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2 - Approaching the Cross: The Sculpted High Crosses of Anglo-Saxon England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2020

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Summary

When considering the ‘Rood’ of the later Middle Ages it is worth perhaps turning to the earliest forms of the monumental crosses that were erected both inside and outside church buildings in Britain and Ireland from the early part of the eighth century onwards. Unique to the region until at least the late eleventh, if not the twelfth century, these large-scale public sculptures have attracted considerable attention for some time, but increasingly so since the early twentieth century.

Given its distinctive ‘free-standing’ form, attempts to explain the emergence of this particular monument type have resulted in the general understanding of it as an innovation reflecting the amalgamation of a number of material cultural phenomena. Among these is the fact that they reflect the reinvigoration of the art of stone sculpture following the re-establishment of the Christian Church in early medieval England during the course of the seventh century when, as Bede records in his Ecclesiastical History, churches began to be constructed in stone and were decorated and furnished with carved stone work. In their design they also seem to represent the influence of earlier, late antique and early Christian monumental forms. These include the stone column, a form that was associated with the triumphal sign of the cross encountered in Constantinian contexts in the early Christian Mediterranean world: as in Jerusalem where a (triumphal) column is recorded as standing close to the Holy Sepulchre complex surmounted by a cross and carved with a Maiestas near the top. Although this monument is unlikely to have been physically encountered by Anglo-Saxons (other than Willibald whose travels to Jerusalem were recorded by the nun Huneberc in the eighth century), the forms of the triumphal and Jupiter column would have been familiar across Europe and in Rome. Together, associations and encounters with the circular columns of antiquity are likely to have informed that of the monumental columns supporting crosses that were set up at the turn of the ninth century in Northumbria and Kent, which also featured the Maiestas in the upper registers. Also influential was the form of the obelisk which is understood to have informed that of the slightly tapering, squared shaft of the high crosses, the obelisk shaft being surmounted by a cross-head in its rearticulated incarnation.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2020

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