EARLY MEDIEVAL ART (G 4319) Fall 2002 Tuesdays, 6:10-8:00 pm Schermerhorn Hall, Room 612

Similar documents
HRS 131: MEDIEVAL CULTURE Professor Mary Doyno Fall 2015 Tuesdays 10:30-11:45am Calaveras 123 Thursdays (on-line)

HISTORICAL TRIPOS PART I PAPER 13 EUROPEAN HISTORY 31 BC AD COURSE GUIDE

HISTORICAL TRIPOS PART I PAPER 13 EUROPEAN HISTORY 31 BC AD COURSE GUIDE

DEREE COLLEGE SYLLABUS FOR: AT 3007 BYZANTINE ART AND ARCHITECTURE. (Previously AT 3007 Early Christian and Byzantine Art and Architecture)

Office: HumB 373; Tel ; Office Hours: M, W 12:00-2:00; T, Th 2:00-4:00; and by appointment

A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by:

The Holy Roman Empire ( ) By: Aubrey Feyrer Amanda Peng Ian Scribner

HillS: MEDIEVAL EUROPE, ILS207: HISTORY OF WESTERN CULTURE, I

HIST 311: Augustus Caesar to Charlemagne: Europe in the First Millennium (3 credit hours) Instructor: Craig M Nakashian Phone:

Early Christian Rome: Art and History

Early Medieval Art. Carolingian Art 8 th -9 th Centuries, France & Germany Ottonian Art 10 th -Early 11 th Centuries, Germany

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

HRS 131: MEDIEVAL CULTURE Professor Mary Doyno Fall 2017 Mondays and Wednesdays 3-4:15pm Alpine 218

HI 201: History of Medieval Europe Fall 2016 TTh 12:30-2:00. CAS 325

+TIP. M. The World 2011, fall semester ENAD. Office: Hours: Phone: .edu GOALS. Great". He. of Charlemagne. European.

Chapter 8: The Byzantine Empire & Emerging Europe, A.D Lesson 4: The Age of Charlemagne

EUROPEAN MIDDLE AGES 476 AD 1500 AD

ARCHAEOLOGY OF ROME S PROVINCES

European Middle Ages,

Warrior Bishops: The Development of the Fighting Clergy under the Ottonians in the Tenth Century

Year Course Programme Early Medieval:

G r e e k s, R o m a n s, K i n g s a n d C r u s a d e r s : E u r o p e a n H i s t o r y t o

History of France: Middle Ages to Susan Mokhberi

Medieval Architecture February The North, Early Medieval and Carolingian Architecture

HTST : The History of Europe (Medieval Europe)

Unit V: The Middle Ages and the Formation of Western Europe ( ) Chapter 13&14

A. After the Roman Empire collapsed, western Europe was ruled by Germanic tribes.

13.1 Charlemagne Unites Germanic Kingdoms. Many Germanic kingdoms that succeeded the Roman Empire are reunited under Charlemagne s empire.

CROATIAN ART AND THE WEST: A VENERABLE WITNESS RECALLED

In the Fall, we made it from approximately 10,000 BC to the 1500s. Next up: 1500s-today

S Y L L A B U S. Sept 19 Course Introduction: Modernity and the Pre-Modern West (J. Hankins) Graeco-Roman Antiquity

Required Text / Materials There is no required textbook for this course. All assigned readings will be posted on Sakai.

Western Europe Ch

Chapter 6, lesson 3 CULTURE of the MIDDLE AGES

Learning Goal 3: Describe the major causes of the Reformation and the political, intellectual, artistic, economic and religious effects of the

Western Civilization Early Civilization to 1715

World History Honors Semester 1 Review Guide

History 103 Introduction to the Medieval World Fall 2007 UNIV 117 MWF 11:30 12:20

21H.402 The Making of a Roman Emperor Fall 2005

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject

The Early Middle Ages (500C1050 CE)

Early Christian Art. Sarcophagus = Tomb Junius Bassus = Roman Prefect. From the period soon after Christianity becomes legal

Chapter Nine: The Rise of Medieval Culture Charlemagne: Ruler and Diplomat ( )

Time Periods for this chapter include:

School of History. History & 2000 Level /9 - August History (HI) modules

GOOD MORNING!!! Middle Ages Medieval Times Dark Ages

Read Chapters from your textbook. Answer the following short answer and multiple choice questions based on the readings in the space provided.

#HUMN-225 COURSE SYLLABUS FOR HUMANITIES III. Dirk Andrews Instructor

This course has no prerequisites and assumes no prior knowledge of Roman or early medieval history.

Chapter 8: The Byzantine Empire & Emerging Europe, A.D Lesson 3: The Early Christian Church

Lahore University of Management Sciences. Fall HIST 126 Europe from the Neolithic to the 1600s

SEMESTER AT SEA COURSE SYLLABUS. Pre-requisites: Previous course work in art/architectural history/history recommended

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject

Introduction to the Modern World History / Fall 2008 Prof. William G. Gray

History and Literature 90an

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

Blake, S. (2013) Western Adoption of Byzantine Tropes in the Early Medieval Period.

HI 307: The Roman World

History 110: The Ancient Mediterranean

The Byzantine Empire and Emerging Europe. Chapter 8

History 205: European History from Antiquity to 1700

University of Texas at Austin Western Civilization in Medieval Times Spring 2017 Syllabus (Subject to change)

History 181 Europe Transformed: From Rome to the Renaissance. Office: Maxey Office Hours: Mon, Thus 1:30-3:00; Fr 10-10:50

LG 1: Explain how Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy were unifying social and political forces in Western Europe and Byzantine Europe and

CHARLEMAGNE AND THE NEW EUROPE

RCIA Significant Moments from the Past Session 25

AKA the Medieval Period with knights, castles and the Black Plague. 8/12/2012 1

World History: Patterns of Interaction

A. Western Europe was on the margins of world history for most of the postclassical millennium.

History 101, Sections 1-3 Fall 2017 State University of New York at Stony Brook MW 12:00-12:50, PLUS section meeting Melville W4550

The Rise of the Franks through Charlemagne (c ) Charlemagne (768-8l4)

The European Middle Ages CE

CHAPTER 12 - THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES IN THE WEST TO 1000: THE BIRTH OF EUROPE

Early Medieval Europe 5 th (first quarter of the) 11 th century

Rebirth. Responses to the changing demographics and increases in wealth also manifested themselves in art and thinking the Renaissance.

Medieval Europe & Crusades. Snapshots of two representative periods: Charlemagne And The Crusades

Set up a new TOC for the 2 nd 6 weeks

THE PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION IN MODERN HISTORY. General History I : The Transformation of the Ancient World. Bibliography

Fall 2005 (September 5th - December 14th): Monday & Wednesday, pm; 1221 Humanities (with occasional classes in 274 Van Hise, as noted)

The Fall of Rome: The Darkness Begins

World History Unit 6 Lesson 1 Charlemagne & Feudalism

Zach Schulz, Office: REC 421. Office hours: Wednesdays, 9:45-10:45am and Thursdays, 2:00-3:00pm, or by appointment.

GSTR 310 Understandings of Christianity: The Global Face of Christianity Fall 2010

Byzantine Empire ( )

AH/RL/HS 253 FROM PONTIUS PILATE TO THEODOSIUS: THE ADVENT OF CHRISTIANITY IES Abroad Rome

Medieval Art. Medieval Art. Key Notions 22/09/2017. Or, the Hold of the Church St. Lawrence, 9/21/2017

The Church. The Church

History Practicum The Crusades HIS Spring 2015

THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY POLITICS, SOCIETY, AND SOCIAL THOUGHT IN EUROPE I: SYLLABUS

Early Medieval Europe Gardner Ch. 16 (pages ) Context

Week 1 The Age of Süleyman: An Introduction to Artistic Orientations

Dawson Period Coverage

Chapter 8 Lesson Reviews

With increasing institutionalization, physical power is replaced by legitimate birth, specific qualifications, or formal election, and the fist by

Bentley Chapter 16 Study Guide: The Two Worlds of Christendom

HST 177H THE APOCALYPSE IN THE CHRISTIAN MIDDLE AGES

Charlemagne The Formation Of A European Identity

OUTLINE LECTURE 1. Continental Legal History. Period Description Politics Intellectual Roman Canon Customary/National Early Middle Ages:

CLASSICS (CLASSICS) Classics (CLASSICS) 1. CLASSICS 205 GREEK AND LATIN ORIGINS OF MEDICAL TERMS 3 credits. Enroll Info: None

THE PROTESTANT REFORMATION 500 YEAR ANNIVERSARY OCTOBER 31, OCTOBER 31, 2017

Transcription:

1 EARLY MEDIEVAL ART (G 4319) Fall 2002 Tuesdays, 6:10-8:00 pm Schermerhorn Hall, Room 612 Prof. Holger Klein e-mail: hak56@columbia.edu 903 Schermerhorn Hall (854-3230) Office Hours: Wednesday, 9:00-11:00 a.m. or by appointment BULLETIN DESCRIPTION A survey of the art and culture of Medieval Europe from the late 5 th through the late 11 th centuries with particular emphasis on the arts and culture of the Carolingian and Ottonian empires. COURSE RATIONALE While the Department of Art History and Archaeology has offered lecture courses on Early Christian and Byzantine Art, Early Christian and Early Medieval Art, and Gothic Art in the past, there has not yet been a course that focused exclusively on the history, art, and culture of Early Medieval Europe. Designed as a course for graduate and advanced undergraduate students, the aim of this lecture course is two-fold: on the one hand it will provide a comprehensive survey of the most important monuments of Early Medieval art and architecture from the fifth through the eleventh centuries, on the other hand it will challenge the modern concept of Medieval art (as opposed to Classical and Renaissance art) by exploring the continuing importance of Classical themes and traditions in the arts of Carolingian and Ottonian Germany. As such, the course will lay the historical and art historical basis for a graduate seminar entitled Continuity and Change between Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages offered by Professor Richard Brilliant and myself in the Spring of 2003. COURSE DESCRIPTION This lecture course, designed for graduate and advanced undergraduate students, offers a survey of the most important monuments, themes, and developments of Early Medieval art, spanning chronologically from the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century to the Investiture Conflict at the end of the eleventh and beginning of the twelfth centuries. The course will explore the formation of Western Medieval culture and its relationship to the Late Antique tradition, the establishment of a Western Roman Empire under Charlemagne and its cultural and artistic implications, and the continuation of the Carolingian cultural and artistic achievements under the Ottonian and Salien emperors of

2 the tenth and eleventh centuries. Topics of special interest will include the function of art and architecture as a means of imperial self-representation, the role of bishops, abbots, and abbesses as patrons of the arts, the problem of cultural exchange between the Byzantine and the German empires, the development of Medieval church architecture and its function as a liturgical space, and the production methods and use of liturgical books and sacred vessels. The lecture will end with an exploration of the emergence of the Romanesque as a decidedly European stylistic phenomenon. EVALUATION For undergraduate students: The final grade will be determined by a formal midterm (30%) and a final exam (50%). Regular attendance and participation in class and discussion sections is required and will amount to 20% of the final grade. For graduate students: The final grade will be determined by a formal midterm (30%), two response papers (20%) and a final research paper (18-20 pages) on a topic related to the lecture course (50%). The deadline for the submission of the final paper is Dec. 13. Students taking the class for r-credit are required to take the midterm and final exam. DISCUSSION SECTION All undergraduate students are required to attend a discussion section that will meet once every week in addition to the lecture. Times and rooms for these sections will be announced in the first week of the semester. READINGS The texts required for the preparation of the class are available at the Reserve Desk at Avery Library. The following books, related to the topic of the class, are available for purchase at Labyrinth Books, 536 West 112 th Street. W. DIEBOLD, Word and Image. An Introduction to Early Medieval Art, Oxford 2000 L. NEES, Early Medieval Art, Oxford 2002 R. STALLEY, Early Medieval Architecture, Oxford 1999 D.A. WARNER, The Chronicon of Thietmar of Merseburg, Manchester 2001 CALENDAR Sept. 3 WEEK 1: Introduction Sept. 10

3 WEEK 2: From Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages P. GEARY, Before France and Germany, New York 1988, pp. 3-38 J. HERRIN, The Formation of Christendom, Princeton 1987, pp. 19-53 I. WOOD, Culture, in: R. MCKITTERICK (ed.), The Early Middle Ages, 400-1000, Oxford 2001, pp. 167-198 Sept. 17 WEEK 3: Art and Culture in the Frankish Kingdom T. REUTER, Germany in the Early Middle Ages c. 800-1056, London 1991, pp. 21-69 R. MCKITTERICK, Town and Monastery in the Carolingian Period, in: The Frankish Kings and Culture in the Early Middle Ages, Aldershot 1995, Study II, pp. 93-102 M. MCCORMICK, The Liturgy of War in the Early Middle Ages: Crisis, Litanies and the Carolingian Monarchy, in: Viator 15 (1984), pp. 1-23 Sept. 24 WEEK 4: Charlemagne and the idea of a Christian Empire J. HERRIN, The Formation of Christendom, Princeton 1987, pp. 445-476 P. GRIERSON, Money and Coinage under Charlemagne, in: H. BEUMANN (ed.), Karl der Große. Lebenswerk und Nachleben, Düsseldorf 1965, pp. 501-536 R. MCKITTERICK, Text and Image in the Carolingian World, in: The Frankish Kings and Culture in the Early Middle Ages, Aldershot 1995, Study VIII, pp. 297-318 Oct. 1 WEEK 5: The Carolingian Renascence: Means and Ends E. PANOFSKY, Renaissance and Renascences, Stockholm 1960, pp. 42-113 L. NEES, The Plan of St. Gall and the Theory of the Program of Carolingian Art, in: Gesta 25/1 (1986), pp. 1-8 B. BRENK, Spolia from Constantine to Charlemagne, in: DOP 41 (1987), pp. 103-109 Oct. 8 WEEK 6: Rome in the Carolingian Age: Aspects of Papal Patronage C. WALTER, Papal Political Imagery in the Medieval Lateran Palace, in: Cahiers Archéologiques 20 (1970), pp. 157-160; 170-176 R. KRAUTHEIMER, The Carolingian Revival of Early Christian Architecture, in: Art Bulletin 24 (1942), pp. 1-38 R. KRAUTHEIMER, Rome. Profile of a City, 312-1308, Princeton 2000, pp.109-142 Oct. 15 WEEK 7: Carolingian Tradition and Ottonian Innovation R. MCKITTERICK, Continuity and Innovation in Tenth-Century Ottonian Culture, in: The Frankish Kings and Culture in the Early Middle Ages, Aldershot 1995, Study XII, pp. 15-24 T. ZOTZ, Carolingian Tradition and Ottonian-Salian Innovation, in: A.J. DUGGAN (ed.), Kings and Kingship in Medieval Europe, London 1993, pp. 69-100

4 K. LEYSER, Ritual, Ceremony and Gesture: Ottonian Germany, in: K. LEYSER, Communications and Power in Medieval Europe, London 1994, pp. 189-213 Oct. 22 WEEK 8: Midterm Exam Oct. 29 WEEK 9: Byzantine Art and the West: The Case of Empress Theophanu R. MCKITTERICK, Ottonian Intellectual culture in the tenth century and the role of Theophanu, in: The Frankish Kings and Culture in the Early Middle Ages, Aldershot 1995, Study XIII, pp. 53-74 K. LEYSER, Theophanu Divina Gratia Imperatrix Augusta, in: K. LEYSER, Communications and Power in Medieval Europe, London 1994, pp. 143-164 H. WESTERMANN-ANGERHAUSEN, Did Theophano leave her mark on the Ottonian sumptuary arts?, in: Empress Theophano: Byzantium and the West at the turn of the first millennium, Cambridge 1995, pp. 244-264 Nov. 5 WEEK 10: Election Day (no class) Nov. 12 WEEK 11: Ottonian Illuminated Manuscripts H. MAYR-HARTING, Ottonian Book Illumination, London 1999, pp. 157-201 H. BUCHTHAL, Byzantium and Reichenau, in: M. CHATZIDAKIS (ed.), Byzantine Art. An European Art, Athens 1966, pp. 43-58 F. MÜTHERICH, Ottonian Art: Changing Aspects, in: Studies in Western Art, Princeton 1963, I, pp. 27-39 Nov. 19 WEEK 12: Bishops as Patrons: Egbert, Bernward, et alteri A. COHEN and A. DERBES, Bernward and Eve at Hildesheim, in: Gesta 40/1 (2001), pp.19-38 Th. HEAD, Art and Artifice in Ottonian Trier, in: Gesta 36 (1997), pp. 65-82 C. NORDENFALK, Archbishop Egbert s Registrum Gregorii, in: Studien zur mittelalterlichen Kunst. Festschrift für Florentine Mütherich, München 1985, pp. 87-100 Nov. 26 WEEK 13: Henry II Emperor, Saint, and Patron of the Arts D.A. WARNER, The Chronicon of Thietmar of Merseburg, Manchester 2001, pp.205-234; 306-321 E. Garrison, Henry II s Iconographic Renovatio: The Dedicatory Images of the Pericope Book and Regensburg Sacramentary, in: N. Hiscock (ed.), The White Mantle of Churches. Architecture, Liturgy, and Art aropund the Millenium, Brepols 2002, in press

5 S. WEINFURTER, Authority and Legitimation of Royal Policy and Action. The Case of Henry II, in: ALTHOFF/FRIED/GEARY (ed.), Medieval Concepts of the Past. Ritual, Memorym Historiography, Cambridge 2001, pp. 19-37 Dec. 3 WEEK 14: The Birth of an International Style, or: What is Romanesque? R. STALLEY, Early Medieval Architecture, Oxford 1999, pp. 191-211 C.R. DODWELL, The Pictorial Arts of the West, 800-1200, New Haven 1993, pp. 32-44 Dec. 10 WEEK 14: Reading/Study Days Dec. 17 WEEK 15: Final Exam