Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Crusader Rhetoric and the Infancy Cycles on Medieval Baptismal Fonts in the Baltic Region
View through CrossRef
This is the first comprehensive, interdisciplinary analysis to demonstrate that the representation of Infancy cycles on twelfth-and-thirteenth-century baptismal fonts was primarily a northern predilection in the Latin West directly influenced by the contemporary military campaigns. The Infantia Christi Corpus, a collection of approximately one-hundred-and-fifty fonts, verifies how the Danish and Gotland workshops modified and augmented biblical history to reflect the prevailing crusader ideology and rhetoric that dominated life during the Valdemarian era in the Baltic region. The artisans constructed the pictorial programs according to the readings of the Mass for the feast days in the seasons of Advent, Christmas and Epiphanytide. The political ambitions of the northern leaders and the Church to create a Land of St. Peter in the Baltic region strategically influenced the integration of Holy Land motifs, warrior saints, militia Christi and martyrdom in the Infancy cycles to justify the escalating northern conquests.
Neither before nor after, in the history of baptismal fonts, have so many been ornamented with the Infancy cycle in elaborate pictorial programs. A brief revival of elaborate Infancy cycles occurs on the fourteenth and fifteenth century fonts commissioned for sites previously located in the Christian borderlands east of the Elbe River with the rise of the Baltic military orders and the advancement of the Church authority. This extraordinary study integrates theological, liturgical, historical and political developments, broadening our understanding of what constituted northern crusader art in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
Title: Crusader Rhetoric and the Infancy Cycles on Medieval Baptismal Fonts in the Baltic Region
Description:
This is the first comprehensive, interdisciplinary analysis to demonstrate that the representation of Infancy cycles on twelfth-and-thirteenth-century baptismal fonts was primarily a northern predilection in the Latin West directly influenced by the contemporary military campaigns.
The Infantia Christi Corpus, a collection of approximately one-hundred-and-fifty fonts, verifies how the Danish and Gotland workshops modified and augmented biblical history to reflect the prevailing crusader ideology and rhetoric that dominated life during the Valdemarian era in the Baltic region.
The artisans constructed the pictorial programs according to the readings of the Mass for the feast days in the seasons of Advent, Christmas and Epiphanytide.
The political ambitions of the northern leaders and the Church to create a Land of St.
Peter in the Baltic region strategically influenced the integration of Holy Land motifs, warrior saints, militia Christi and martyrdom in the Infancy cycles to justify the escalating northern conquests.
Neither before nor after, in the history of baptismal fonts, have so many been ornamented with the Infancy cycle in elaborate pictorial programs.
A brief revival of elaborate Infancy cycles occurs on the fourteenth and fifteenth century fonts commissioned for sites previously located in the Christian borderlands east of the Elbe River with the rise of the Baltic military orders and the advancement of the Church authority.
This extraordinary study integrates theological, liturgical, historical and political developments, broadening our understanding of what constituted northern crusader art in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
Related Results
Rhetoric and Communication
Rhetoric and Communication
The term “rhetoric” (rhetorike) was coined by the ancient Greek philosopher Plato, and systematically elaborated upon by his successor Aristotle. On the basis of these foundational...
DEEP LITHOSPHERIC STRUCTURE AND SEISMISITY OF THE BELARUSIAN-BALTIC REGION
DEEP LITHOSPHERIC STRUCTURE AND SEISMISITY OF THE BELARUSIAN-BALTIC REGION
The territory of the Belarusian-Baltic region, located in the west of the East European craton, has been represented by a three-dimensional block model showing a regular decrease i...
Editor Words
Editor Words
In its 64 issue, the scholarly Rhetoric and Communications journal continues its tradition of publishing in-depth research by established scholars and emerging researchers from Bul...
Baltic studies in Romania: sources, beginnings and perspectives
Baltic studies in Romania: sources, beginnings and perspectives
This article analyses the beginnings, development and prospect of Baltic studies in Romania. The article stands on three pillars. It starts with an investigation on the main source...
Air Baltic and SAS – a case study in the European airline industry
Air Baltic and SAS – a case study in the European airline industry
PurposeNo‐frills carriers have revolutionized Europe's aviation market and have changed the airline business in a dramatic way. Having entered most of the countries in Central Euro...
The Baptismal Revolution in the American Episcopal Church: Baptismal Ecclesiology and the Baptismal Covenant
The Baptismal Revolution in the American Episcopal Church: Baptismal Ecclesiology and the Baptismal Covenant
AbstractThe Episcopal Church has come to espouse a developed form of baptismal ecclesiology, in which all laypersons are believed to be ministers by virtue of their baptism and the...
ON THE ORIGINAL MEANING AND THE GRAMMATICAL STATUS OF BALTIC *pat(is), *pat(n)ī
ON THE ORIGINAL MEANING AND THE GRAMMATICAL STATUS OF BALTIC *pat(is), *pat(n)ī
On the basis of the data from the Baltic and other Indo-European languages, the article rejects the common current view that Baltic *pat-root nouns, cf. Latv. pats ‘master, mister,...
Exploring the boundaries of rhetoric
Exploring the boundaries of rhetoric
Purpose
– The purpose of this paper is to examine how the boundaries of rhetoric have excluded important theoretical and practical subjects and how these subjects a...

