Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title Early Christian Chapels in the West : Decoration, Function, and Patronage
Published University of Toronto Press 2003

Copies

Description 1 online resource (512 pages)
Contents Intro -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- List of Abbreviations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Origins, Semantics, and Functions of the Early Christian Chapel -- Part One: The Context of the Chapels in Italy and Istria: History, Archaeology, and Topography -- 1 Martyr Shrine to Funerary Chapel -- 2 The Mausolea of the Imperial Family in the West -- 3 The Domestic Oratory: A Mirage -- 4 Chapels within the Confines of Churches: A Late Development -- Part Two: The Survivors: Iconography and Meaning -- 5 A Sole Survivor: The Chapel of the Archbishops of Ravenna -- 6 Commemoration of the Dead: S Vittore in Ciel D'Oro, Milan, and the S Matrona Chapel at S Prisco -- 7 Mausolea of the Rulers in the West -- 8 Papal Chapels: The Chapels of Pope Hilarus at the Lateran Baptistery, Rome -- 9 A Collective Funerary Martyrium: The S Venanzio Chapel, Rome -- 10 The Chapel Revisited: A Synthesis -- Appendix: A Short Catalogue of Chapels Mentioned in This Book -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Z -- Illustrations
Summary Chapels were among the important types of buildings that evolved during the first four centuries of organised Christianity in the West. They were originally developed in connection with the cult of the saints, commemorating both their gravesites and their places of martyrdom. But the chapels rapidly found other uses among the ever-expanding Christian population as places of prayer and pilgrimage, and were chosen by the faithful for their own burial beside the saints. With little in the way of contemporary written records, the decorative programme of each chapel is now often the only way to determine the function, patronage, and meaning of the building. Gillian Mackie examines the decorative schemes of the surviving chapels built in Italy and Istria from AD312-740 in the context of numerous chapels known from archaeological sites or from later medieval texts. Using the decoration as the primary source of evidence on the buildings' use and meaning, this survey includes chapels, imperial mausolea, and the oratories of the popes and bishops, from Rome, Milan, Ravenna, and the smaller centres of the upper Adriatic. The author begins with an overview of the various types, and then discusses several of the most complete monuments in considerable detail. Unique in its scope and approach, Mackie's survey of the functional context of early medieval chapels is the most complete work ever published in its field and will be an important reference work for anyone interested in medieval art and architecture
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes English
Subject Chapels -- Italy.
Church decoration and ornament -- Italy
Architecture, Medieval -- Italy
Chapels -- Italy -- History -- To 1500
Mausoleums -- Italy -- History -- To 1500
Saints -- Cult -- Italy -- History -- To 1500
HISTORY -- Medieval.
ARCHITECTURE -- Buildings -- Religious.
Church decoration and ornament
Architecture, Medieval
Chapels
Mausoleums
Saints -- Cult
Heiligenverering.
Kapellen (bouwkunst)
Italy
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 1282014277
9781282014275
9786612014277
661201427X
1442674180
9781442674189