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The medieval South Caucasus : artistic cultures of Albania, Armenia and Georgia / edited by Ivan Foletti and Erik Thunø ; with the collaboration of Adrien Palladino.
Fine Arts Library N7292.4 .M43 2016
By Request
- Format:
- Book
- Series:
- Convivium (Brno, Czech Republic). Supplementum ; 2336-3452 2016.
- Convivium. Supplementum, 2336-3452 ; 2016
- Language:
- Czech
- English
- German
- Subjects (All):
- Art, Medieval--Caucasus, South.
- Art, Medieval.
- South Caucasus.
- Physical Description:
- 227 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), facsimiles, maps, plans, portraits ; 26 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- [Turnhout] : Brepols, 2016.
- Language Note:
- Text in English with 1 contribution in German; abstracts in English; summaries in Czech.
- Summary:
- The volume serves as an introduction to what its editors have chosen to call the "artistic cultures" prevalent during the Middle Ages in the region of the South Caucasus. Although far from comprehensive in terms of material, chronology and geography, the volume intends to raise awareness of a region whose artistic wealth and cultural diversity has remained relatively unknown to most medievalists. Stretching from Eastern Anatolia and the Black Sea in the West to the Caspian Sea in the East, and from the snow-capped Great Caucasus mountain range in the north to the Armenian highlands in the south, medieval southern Caucasia was originally divided into the kingdom of Caucasian Albania, Greater and Lesser Armenia, and western and eastern Georgia, that is, the kingdoms of Lazica (Egrisi) and Iberia (Kartli) respectively. Together, these entities made the South Caucasus a true frontier region between Europe and Asia and a place of transcultural exchange. Its official Christianization began as early as in the fourth century, even before Constantine the Great founded Constantinople or had himself been converted to Christianity. During the subsequent centuries, the region became a well-connected and strategic buffer zone for its neighboring and occupant Byzantine, Persian, Islamic, Seljuk and Mongol powers. And although subject to constantly shifting borders, the medieval kingdoms of the South Caucasus remained an internally diverse yet shared and distinct geographical and historical unity. Far from being isolated, these cultures were part of a much wider medieval universe. Because of the transcultural nature and elevated artistic quality of their objects and monuments, they have much to offer the field of art history, which has recently been challenged to think more globally in terms of transculturation, movement and appropriation among medieval cultures.
- Contents:
- The artistic cultures of the Medieval South Caucasus : historiography, myths, and objects / Ivan Foletti & Erik Thunø
- The Russian view of a "peripheral" region : Nikodim P. Kondakov and the Southern Caucasus / Ivan Foletti
- Southern Caucasus in perspective : the scholarly debate through the pages of "Seminarium Kondakovianum" and "Skythika" (1927-1938) / Francesco Lovino
- Medieval monuments from empire to nation states : beyond Armenian and Islamic architecture in the South Caucasus (1180-1300) / Patricia Blessing
- The monument and the world : Zuart'noc' and the problem of origins / Christina Maranci
- Greek bearing gifts : the icon of Xaxuli and enamel doplomacy between Byzantium and Georgia / Antony Eastmond
- Medieval art and modern approaches : a new look at the Akhtala paintings / Marina Bulia & Mzia Janjalia
- Toward a detailed typology : four-sided stelae in early Christian South Caucasus / Sipana Tchakerian
- Cross-cultural dressing, the Medieval South Caucasus and art history / Erik Thunø
- Early Christian churches in Caucasian Albania / Annegret Plontke-Lüning
- Relics, woodworking, and the skins of reptiles / Lynn Jones
- Svanetien : das letzte Mittelalter Europas / Marina Kevkhishvili
- Echoes of Golgotha : on the iconization of monumental crosses in Medieval Svaneťi / Michele Bacci.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references.
- ISBN:
- 8021083220
- 9788021083226
- OCLC:
- 962127208
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