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OverviewThe twenty-five papers, taken from a Cardiff conference in 1998, are concerned with Insular art in its broadest sense, encompassing studies of metalwork, manuscripts, sculpture and textiles, both recent discoveries and new investigations of well-known objects. They include material associated with Anglo-Saxon England as well as early Medieval Scotland, Wales and Ireland, and discoveries of Insular metalwork in Scandinavia. They are divided into five themes which reflect the many recent advances in the study of Insular art. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mark Redknap , Nancy Edwards , Alan Lane , Susan YoungsPublisher: Oxbow Books Imprint: Oxbow Books Dimensions: Width: 21.00cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 29.70cm Weight: 1.324kg ISBN: 9781842170588ISBN 10: 1842170589 Pages: 293 Publication Date: 18 January 2002 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPart I. Politics and Patrons 1. Patrons and politics: Art, artefact and methodology (Raghnall O Floinn) 2. The cultural and political milieu of the deposition and manufacture of the hoard discovered at Reerasta Rath, Ardagh, Co. Limerick (Edel Bhreathnach) Part II. National and regional identities 3. National and regional identities: the 'glittering prizes' (James Graham-Campbell) 4. Strap-ends and the identification of regional patterns in the production and circulation of ornamental metalwork in Late Anglo-Saxon and Viking Age Britain (Gabor Thomas) 5. Irish monumental sculpture : the dating evidence provided by linguistic forms (Catherine Swift) 6. Neo-Pelagianism, early Insular religious art, and the image of Christ (Shirley Ann Brown and Michael W. Herren) Part III: Art and Archaeology 7. The Mote of Mark: the archaeological context of the decorated metalwork (David Longley) 8. A fine quality Insular embroidery from Llan-gors Crannog, near Brecon (Hero Granger-Taylor and Frances Pritchard) 9. Galls bangles as a regional development in Early Medieval Ireland (Judith Carroll) 10. The rapid qualitative analysis of groups of metalwork: making a dream come true (Paul T. Craddock, Jonathan M. Wallis and John F. Merkel) 11. Insular belt-fittings from the Pagan Norse graves of Scotland: a reappraisal in the light of scientific and stylistic analysis (Caroline Paterson) 12. An aspect of seventh-century Anglo-Saxon goldsmithing (Michael Pindar) 13. The earliest filigree from Ireland (Niamh Whitfield) Part V. Style: Analysis, Methodology and Meaning 14. The Barberini Gospels (Rome, Vatican, Biblioteca Aposolica Barberini Lat. 570) as a paradigm of Insular art (George Henderson) 15. Style: a history of uses and abuses in the study of Insular art (Nancy Netzer) 16. The St Petersburg Gospels and the sources of Southumbrian art (Victoria A. Bruno) 17. Bible text and illumination in St Gall Stiftsbibliothek Codex 51, with special reference to Longinus in the Crucifixion Scene (Martin McNamara) 18. Hidden order, order revealed: New light on carpet pages (Emmanuelle Pirotte) 19. Apocalyptic elements in Irish High Cross iconography? (Kees Veelenturf) 20. High Cross design (Robert D. Stevick) 21. Two shrine fragments from Kineddar, Moray (Penny Dransart) 22. The date of the Aberlemno churchyard stoen (Lloyd Laing) 23. Biblical narrative and local imagery on the Kilnaruane cross-shaft, Co. Cork (Jonathan M. Wooding) 24. The Hillquarter, Co. Westmeath Mounts: an Early Medieval Saddle from Ireland (Eamonn P. Kelly) 25. Survival and revival of the Insular stle in Later Medieval Scottish art (Virginia Glenn)Reviews... (this) volume can rightly take its place as an important source of original scholarship and future discussion.'--Jane Hawkes Archaeological Journal (01/01/0001) ... (this) volume can rightly take its place as an important source of original scholarship and future discussion.'--Jane Hawkes -Archaeological Journal, 159, 2002 - ... (this) volume can rightly take its place as an important source of original scholarship and future discussion.'--Jane Hawkes Archaeological Journal, 159 (01/01/2002) ... (this) volume can rightly take its place as an important source of original scholarship and future discussion.'--Jane Hawkes Archaeological Journal, 159, 2002 full of interest...the book is well produced, and the quality of illustration is commendably high.'--Richard N Bailey CBA/Archaeology in Wales, 42, 2002 full of interest...the book is well produced, and the quality of illustration is commendably high.'--Richard N Bailey CBA/Archaeology in Wales, 42, 2002 ... (this) volume can rightly take its place as an important source of original scholarship and future discussion.'--Jane Hawkes Archaeological Journal, 159, 2002 ... (this) volume can rightly take its place as an important source of original scholarship and future discussion.'--Jane Hawkes Archaeological Journal, 159, 2002 Author InformationDr Mark Redknap, FSA, is Head of Collections & Research in the Department of History & Archaeology, Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales. His research covers aspects of terrestrial and maritime/underwater archaeology, with a recent focus on early medieval and medieval material culture, providing reports on possible post-Roman treasure to coroners in Wales. He served as a Commissioner for the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales 2008 - 2018 Dr Alan Lane, FSA, is a Senior Lecturer in Early Medieval Archaeology at Cardiff University. He specialises in the archaeology of the Celtic West and North and has carried out excavations and research in Wales and Scotland on high status settlement sites. He has worked on the Iron Age, post-Roman and Viking ceramic sequences of the Hebrides and their use as site identification markers. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |