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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
341

Recherches sur l’iconographie profane à la fin du Moyen Âge : les premiers traités de chasse enluminés (livre du roy Modus et de la royne Ratio de H. de Ferrières – livre de chasse de Febus) / A study in late Middle Ages secular iconography : early illuminated huntbooks (livre du roy Modus et de la royne Ratio by H. de Ferrières – livre de chasse by Febus)

Pagenot, Sandrine 28 November 2009 (has links)
Les deux principaux traités de chasse français médiévaux, le Livre du roy Modus et de la royne Ratio, rédigé entre 1354 et 1377 par un seigneur normand, Henri de Ferrières et le Livre de chasse, écrit de 1387 à 1388 par le comte Gaston III de Foix-Béarn, dit Febus, sont nés de la volonté d’établir une somme des savoirs cynégétiques et de les transmettre aux générations futures grâce à un livre associant des images au texte. Ce travail se propose de mettre en lumière les modalités de la création iconographique, la fonction des miniatures, leur relation avec le texte, au sein d’un ouvrage didactique profane, ainsi que la transmission d’un modèle, en se fondant sur les exemplaires les plus anciens de chaque œuvre (exécutés en 1379 et 1388-1390) et sur un corpus représentatif de leurs suiveurs, s’échelonnant sur un siècle. On a pu expliquer l’apparition d’un tel projet à la fin du XIVe siècle en analysant le propos et les intentions des auteurs et en cernant un contexte intellectuel, social et artistique favorable. L’examen des données formelles des livres et surtout de leur mise en page a montré un équilibre entre texte et image et le caractère pédagogique de leur traitement visuel. L’étude approfondie des cycles originaux a révélé la souplesse des mises en scène et des procédés narratifs s’adaptant aux contenus variés, l’implication concomitante de l’auteur et de l’artiste dans la création des illustrations, la variété des usages faits par les miniatures du référent textuel et la multiplicité des rôles dévolus aux images. Les premiers traités de chasse enluminés voient le langage pictural collaborer avec le langage écrit au service de l’ambition didactique du livre. / The two principle French medieval huntbooks, the Livre du roy Modus et de la royne Ratio, written between 1354 and 1377 by Henri de Ferrières, a Norman nobleman, and the Livre de chasse, written between 1387 and 1388 by Comte Gaston III de Foix-Béarn, called Febus, were encouraged and sponsored for the purpose of establishing a significant compilation of hunting knowledge, intended for future generation through a work associating illustration with the text. The present thesis proposes a clarification of the modes of iconographic creation, the role of miniatures, their relation to a text, at the heart of secular didactic works, as well as transmitting a model, founded upon the oldest copies of each work (executed respectively in 1379 and 1388-1390) and on a representative body of works by followers extended over one century. It was possible to explain the appearence of such a project at the end of 14th century by analysing proposals and intentions of the authors and discerning favorable intellectual, social and artistic context. Examination of book content and espacially setting on the page showed balance between text and ilustration and the pedagogic character of visual treatment. Extended study of original cycles revealed the suppleness of the visual story line and of the narrative process adapting to variable content, the concomitant connection between author and artist for the creation of illustrations, the variety of textual usages in miniatures and the multiplicity of roles given to images. The first illuminated huntbook treatises show pictural language working effectively with written language in the service of didactic purposes of the book.
342

La tenture de l’abbatiale Saint-Robert de La Chaise-Dieu : un chef-d’œuvre de collaboration / The tapestries of Saint-Robert of La Chaise-Dieu

Brun, Sophie 02 October 2009 (has links)
Conservés dans le chœur de l’abbaye Saint-Robert pour lequel ils furent crées, les douze panneaux de la tenture de La Chaise-Dieu mettent en scène les épisodes de la Vie du Christ et de la Vie de la Vierge, flanqués de leurs préfigures vétérotestamentaires. En outre, deux pièces indépendantes reproduisent plusieurs compositions évangéliques du cycle principal. De multiples blasons révèlent l’identité du commanditaire, Jacques de Saint-Nectaire, qui gouverne l’institution bénédictine de 1491 à 1518, soit dans le contexte historique de l’arrivée de la commende. Basée sur un matériel d’analyse exceptionnel, cette étude monographique propose une reconstitution de l’élaboration artistique de l’œuvre et tente de définir l’implication du commanditaire dans le projet initial, le degré de liberté des peintres et l’influence des lissiers sur le rendu final des tapisseries. Dans ce but, l’étude des modèles gravés et de leur utilisation lors de la réalisation des cartons à grandeur fait l’objet d’une attention particulière. En conclusion, ce travail apporte des hypothèses concernant le milieu d’origine des artistes et la localisation de leurs ateliers. / As one of the most spectacular cycle of medieval tapestries preserved, the fourteen woven panels of La Chaise-Dieu - for most of them still hanging in the choir of Saint-Robert church (Auvergne/France) - depict episodes of Jesus and Mary’s life along with scenes extracted from the Old Testament. Their many blazons have always identified their patron with Jacques de Saint-Nectaire, abbot of the Benedictine institution from 1491 to 1518. Thanks to the tremendous group of evidences offered by this unique set, this research challenges the general assumptions of the elaboration of tapestries, introducing a new insight about the distinctive roles played by the patron, the master painter, his assistants and the weavers. A particular importance has been lent to the study of the engravings used as patterns. As a conclusion, this work aims to provide some hypothesis regarding the artists’ origins and their workshops’ location.
343

‘Parochiæ Venetiarum’. Paroisses et communautés paroissiales à Venise dans les derniers siècles du Moyen Âge / ‘Parochiæ Venetiarum’. Parishes and parochial communities in Venice during the last centuries of the Middle Ages

Vuillemin, Pascal 30 November 2009 (has links)
À la fin du Moyen Âge, les paroisses urbaines traversèrent une période de crise, qui se traduisit par une profonde déprise, temporelle et spirituelle, des cadres paroissiaux sur les fidèles. Cette recherche entend considérer un ensemble de paroisses urbaines dans les derniers siècles du Moyen Âge afin d’observer, « de l’intérieur », les conditions, les enjeux et les conséquences de l’évolution des interactions entre les paroisses et leurs communautés paroissiales. Venise, du fait de la richesse de ses archives paroissiales, a été retenue pour mener cette enquête. Dans un premier temps de l'étude, une vue d’ensemble des cadres paroissiaux vénitiens est proposée dans une confrontation constante avec le droit canonique médiéval : les territoires, les clergés et la liturgie sont ainsi examinés. Alors que le droit canonique juxtaposait ces trois cadres, la réalité paroissiale vénitienne en souligne au contraire les interactions. On en vient ensuite à envisager les évolutions à l'œuvre, qu’il s’agisse de l’affirmation du juspatronat laïc, de l’élaboration d’une nouvelle économie paroissiale et des transformations des pratiques dévotionnelles. Enfin, la thèse s’attache à mesurer les effets de ces mutations, qui se reflétaient dans la concurrence exercée par les autres établissements religieux, concurrence qui porta à une désagrégation des droits coutumiers paroissiaux. Aussi, l’ordinaire vénitien entreprit-il à la fin du XVe siècle de réformer les paroisses et d’en unifier les coutumes, donnant ainsi naissance à une institution paroissiale vénitienne qui se maintint jusqu’à la chute de la République. / In the late Middle Ages, urban parishes went through a period of crisis, which resulted in a profound abandonment by the parochial structures of whole sections of faithfuls'life, both temporal and spiritual. The aim of this research involves the study, through the analysis of their own archives, of a collection of urban parishes in the last centuries of the Middle Ages in order to observe, "from within" conditions, issues and consequences of changing interactions between parishes and their faithful communities. Because of its vast parish records, Venice has been chosen as the particular object of this investigation. The first part provides an initial overview of the Venetian parochial structures, comparing them to medieval canon law, therefore the territories, the clergy and the liturgy are discussed. In fact, while canon law juxtaposed these three frameworks, the reality of the Venetian parochial organisations instead emphasized the existing interactions between these three levels. The second part is therefore considering the various developments : like the assertion of secular juspatronat, the rise of a new parish economy or changes in devotional practices. Finally, a third part attempts to measure the effects of these mutations, which were reflected in the competition from other religious bodies. A competition that led to disintegration of customary parochial rights. So, to solve these difficulties, the Venetian episcopate began, in the late fifteenth century, to reform its parishes and to unify their specific customs, by thus giving birth to the Venetian parochial institution that will continue until the fall of the Republic.
344

The sacred history of early Islamic Medina : the prophet, caliphs, scholars and the town's Ḥaram

Munt, Thomas H. R. January 2011 (has links)
This thesis investigates the emergence of Medina in the Ḥijāz as a widely-venerated holy city over the first three Islamic centuries (seventh to ninth centuries CE) within the appropriate historical context, with special attention paid to the town’s ḥaram. It focuses in particular upon the roles played by the Prophet Muḥammad, Umayyad and Abbasid caliphs, and early Islamic legal scholars in this development. It shows that Medina’s emergence as a widely-venerated holy city alongside Mecca was a gradual and contested process, and one that was intimately linked with several important developments concerning legitimate political, religious, and legal authority in the Islamic world. The most important sources for this study have been Medina’s local histories, and Chapter One investigates the development of a tradition of local history-writing there. The Prophet Muḥammad first created a form of sacred space, a ḥaram, at Medina, and Chapter Two seeks to provide the context for this by investigating some forms of sacred and protected space found in the pre-Islamic Arabian Peninsula. Chapter Three then examines a rare early document preserved in the later Islamic sources, which deals in part with Muḥammad’s creation of Medina’s ḥaram, the so-called “Constitution of Medina”, and investigates why and how Muḥammad created that particular form of sacred space at Medina. The remaining two chapters deal with the history of Muḥammad’s ḥaram at Medina after his death as its original raison d’être disappeared. Chapter Four analyses some aspects of Muslim legal scholars’ discussions concerning Medina’s ḥaram, and demonstrates that certain groups disputed its existence. Chapter Five then seeks to understand why caliphs and other scholars invested so heavily in actively promoting its widespread veneration and Medina’s status as a holy city. It concludes that caliphs from the late first/early eighth century patronised Medina to associate themselves with legitimate political authority inherited from Muḥammad, and that from the late second/eighth century certain legal scholars argued for the continued existence of Medina’s ḥaram because of its association with the Prophet and his Companions who had come to be for them the ultimate source of legal authority.
345

Images of the built landscape in the later Roman world

Simon, Jesse January 2012 (has links)
At its greatest extent, the Roman empire represented one of the largest continuous areas of land to have been ruled by a single central administration in the classical period. While the extent of the empire may be determined from both the extensive body of literary evidence from the Roman world, and also from the physi- cal remains of great public works stretching from Britain to Arabia, the processes by which the Romans were able to apprehend larger spaces remain infrequently studied in modern scholarship. It is often assumed that Roman spatial awareness came from cartographic representations and that the imperial Roman administration must have possessed detailed scale maps of both individual regions and of the empire as a whole. In the first part of the present study, it is demonstrated that Roman spatial understanding may not have relied very extensively on cartography, and that any maps produced in the Roman world were designed to serve very different purposes from those that we might associate with maps today. Instead, it is argued that the extensive construction projects that defined the character of the imperial world would have pro- vided a means by which the larger physical spaces of the empire could be understood. However, as transformations began to occur within the built environment between the late-third and late-sixth centuries, spatial processes would have necessarily started to change. In the second part of the present study, it is suggested that attitudes toward the built environment would have led to changes in the physical arrangement of rural and urban spaces in late antiquity; furthermore the eventual dissolution of the constructed landscape that defined the Roman empire would have resulted in new approaches to the apprehension of larger spaces, approaches in which cartographic expression may have played a more central role.
346

Theories of national identity in early medieval Ireland

Wadden, Patrick James January 2011 (has links)
Despite the political disunity of early Irish society, theories and expressions of national identity abounded in the work of the learned classes of clerics, genealogists, poets and lawyers. This thesis examines texts from two crucial periods in the evolution of these theories. Focusing initially on the seventh and eighth centuries, the first part of the thesis argues that Irish national identity was created as part of a campaign to assert the joint authority of the Uí Néill kings of Tara and their ecclesiastical allies in Armagh. Drawing inspiration from biblical and patristic sources, and possibly also from contemporary developments elsewhere in Europe, these ecclesiastico-political allies asserted the national unity of the Irish in linguistic, genetic and territorial terms in pursuit of their own particular objectives. The influence of biblical and patristic beliefs on many of these early expressions of Irish identity highlights the outward-looking nature of the Irish scholarly tradition. During the eleventh and twelfth centuries, this international dimension intensified as the histories and identities of foreign peoples became subjects of study in Ireland, and new source materials filtered into the country from overseas. With reference to two texts composed during this period, the Irish Sex Aetates Mundi and a poem on national characteristics beginning Cumtach na nIudaide n-ard – the second part of this thesis discusses the influence of newly acquired sources on contemporary Irish scholarship. It also examines how the information contained in these sources was adapted and rationalised to conform to the basic assumptions of Irish society.
347

The politics of interpretation : language, philosophy, and authority in the Carolingian Empire (775-820)

Carlson, Laura M. January 2011 (has links)
Is language a tool of empire or is empire a tool of language? This thesis examines the cultivation of Carolingian hegemony on a pan-European scale; one defined by a renewed interest in the study of language and its relationship to Carolingian eagerness for moral and spiritual authority. Intended to complement previous work on Carolingian cultural politics, this thesis reiterates the emergence of active philosophical speculation during the late eighth and early ninth centuries. Prior research has ignored the centrality of linguistic hermeneutics in the Carolingian literate programme. This thesis addresses this lacuna, demonstrating the symbiotic relationship between spirituality, language, and politics within the Carolingian world. The work appropriates prior investigations into the connection of semiotics and Christian philosophy and proposes the development of a renewed interest into ontology and epistemology by Carolingian scholars, notably Alcuin of York and Theodulf of Orléans. The correlation between linguistic philosophy and spiritual authority is confirmed by the 794 Synod of Frankfurt, at which accusations towards both the Adoptionist movement of northern Spain and the repeal of Byzantine Iconoclasm were based on the dangers of linguistic misinterpretation. The thesis also explores the manifestation of this emergent philosophy of language within the manuscript evidence, witnessed by the biblical pandects produced by Alcuin and Theodulf. Desire for the emendation of texts, not to mention the formation of a uniform script (Caroline Minuscule), abetted the larger goal of both infusing a text with authority (both secular and divine) and allowing for broader spiritual and intellectual understanding of a text. Increasing engagement with classical philosophy and rhetoric, the nature of Carolingian biblical revision, and the cultural politics as seen at the Synod of Frankfurt depict the primacy of language to the Carolingians, not only as a tool of imperialism, but the axis of their intellectual and spiritual world.
348

Society, Community and Power in Northern Spain : 700-1000

Portass, Robert Nicholas January 2011 (has links)
The period from c.718 to c.1000 oversaw the reconquest of a significant part of the Iberian Peninsula by the Kingdom of Asturias (718–910) and its successor in León (910–1037); the study of this process of Reconquista has in recent years focused on two broader social changes: the increasing exploitation of the peasantry, and the eclipse of public power. In the Introduction, I argue that it is necessary to integrate the study of peasant societies with analyses of royal and aristocratic power; reframing the subject in this way, we are able to appreciate the diversity of social experience which characterized both peasant and aristocratic life across the two case studies here examined, Southern Galicia, and the Liébana. I argue that the tenth century must be seen on its own terms, and without the benefit of hindsight, if we are to characterize it fairly. Chapter Two discusses the source material I have used in the elaboration of this thesis, highlighting its uses and problems from a critical perspective. In Chapter Three I show that fluid social structures allowed a family to rise to power from amongst the village inhabitants of the Liébana. Public officials such as counts were not able to impose themselves frequently upon this society. In Chapter Four, I show how a rich and aristocratic family of lay magnates, based in southern Galicia, were major political operators from the ninth century, but only came to exercise significant social influence amongst local society after the construction of the monastery of Celanova in 936. My Conclusion contextualizes these changes; it also argues that more nuanced and less schematic approaches to social relations demonstrate that peasants retained considerable autonomy in this period, and that factional politics influenced the stability of kingship far more than the supposed eclipse of public power.
349

Angels in Anglo-Saxon England, 700-1000

Sowerby, R. S. January 2012 (has links)
This thesis seeks to understand the changing place of angels in the religious culture of Anglo-Saxon England between AD 700 and 1000. From images carved in stone to reports of prophetic apparitions, angels are a remarkably ubiquitous presence in the art, literature and theology of early medieval England. That very ubiquity has, however, meant that their significance in Anglo-Saxon thought has largely been overlooked, dismissed as a commonplace of fanciful monkish imaginations. But angels were always bound up with constantly evolving ideas about human nature, devotional practice and the workings of the world. By examining the changing ways that Anglo-Saxon Christians thought about the unseen beings which shared their world, it is possible to detect broader changes in religious thought and expression in one part of the early medieval West. The six chapters of this thesis each investigate a different strand from this complex of ideas. Chapters One and Two begin with Anglo-Saxon beliefs at their most theological and speculative, exploring ideas about the early history of the angels and the nature of their society – ideas which were used to express and promote changing ideals about religious practice in early England. Chapters Three and Four turn to the ways that angels were believed to interact more directly in earthly affairs, as guardians of the living and escorts of the dead, showing how even apparently traditional beliefs reveal changing ideas about intercession, moral achievement and the supernatural. Lastly, Chapters Five and Six investigate the complicated ways that these ideas informed two central aspects of Anglo-Saxon religion: the cult of saints, and devotional prayer. A final Conclusion considers the cumulative trajectory of these otherwise distinct aspects of Anglo-Saxon thought, and asks how we might best explain the changing importance of angels in early medieval England.
350

The logic of political conflict in the late Middle Ages : a comparative study of urban political conflicts in Italy and the southern Low Countries, c. 1370-1440

Lantschner, Patrick January 2013 (has links)
This thesis examines urban political conflict in the late Middle Ages (c. 1370-1440) in Europe’s most heavily urbanised regions, Italy and the Southern Low Countries. Conflicts have frequently been viewed in the context of an emerging state-controlled political order, and have been interpreted either as forms of disruptive disorder, or as affirmations of political processes shaped by states. This thesis suggests that urban conflict should be studied not in the context of a state-controlled political order, but within the political framework provided by the numerous semi-autonomous jurisdictional institutions inside and outside cities (such as guilds, parishes or contending outside powers). This pluralistic order of politics gave rise to a form of political order sui generis which expressed itself in two ways. According to a general logic of conflict (Part One), particular rationales for justifying conflict (Chapter One) and specific political practices ranging from concealed protest to urban warfare (Chapter Two) were embedded in this multi-faceted and shifting political framework. Action groups could be negotiated and renegotiated around the resources provided by the city’s multiple legitimating institutions (Chapter Three). At the same time, such political institutions were configured differently in different cities, and this also generated a particular logic which lay at the basis of different systems of conflict (Part Two). Levels of conflict could, in fact, vary greatly between Bologna and Liège (Chapter Four), Florence and Tournai (Chapter Five), and Lille and Verona (Chapter Six), where, on the basis of different underlying political institutions, diverse practices of conflict and forms of association prevailed. The pluralistic order of politics itself was, therefore, a form of political organisation which crystallised around conflict. It gave rise to a logic which put conflict at the centre of the political order of late medieval cities.

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