Je (středověk) doba temna? Umění, migrace a moc

Title in English Dark Middle Ages?
Authors

FOLETTI Ivan LEŠÁK Martin PICHANIČOVÁ Veronika ROSENBERGOVÁ Sabina

Year of publication 2022
Type Monograph
Citation
Description In popular culture, the Middle Ages have often been represented as a dark period full of misery, while medieval art has been regarded decadent. If we, however, resolve to look closer, we encounter a much more lively and diverse world that cannot be characterized in few sentences, a world filled with light as much as with darkness. The authors of the book contemplate on early medieval art and visual cultures with the aim to refute the most widespread stereotypes related to the period. Did the fall of the Roman Empire and the Migration Period lead to a decline of artistic production? Was the medieval landscape interwoven with dark, dense, and dangerous forests, as we know them from the Robin Hood legends or the literary works of the Romanticism? Was the religious sphere strictly divided from the profane one not to be desecrated? Was the art's purpose solely to celebrate God, and were gold and precious stones instrumental only for the manifestation of the power and wealth of the Church? Authors seek to find answers to these and other questions and present the early Middle Ages rather as a colourful mosaic, a period of vivid cultural exchange and diversity, and, in certain sense, as a cradle of abstract and conceptual thinking. In the end, the main goal of the book is to answer, at least partially, the question in its title, i.e. were the Middle Ages a dark period of history? In popular culture, the Middle Ages have often been represented as a dark period full of misery, while medieval art has been regarded decadent. If we, however, resolve to look closer, we encounter a much more lively and diverse world that cannot be characterized in few sentences, a world filled with light as much as with darkness. The authors of the book contemplate on early medieval art and visual cultures with the aim to refute the most widespread stereotypes related to the period. Did the fall of the Roman Empire and the Migration Period lead to a decline of artistic production? Was the medieval landscape interwoven with dark, dense, and dangerous forests, as we know them from the Robin Hood legends or the literary works of the Romanticism? Was the religious sphere strictly divided from the profane one not to be desecrated? Was the art's purpose solely to celebrate God, and were gold and precious stones instrumental only for the manifestation of the power and wealth of the Church? Authors seek to find answers to these and other questions and present the early Middle Ages rather as a colourful mosaic, a period of vivid cultural exchange and diversity, and, in certain sense, as a cradle of abstract and conceptual thinking. In the end, the main goal of the book is to answer, at least partially, the question in its title, i.e. were the Middle Ages a dark period of history?

You are running an old browser version. We recommend updating your browser to its latest version.