Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Spectator Responses to an Image of Violence: Seeing Apollonia
- Der ernsthafte König oder die Hölle schon auf Erden: Gewalt im Dienste des Seelenheils
- Lazarus’s Vision of Hell: A Significant Passage in Late-Medieval Passion Plays
- Violence and Late-Medieval Justice
- La noblesse face à la violence: arrestations, exécutions et assassinats dans les Chroniques de Jean Froissart commandées par Louis de Gruuthuse (Paris, B.N.F., mss. fr. 2643–46)
- The Music of the Medieval Body in Pain
- The Emergence of Sexual Violence in Quattrocento Florentine Art
- Some Lesser-Known Ladies of Public Art: On Women and Lions
- The Self in the Eyes of the Other: Creating Violent Expectations in Late-Medieval German Drama
- Cleansing the Social Body: Andrea Mantegna’s: Judith and the Moor (1490–1505)
- Aggression and Annihilation: Spanish Sentimental Romances and the Legends of the Saints
- Der Malleus Maleficarum (1487) und die Hexenverfolgung in Deutschland
- “For They Know Not What They Do”: Violence in Medieval Passion Iconography
- Zur Bedeutung von Gewalt in der Reynaert-Epik des 15. Jahrhunderts
- Terror and Laughter in the Images of the Wild Man: The Case of the 1489 Valentin et Orson
- Rereading Rape in Two Versions of La fille du comte de Pontieu
- The French Kill Their King: The Assassination of Childeric II in Late-Medieval French Historiography
“For They Know Not What They Do”: Violence in Medieval Passion Iconography
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Spectator Responses to an Image of Violence: Seeing Apollonia
- Der ernsthafte König oder die Hölle schon auf Erden: Gewalt im Dienste des Seelenheils
- Lazarus’s Vision of Hell: A Significant Passage in Late-Medieval Passion Plays
- Violence and Late-Medieval Justice
- La noblesse face à la violence: arrestations, exécutions et assassinats dans les Chroniques de Jean Froissart commandées par Louis de Gruuthuse (Paris, B.N.F., mss. fr. 2643–46)
- The Music of the Medieval Body in Pain
- The Emergence of Sexual Violence in Quattrocento Florentine Art
- Some Lesser-Known Ladies of Public Art: On Women and Lions
- The Self in the Eyes of the Other: Creating Violent Expectations in Late-Medieval German Drama
- Cleansing the Social Body: Andrea Mantegna’s: Judith and the Moor (1490–1505)
- Aggression and Annihilation: Spanish Sentimental Romances and the Legends of the Saints
- Der Malleus Maleficarum (1487) und die Hexenverfolgung in Deutschland
- “For They Know Not What They Do”: Violence in Medieval Passion Iconography
- Zur Bedeutung von Gewalt in der Reynaert-Epik des 15. Jahrhunderts
- Terror and Laughter in the Images of the Wild Man: The Case of the 1489 Valentin et Orson
- Rereading Rape in Two Versions of La fille du comte de Pontieu
- The French Kill Their King: The Assassination of Childeric II in Late-Medieval French Historiography
Summary
Even in today's climate of video nasties and cinematic gore, medieval images of torture demand a powerful response. Modern viewers react variously with laughter, disgust, even horror, when confronted with the cartoon-like savagery of a saint being mutilated and torn to pieces; the response is more powerful still when the subject of the image in question is Christ's passion. Perhaps there is no image of the crucifixion that jolts contemporary sensibilities so much as a late-fourteenth-century carved Crucifix from the Corpus Christi Church, Wrocław (formerly Breslau, Germany; now a part of Poland) (fig. 1). It is a supremely provocative and emotive image. More than any painting by Grünewald, more even than Holbein's Dead Christ, the carving demands an immediate response. Taking in the composition, first of all, requires of the beholder that the eyes move incessantly downwards: Christ's veined arms are stretched tensely, locked in a strained bony curve; leaning slightly to one side, the left arm is pulled taut by the weight of the body; the legs bunch up pathetically, struggling against the torso as it sinks downwards. The descending movement of the eyes’ sealed lids of the Redeemer— encircled by a frame of bloody lashes—points toward the most captivating part of the image: the wound in Christ's side (fig. 2).
Closing in upon that infliction (if we can), we see that the wound exudes rich, blobby globules of curdled blood. Unlike the lacerations in conventional crucifixion scenes, which are relatively bloodless in comparison (fig. 3), the gash is fashioned from droplets of blood arranged in neat lines, like a string of glossy pearls or dripping stalactites, echoed in the bloody mass that exudes from the deep cuts which all but obliterate Christ's hands; the entire body is bespattered with miniature scourge wounds, interspersed rhythmically at intervals across the flesh.
How do we approach understanding a culture that put such images at its very center? How are we to comprehend such violent visions? Images of medieval torture are often defended with reference to what Umberto Eco has dubbed “shaggy medievalism,” the idea of the Middle Ages as a barbaric time. In a culture saturated with violence, death, pain, and disease, it is argued by art historians, it was natural that those involved in the patronage, manufacture, and viewing of artifacts like the Wrocław crucifix, should exhibit a profound fascination with flowing blood, torn flesh, and fragmented body parts.
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- Fifteenth-Century Studies Vol. 27A Special Issue on Violence in Fifteenth-Century Text and Image, pp. 200 - 216Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2002