.5 |
HECS Band | 1 |
Coordinator | Prof Nigel Morgan |
Prerequisites | Usually 25 points of first-year art history, see Prerequisites. |
Semester | 1 (view timetable) |
Contact | A 1-hour lecture and a 1.5-hour tutorial per week |
Subject Description | This subject forms an introduction to the art of medieval Northern Europe from the 11th to the 14th centuries, focusing on England, France and Germany. Students should develop a knowledge of areas such as the art of the 11th and 12th centuries in the context of Benedictine, Cluniac and Cistercian expressions of monasticism; Romanesque art in Burgundy and Languedoc; the rise of Gothic and Abbot Suger of St Denis; the architecture, sculpture and stained glass of the Gothic cathedrals of Chartres, Bourges, Paris, Amiens and Reims in France, of Canterbury, Wells, Lincoln, Salisbury and Westminster Abbey in England, and of Cologne, Magdeburg, Bamberg and Naumburg in Germany; 12th and 13th century manuscript illumination, ivories, enamel and goldsmith work; Christological and Marian imagery, and that of the saints and their lives; chivalric culture and influence of the patronage of lay men and women at the courts of France and England in the 13th century. |
Assessment | Written work, comprising of a 1000 word class paper, a 2000 word essay, and a 1000 word visual test. |
Prescribed Texts | A subject reader will be available. |
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