Toledo Cathedral: Building Histories in Medieval Castile

Awards:   Nominated for Spiro Kostof Book Award 2017 Nominated for The Haskins Medal 2017
Author:   Tom Nickson (Courtauld)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
ISBN:  

9780271066455


Pages:   324
Publication Date:   18 November 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Toledo Cathedral: Building Histories in Medieval Castile


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Awards

  • Nominated for Spiro Kostof Book Award 2017
  • Nominated for The Haskins Medal 2017

Overview

Medieval Toledo is famous as a center of Arabic learning and as a home to sizable Jewish, Muslim, and Christian communities. Yet its cathedral—one of the largest, richest, and best preserved in all of Europe—is little known outside Spain. In Toledo Cathedral, Tom Nickson provides the first in-depth analysis of the cathedral’s art and architecture. Focusing on the early thirteenth to the late fourteenth centuries, he examines over two hundred years of change and consolidation, tracing the growth of the cathedral in the city as well as the evolution of sacred places within the cathedral itself. He goes on to consider this substantial monument in terms of its location in Toledo, Spain’s most cosmopolitan city in the medieval period. Nickson also addresses the importance and symbolic significance of Toledo’s cathedral to the city and the art and architecture of the medieval Iberian Peninsula, showing how it fits in with broader narratives of change in the arts, culture, and ideology of the late medieval period in Spain and in Mediterranean Europe as a whole.

Full Product Details

Author:   Tom Nickson (Courtauld)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 22.90cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 25.40cm
Weight:   1.678kg
ISBN:  

9780271066455


ISBN 10:   0271066458
Pages:   324
Publication Date:   18 November 2015
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Contents List of Illustrations Tables Abbreviations Acknowledgments Note on the Text Part 1 Introduction Building Histories The Historical Trajectory Toledan Encounters Chapter 1. The City The Forma mezquite Part 2 Chapter 2. The Design Rodrigo and his Chapter Building Big Vaults Chapels Chapter 3. Rodrigo’s Project Setting Out New Altars, Old Altars The Upper Levels Building the Cathedral Building Toledo Chapter 4. Between Córdoba and Paris Design and Transmission Inventing vaults Chapter 5. The Exemplary Form Archaeological Evidence Written Evidence Stylistic Evidence Finding the End Part 3 Chapter 6. The Cathedral of Memory Liturgy The Dead Sacred Topography The Treasury Chapter 7. Cults Mad about Mary Mary Multiplied Greedyguts and Avarice The Cult of St Ildefonso The San Ildefonso Chapel St Eugene The Cross Chapter 8. Urbs regia The Royal Chapels Kings and Crosses History Embodied Picturing History Chapter 9. Cathedral and City The Puerta del Reloj The West Façade The Puerta del Perdón Chapter 10. Art and Belief Tenorio and his Painters Locating the Choir Enclosure Picturing the Pentateuch The Choir Enclosure and Image Culture in Late Medieval Castile Conclusion. Toledo and Beyond Glossary Appendix Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

Nickson contends that 'scale, ambition, and rhetoric' set Toledo Cathedral apart from the other thirteenth-century Spanish cathedrals of Burgos and Le n, and certainly the ambitious objectives of his study of Toledo set it apart from previous scholarship on Spanish Gothic architecture. --Danya Crites, Speculum A wonderfully interdisciplinary study, Toledo Cathedral will have great appeal to a variety of readers interested in medieval Spain and Gothic art and architecture, as well as those who study medieval memory and the extended 'life' of buildings. --Elisa A. Foster, CAA.Reviews This study proves a strong voice for Toledo in the realm of scholarship. Nickson's introduction acknowledges the fact that his diverse angles of approach may make some readers read this book piecemeal. Those who do wish to pursue specific topics will find the volume easy to consult and clearly laid out; the second appendix, for example, pairs with fig. 64 to reconstruct the original location of chapels, altars, and their dedications (some eighty-four in all), while numerous color plates give details ranging from liturgical furnishings, manuscript illuminations, textile work, and, of course, architecture. This rich range, integrated with many high-quality images, will make Toledo Cathedral a valuable resource for any scholar of medieval Castile, or indeed of medieval Europe. But the book is much more than a collection of fascinating parts; the author's engaging, frank first-person style and interwoven narratives make it a rewarding work in its entirety. --Charlotte A. Stanford, Mediaevistik This superb volume is unlikely to be read from cover to cover. It is a mosaic of different studies dealing with disparate themes related to the architectural origins of each part of the building. The intending reader needs to dip into it rather than attempt to absorb its contents at a sitting. Perhaps Nickson's most valuable contribution is to give us not merely an analysis of stonework but a very lucid presentation of the evidence for multiple aspects of identity, and the claims of the cathedral to power and primacy. . . . Tom Nickson gives us an expert analysis, superbly illustrated, in a highly detailed but also well-accomplished piece of research. --Henry Kamen, Times Literary Supplement A learned but fluent book. --Christopher Howse, The Telegraph / Sacred Mysteries blog Few studies of Spanish Gothic architecture address the history and significance of a major cathedral with such mastery as does Tom Nickson's Toledo Cathedral. Nickson's meticulous scrutiny of primary texts and material evidence builds a cogent, persuasive construction narrative that illuminates the roots and trajectory of Toledo Cathedral's distinctive design, while his reconstruction of the late medieval people, objects, and performances that animated this great building sheds unprecedented light on its continuing importance to a city bent on asserting its centrality to Iberian history, politics, and culture. Blending traditional architectural analysis with incisive social history, this impressive, generously illustrated book will reshape our understanding not just of Toledo's history and meaning but also of the story and significance of Gothic architecture in Spain. --Pamela Patton, Princeton University With this imposing study of the primatial cathedral of Spain, Tom Nickson has written one of the outstanding architectural monographs in the history of Spanish (and European) Gothic. But, as the author underlines, the book is as much concerned with the building of history as the history of building. It reconciles many separate studies on the cathedral and blends new Spanish art-historical scholarship with close documentary archaeology. Above all, it presents a rich overlay of Roman, Visigothic, and Islamic cultures and integrates them into Toledo's active communities of Jews, Muslims, Christians, and confessional converts--questions of ethnic identity which still dominate our own concerns. Spain, at last, has the cathedral it deserves. --Paul Crossley, The Courtauld Institute of Art A masterly exploration and minute analysis of a soaring masterpiece, Tom Nickson's revelatory study directs new and penetrating light onto the social importance--and architectural significance--of his subject. --Peter Linehan, St. John's College, University of Cambridge Nickson has produced a magnificent and multifaceted piece of scholarship, thus making a superb contribution to the state of our common knowledge. Toledo Cathedral: Building Histories in Medieval Castile will remain for generations to come an essential point of reference for all who wish to embark on the study of medieval Toledo and 'Gothic' (if we must) Spain. --Cynthia Robinson, The Medieval Review Compared with those of northern Europe, medieval cathedrals of Spain have thus far received relatively little scholarly attention. This comprehensive study . . . is therefore welcome. --W. Cahn, Choice


A masterly exploration and minute analysis of a soaring masterpiece, Tom Nickson s revelatory study directs new and penetrating light onto the social importance and architectural significance of his subject. Peter Linehan, St. John s College, University of Cambridge


A learned but fluent book. --Christopher Howse, The Telegraph / Sacred Mysteries blog


Few studies of Spanish Gothic architecture address the history and significance of a major cathedral with such mastery as does Thomas Nickson's Toledo Cathedral. Nickson's meticulous scrutiny of primary texts and material evidence builds a cogent, persuasive construction narrative that illuminates the roots and trajectory of Toledo Cathedral's distinctive design, while his reconstruction of the late medieval people, objects, and performances that animated this great building sheds unprecedented light on its continuing importance to a city bent on asserting its centrality to Iberian history, politics, and culture. Blending traditional architectural analysis with incisive social history, this impressive, generously illustrated book will reshape our understanding not just of Toledo's history and meaning but also of the story and significance of Gothic architecture in Spain. --Pamela Patton, Princeton University


Nickson contends that 'scale, ambition, and rhetoric' set Toledo Cathedral apart from the other thirteenth-century Spanish cathedrals of Burgos and Le n, and certainly the ambitious objectives of his study of Toledo set it apart from previous scholarship on Spanish Gothic architecture. --Danya Crites, Speculum A wonderfully interdisciplinary study, Toledo Cathedral will have great appeal to a variety of readers interested in medieval Spain and Gothic art and architecture, as well as those who study medieval memory and the extended 'life' of buildings. --Elisa A. Foster, CAA.Reviews This study proves a strong voice for Toledo in the realm of scholarship. Nickson's introduction acknowledges the fact that his diverse angles of approach may make some readers read this book piecemeal. Those who do wish to pursue specific topics will find the volume easy to consult and clearly laid out; the second appendix, for example, pairs with fig. 64 to reconstruct the original location of chapels, altars, and their dedications (some eighty-four in all), while numerous color plates give details ranging from liturgical furnishings, manuscript illuminations, textile work, and, of course, architecture. This rich range, integrated with many high-quality images, will make Toledo Cathedral a valuable resource for any scholar of medieval Castile, or indeed of medieval Europe. But the book is much more than a collection of fascinating parts; the author's engaging, frank first-person style and interwoven narratives make it a rewarding work in its entirety. --Charlotte A. Stanford, Mediaevistik A learned but fluent book. --Christopher Howse, The Telegraph / Sacred Mysteries blog With this imposing study of the primatial cathedral of Spain, Tom Nickson has written one of the outstanding architectural monographs in the history of Spanish (and European) Gothic. But, as the author underlines, the book is as much concerned with the building of history as the history of building. It reconciles many separate studies on the cathedral and blends new Spanish art-historical scholarship with close documentary archaeology. Above all, it presents a rich overlay of Roman, Visigothic, and Islamic cultures and integrates them into Toledo's active communities of Jews, Muslims, Christians, and confessional converts--questions of ethnic identity which still dominate our own concerns. Spain, at last, has the cathedral it deserves. --Paul Crossley, The Courtauld Institute of Art A masterly exploration and minute analysis of a soaring masterpiece, Tom Nickson's revelatory study directs new and penetrating light onto the social importance--and architectural significance--of his subject. --Peter Linehan, St. John's College, University of Cambridge Few studies of Spanish Gothic architecture address the history and significance of a major cathedral with such mastery as does Tom Nickson's Toledo Cathedral. Nickson's meticulous scrutiny of primary texts and material evidence builds a cogent, persuasive construction narrative that illuminates the roots and trajectory of Toledo Cathedral's distinctive design, while his reconstruction of the late medieval people, objects, and performances that animated this great building sheds unprecedented light on its continuing importance to a city bent on asserting its centrality to Iberian history, politics, and culture. Blending traditional architectural analysis with incisive social history, this impressive, generously illustrated book will reshape our understanding not just of Toledo's history and meaning but also of the story and significance of Gothic architecture in Spain. --Pamela Patton, Princeton University Nickson has produced a magnificent and multifaceted piece of scholarship, thus making a superb contribution to the state of our common knowledge. Toledo Cathedral: Building Histories in Medieval Castile will remain for generations to come an essential point of reference for all who wish to embark on the study of medieval Toledo and 'Gothic' (if we must) Spain. --Cynthia Robinson, The Medieval Review Compared with those of northern Europe, medieval cathedrals of Spain have thus far received relatively little scholarly attention. This comprehensive study . . . is therefore welcome. --W. Cahn, Choice This superb volume is unlikely to be read from cover to cover. It is a mosaic of different studies dealing with disparate themes related to the architectural origins of each part of the building. The intending reader needs to dip into it rather than attempt to absorb its contents at a sitting. Perhaps Nickson's most valuable contribution is to give us not merely an analysis of stonework but a very lucid presentation of the evidence for multiple aspects of identity, and the claims of the cathedral to power and primacy. . . . Tom Nickson gives us an expert analysis, superbly illustrated, in a highly detailed but also well-accomplished piece of research. --Henry Kamen, Times Literary Supplement


Author Information

Tom Nickson is Lecturer in Medieval Art and Architecture at The Courtauld Institute of Art, London.

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