Buch, Englisch, 486 Seiten, Format (B × H): 181 mm x 251 mm, Gewicht: 1150 g
Buch, Englisch, 486 Seiten, Format (B × H): 181 mm x 251 mm, Gewicht: 1150 g
ISBN: 978-1-4094-1761-3
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction
From Isis to Mary: The Arx and its surroundings from Antiquity to the Middle Ages
1 Before the Franciscans: The previous churches on the site
- Cunctarum prima quae fuit orbe sita: Literary, documentary, and epigraphic evidence from the earliest times to the thirteenth century
- From S. Maria in Capitolio to S. Maria in Aracoeli: the title
- Archaeological evidence from the earliest times to the thirteenth century
- The previous churches and their relationship with the Franciscan building
- Early medieval church furniture
- The obelisk
- The cloisters
- Conclusion
2 The Franciscan ‘appropriation’ of the Arx
- Franciscan foundations in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Europe
- The Franciscans in Rome and their new headquarters
- The ara coeli
- The monument and its ‘meaning’
- The ara coeli ‘confessio’: Art for the Benedictines or the Franciscans?
- New and old cults before the construction of the new church
3 The New Franciscan Church: Between tradition and innovation
- An architectural analysis of the medieval building
- Nave and aisles
- Transept
- Chapel L9
- Original main chapel
- Façade
- The decoration of the apse and the Franciscan promotion of the legend of Augustus from Rome to Finland
- Marble workshop: Window tracery
- Transmission and reception of formal ideas: Artistic exchanges between Rome and England in the thirteenth century
- The magister principalis and the builders
- The deployment of Spolia and Franciscan ideas
- New and old cults in the new Franciscan church: paths for faithful and pilgrims
4 The ‘extended’ space of the Franciscan church: S. Maria in Aracoeli as a lived social and political place
- The ‘extended’ space of the church exterior
- The original side-entrance and the guardianship of the minors
- Preaching, politics, and religious tribunals
- The ‘extended’ space of the church interior
- Inner appearance and family chapels
- Burying in the Franciscan church
- Between ‘public’ and ‘private’ in the Rome of the popular regime: Francesco Felici’s icon tabernacle and family chapel (1372)
- Beyond Rome: the Legend of Augustus and the Aracoeli icon in Fourteenth- and early Fifteenth-century Siena
Conclusions
Appendix: chart of intercolumniations