Seeable Signs: The Iconography of the Seven Sacraments, 1350-1544

Ann Eljenholm Nichols

Seeable Signs: The Iconography of the Seven Sacraments, 1350-1544
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Country
United Kingdom
Published
21 July 1994
Pages
496
ISBN
9780851153421

Seeable Signs: The Iconography of the Seven Sacraments, 1350-1544

Ann Eljenholm Nichols

Seven-sacrament art - the representation of all seven sacraments -first appeared in Europe as an occasional subject in the 14th century, but by the middle of the 15th it had become widely popular. In this interdisciplinary study, Ann Eljenholm Nichols provides an analysis of the iconography of the sacraments. The book begins with a comprehensive survey of all known continental work, some of it never before published, but it focuses on English work. Nichols argues that before 1450 there existed an international iconography of the sacraments, but that thereafter English work diverges so radically it is necessary to speak of a distinctive insular iconography. The explanation for that difference, she believes, is to be found in the peculiar religious climate created by the Lollard rejection of the sacramental system. The need to counter-attack, to make the sacred signs seeable, accounts for the theological character of the font iconography. Her book makes an important contribution to the cultural and social history of medieval England. ANN ELJENHOLM NICHOLS is Professor, Department of English, Winona State University. (East Anglia) Seven-sacrament art - the representation of all seven sacraments -firstappeared in Europe as an occasional subject in the 14th century, but by the middle of the 15th it had become widely popular. In this interdisciplinary study Ann Eljenholm Nichols provides an analysis of the iconography of the sacraments, focusing in particular on the imaged baptismal fonts in East Anglia, the single best corpus of extant seven-sacrament art. Nichols argues that after 1450 English work diverges radically from the international iconography of the sacraments; the explanation for this distinctive insular tradition, she believes, is to be found in the peculiar religious climate created by the Lollard rejection of the sacramental system, a rejection vigorously pursued in East Anglia. Her careful use of literary evidence -theological, didactic and liturgical -to illu

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