Abstract
AbstractSince the sixteenth century, both scholarly and popular readings of tomb monuments have assigned a series of interpretations to medieval effigies with crossed legs. These have included the beliefs that the effigies dated from before the Norman Conquest; that they commemorated crusaders, or those who had taken crusading vows; and that they commemorated Knights Templar. The ‘crusader’ theory has proved particularly tenacious, and, although largely discredited by scholars, continues to flourish in folk wisdom. This paper charts the emergence and dissemination of these several ideas and the debates they engendered. It argues that the early modern identification of the cross-legged attitude as a noteworthy feature was, despite its mistaken associations, a landmark in the story of the formulation of techniques for the typological diagnosis of antiquities.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Archeology,History,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Archeology
Reference264 articles.
1. BL, Cotton Jul F.vi, fols 379–86 (anonymous notes re Dorset and Somerset, c 1579)
2. ‘The monumental effigies of Staffordshire, Part II’;Jeavons;Trans Proc Birmingham Archaeol Soc,1954
Cited by
3 articles.
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