The Place of the Cross in Anglo-Saxon England

Front Cover
Catherine E. Karkov, Sarah Larratt Keefer, Karen Louise Jolly
Boydell Press, 2006 - 171 pages
The cross in early medieval England was so ubiquitous as to become invisible to the modern eye: it played an innovative role in Anglo-Saxon culture, evident in art, architecture, material culture, literature, ritual, medicine, and popular practice. The essays in this volume move us from the place of the cross in the origins of Anglo-Saxon England and the Anglo-Saxon church, to its place in the expansion of the early Anglo-Saxon kingdoms both within and beyond England. They reach back to the sources, both material and textual, of Early Christian Rome and Jerusalem, and forward to the visionary cross of the Last Judgement. Perhaps most importantly, throughout they challenge existing notions of the development of Anglo-Saxon sculpture, the patronage and audiences of Anglo-Saxon texts, the use of sources, physical and cultural geography and the Anglo-Saxon imagination. In doing so they make important contributions not only to our understanding of Anglo-Saxon England and the place of the cross within it, but also to our understanding of the place of Anglo-Saxon England within the medieval world.

CATHERINE E. KARKOV is Professor of Art at Miami University.
SARAH L. KEEFER is Professor of English at Trent University.
KAREN L. JOLLY is Associate Professor of History at the University of Hawaii Manoa.

Contributors: IAN WOOD, ELIZABETH COATSWORTH, ALEXANDER R. RUMBLE, INGE B. MILFULL, KAREN LOUISE JOLLY, DAVID F. JOHNSON, KAROLYN KINANE, JANE ROBERTS, CALVIN B. KENDALL, ELAINE TREHARNE, NICHOLAS J. HIGHAM.
 

Contents

IAN WOOD
3
ALEXANDER R RUMBLE
29
INGE B MILFULL
43
KAREN L JOLLY
58
DAVID F JOHNSON
80
KAROLYN KINANE
96
JANE ROBERTS
113
CALVIN B KENDALL
129
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About the author (2006)

CATHERINE E. KARKOV is Professor Emeritus of Art History, University of Leeds. Karen Louise Jolly is professor of medieval European history at the University of Hawai'i Mānoa. Her research focuses on popular religion, marginal manuscripts, and re-imagining early medieval Britain through historical fiction.

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