Comprehensive Exam Bibliography 11.24.12 Early Anglo-Saxon Art

Comprehensive Exam Bibliography 11.24.12 Early Anglo-Saxon Art

Comprehensive Exam Bibliography 11.24.12 Early Anglo‐Saxon Art History C. Twomey STAFFORDSHIRE HOARD 2012 COLLOQUIUM ARTICLES Behr, Charlotte. “The Symbolic Nature of Gold in Magical and Religious Contexts.” Brooks, Nicholas “The Staffordshire Hoard the Mercian Royal Court” Brown, Michelle P. “The Manuscript Context for the Inscription” Henderson, George and Isabel Henderson. “The Implications of the Staffordshire Hoard for the understanding of the origins and development of the Insular art style as it appears in manuscripts and sculpture.” Hooke, Della, “The Landscape of the Stafforshire Hoard.” Keynes, Simon. “The Staffordshire Hoard and Mercian Power” Leahy, Kevin. “The Contents of the Hoard” Okasha, Elizabeth, “The Staffordshire Hoard inscription” (Revised version, Oct 2011). Nielsen, Karen Høilund. “Style II and all that: The potential of the hoard for statistical study of chronology and geographical distributions” Parsons, David, “The name ‘Hammerwich.’” ADDITIONAL STAFFORDSHIRE HOARD MATERIALS Carver, M. 2011.’The best we can do?’, Antiquity 85, 230‐34. http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/085/ant0850230.htm Dean, Stephen, Della Hooke and Alex Jones, “The ‘Staffordshire Hoard’: The Fieldwork,” The Antiquaries Journal 90 (2010): 139‐52. Webster, L., Sparey‐Green, C., Périn, P. and Hills, C. 2011 ‘The Staffordshire (Ogley Hay) Hoard: problems of interpretation’, Antiquity 85, 221‐9 http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/085/ant0850221.htm. ARTICLES: Bruce‐Mitford, Rupert. “Ireland and the Hanging Bowls,” Ireland and Insular Art AD 500‐1200: Proceedings of a Conference at University College Cork 31 Oct‐3 Nov 1985 (Dublin: Royal Irish Academy, 1987): 30‐9. Stephen T Driscoll, Jane Geddes, and Mark A Hall, eds., Pictish Progress: New Studies on Northern Britain in the Middle Ages (Leiden, 2011). Hahn, Cynthia. “What Do Reliquaries Do for Relics?,” Numen, 57 (2010), 284–316. Isabel Henderson, “New Animal Ornament on the Cross‐Slab from Hilton of Cadboll, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland,” in Rachel Moss, ed., Making and Meaning in Insular Art, TRIARC Research Studies in Irish Art: 1 (2007), 198–214. Gameson, Richard. The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain. Vol 1 (Cambridge, 2012). Brown, Michelle, “Writing in the Insular world” 121‐66. Netzer, Nancy, “The design and decoration of Insular gospel‐books and other liturgical manuscripts, c. 600‐ c. 900” 225‐43. Love, Rosalind, “The library of the Venerable Bede” 606‐32. Hourihane, Colum. Insular & Anglo‐Saxon Art and Thought in the Early Medieval Period (Princeton, 2011). Brown, Michelle P., “Southumbrian Book Culture: The Interface Between Insular and Anglo‐Saxon” 31‐42. Nees, Lawrence. “Recent Trends in Dating Works of Insular Art.” In Insular and Anglo‐ Saxon Art and Thought in the Early Medieval Period, edited by Colum Hourihane, 14– 30. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2011. Netzer, Nancy. “New Finds Versus the Beginning of the Narrative on Insular Gospel Books,” in Colum Hourihane, ed., Insular and Anglo‐Saxon Art and Thought in the Early Medieval Period (Princeton, 2012), 3–13. O’Donoghue, Neil, “Insular Chrismals and House‐Shaped Shrines in the Early Middle Ages” 79‐92. Ryan, Michael, “Metalwork in Ireland from the Later Seventh to the Ninth Century: A Review” 43‐58. Netzer, Nancy. “The ‘Celtic’ Bronzes from Dura Europos: Connections to Britain,” in Lisa Brody and Gail Hoffman, eds., Dura Europos: Crossroads of Antiquity (Chestnut Hill, MA, 2011), 283–94. Netzer, Nancy. “Insular and Islamic Cosmophilic Responses to the Classical Past” in Sheila S. Blair and Jonathan M. Bloom, eds., Cosmophilia: Islamic Art from the David Collection, Copenhagen (Chicago, 2006): 39‐44. Netzer, Nancy. “Style: A History of Uses and Abuses in the Study of Insular Art” in M. Redknapp ed., Pattern and Purpose in Insular Art (Oxford: 2001): 169:177. Whitfield, Niamh. “The ‘Tara’ Brooch: An Irish Emblem of Status in Its European Context,” in Colum Hourihane, ed., From Ireland Coming: Irish Art from the Early Christian to the Late Gothic Period and Its European Context (Princeton, N.J., 2001), 211–48. BOOKS: Brenan, Jane. Hanging Bowls and their Contexts, BAR British Series 220 (Oxford, 1991). Brown, Michelle. The Lindisfarne Gospels: Society, Spirituality and the Scribe (London, 2003). Martin Carver, Portmahomack: Monastery of the Picts (Edinburgh, 2008). Henderson, Isabel and George Henderson. The Art of the Picts: Sculpture and Metalwork in Early Medieval Scotland (New York, 2004). Alan Lane and Ewan Campbell, eds., Dunadd: An Early Dalriadic Capital (Oxford, 2000). Karkov, Catherine. The Art of Anglo‐Saxon England (Woodbridge, 2011). Pollington, Stephen et al. Wayland’s Work: Anglo‐Saxon Art, Myth and Material Culture from the 4th to the 7th Century. Anglo‐Saxon Books. 2010. Leslie Webster, Anglo‐Saxon Art: A New History (Ithaca, 2012). Webster, Leslie and Backhouse, Janet eds. The Making of England: Anglo‐Saxon Art and Culture AD 600‐900, British Museum, 1991. .

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