Explores the history and significance of Limoges enamels in medieval
Norway, offering new insights into their cultural and material
context. This book presents the results of years of research on
Limoges enamels in the medieval Norwegian Church province (established
1152/1153). This is the first study of the 133, more-or-less complete,
surviving objects. In presenting this new knowledge, the book aims to
stimulate further research about the material culture of the Middle
Ages, and to provide an important resource for those studying churches
and places in the Nordic countries, medieval art and especially
Limoges enamels. Over 4000 of the French enamels probably found their
way to the northern fringes of Europe in the 13th century. This
estimate is based on the numbers of preserved objects and pieces that
have been discovered in Norwegian medieval churches, as well as on the
references to such items in the Icelandic church inventories. The
results of this new study question some of the earlier interpretations
accepted by European medievalists. The lustrous copperworks of the
Limousin district were known throughout Europe in the Middle Ages.
Their products – reliquaries, crucifixes, candlesticks, book-covers,
censers – embellishing churches and coffrets, boxes, belt buckles
and harness fittings, revealed the success of the elite. Yet, these
works have not received much attention in the Nordic countries, and
the secular enamels have been particularly underestimated. We have no
evidence for the location and organisation of workshops, or to the
diffusion of products, including exports to the Nordic countries. The
author argues that enamels destined for Norway, and probably Iceland
too, travelled by established sea routes and reached Bergen via the
port of London. The book keeps the object at the centre, explores its
setting and history and emphasises that the enamel itself supplies the
main information; it becomes a source to itself. The focus is not the
traditional art historical study of typologies and styles; instead,
the key theme is the cultural context of the enamels and the visual
vocabulary, supplied by the ecclesiastical conventions, that they
convey. The enamellers consistently employed the same imagery from the
12th–14th centuries. Yet, the works reveal amazing individual
variations and are a remarkable fusion of creativity and continuity
– no two are identical. The role of these liturgical objects is as
guides to devotion. Accordingly, a specific survey of the crowned and
robed Christ enamels reveals that he is epitomised not only as King,
but also as High Priest and Celebrant of the Mass: he thus becomes a
mediator between God in Heaven and the earthly congregation. The
author also explores the effect on Limoges enamels from renewed
interest in the Middle Ages in the 18th–20th centuries: the
production of modern enamels in ‘the Limoges style’ (fakes), and
the dismounting of medieval enamels and re-use in modern contexts.
This suggests that the acknowledged Catholic allegories have been lost
in the transformation process. The surviving collection from medieval
Norway reveals that rare, exclusive enamels are outnumbered by the
more modest ones meant for a wider market. Yet, every single item is
proof of and a unique source for the history of Nordic material
culture in the Middle Ages.
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Enamels of Limoges in Norway
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9798888572115
Publisert
2026
Utgiver
Casemate Publishers and Book Distributors, LLC
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter