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Church Monuments in South Wales, c.1200-1547
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The first full-scale study of the medieval funerary monuments of South Wales.South Wales is an area blessed with an eclectic, but largely unknown, monumental heritage, ranging from plain cross slab...
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17 November 2017

The first full-scale study of the medieval funerary monuments of South Wales.
South Wales is an area blessed with an eclectic, but largely unknown, monumental heritage, ranging from plain cross slabs to richly carved effigial monuments on canopied tomb-chests. As a group, these monuments closely reflect theturbulent history of the southern march of Wales, its close links to the West Country and its differences from the 'native Wales' of the north-west. As individuals, they offer fascinating insights into the spiritual and secular concerns of the area's culturally diverse elites.
Church Monuments in South Wales is the first full-scale study of the medieval funerary monuments of this region offering a much-needed Celtic contribution to the growingcorpus of literature on the monumental culture of late-medieval Europe, which for the British Isles has been hitherto dominated by English studies. It focuses on the social groups who commissioned and were commemorated by funerary monuments and how this distinctive memorial culture reflected their shifting fortunes, tastes and pre-occupations at a time of great social change.
Rhianydd Biebrach has taught medieval history at the universities ofSwansea, Cardiff and South Wales and edited the journal Church Monuments. She currently works for Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum Wales.
South Wales is an area blessed with an eclectic, but largely unknown, monumental heritage, ranging from plain cross slabs to richly carved effigial monuments on canopied tomb-chests. As a group, these monuments closely reflect theturbulent history of the southern march of Wales, its close links to the West Country and its differences from the 'native Wales' of the north-west. As individuals, they offer fascinating insights into the spiritual and secular concerns of the area's culturally diverse elites.
Church Monuments in South Wales is the first full-scale study of the medieval funerary monuments of this region offering a much-needed Celtic contribution to the growingcorpus of literature on the monumental culture of late-medieval Europe, which for the British Isles has been hitherto dominated by English studies. It focuses on the social groups who commissioned and were commemorated by funerary monuments and how this distinctive memorial culture reflected their shifting fortunes, tastes and pre-occupations at a time of great social change.
Rhianydd Biebrach has taught medieval history at the universities ofSwansea, Cardiff and South Wales and edited the journal Church Monuments. She currently works for Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum Wales.
Price: $85.00
Pages: 226
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Boydell Press
Publication Date:
17 November 2017
Trim Size: 9.45 X 6.69 in
ISBN: 9781783272648
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
HISTORY / Europe / Medieval, European history: medieval period, middle ages, ART / History / European / Medieval, RELIGION / Christianity / History, History of art
An extremely competent, interesting and well set-out study of an important subject.
Introduction. South Wales from the Thirteenth to the Early Sixteenth Century
An Overview of Welsh Monuments
Patrons and Subjects: The Social Status of those Commissioning and Commemorated by Monuments in South Wales
Materials, Production and Supply
Spirituality and the Desire for Salvation
Secular Concerns
Afterlife
Conclusion
Bibliography
An Overview of Welsh Monuments
Patrons and Subjects: The Social Status of those Commissioning and Commemorated by Monuments in South Wales
Materials, Production and Supply
Spirituality and the Desire for Salvation
Secular Concerns
Afterlife
Conclusion
Bibliography