Art, architecture, and aesthetics in the baronial convents of medieval Latium

Title: Art, architecture, and aesthetics in the baronial convents of medieval Latium
Variant title:
  • Umění, architektura a estetika šlechtických klášterů středověkého Latia
Source document: Convivium. 2022, vol. 9, iss. Supplementum 1, pp. [92]-[111]
Extent
[92]-[111]
  • ISSN
    2336-3452 (print)
    2336-808X (online)
Type: Article
Language
Summary language
License: Not specified license
Rights access
fulltext is not accessible
 

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Abstract(s)
Despite extensive recent scholarly attention to female monastic art and architecture, no comprehensive analysis of late-medieval conventual communities in Rome and Latium has been done to date. Archival study, cross-referenced with in-depth analysis of material evidence from convents directly endowed by baronial families, raises a challenge to traditional "top-down" readings in favor of an interdisciplinary network perspective. This article highlights common and diverse features of "baronial" nunneries by using evidence from case studies in a comparative framework. The nunneries selected for this multifocal analysis were those with the most promising documentary, architectural, and artistic remains, with particular attention to five characterizing features: ground plan, liturgical furnishings, family chapel, fresco decoration, and choir. In the absence of an overreaching study of medieval conventual realities in Rome and Latium, this article provides an in-depth analysis of the characterizing features of the principal convents endowed by barons in the region. This investigation should foster a deeper understanding of the fragmented and inherently stratified material culture of medieval Rome its environs.