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Anglo-Saxon Vine-scroll Ornament

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

The principal questions concerning the origin and chronology of Anglo-Saxon sculpture are still awaiting their final settlement. As there is so little external evidence for dating the monuments, it seems probable that only such a method as that so successfully adopted by Mlle. Henry in her book on Irish sculpture can offer a useful approach to the problems they raise. This method implies a separate analysis of each decorative element, research as to its origin, and a comparison wherever possible of its various evolutionary stages with better dated examples in other arts or other countries. The arrangement of the different motives in series can be collated by the evidence offered when they occur on the same monument, and by this means at least approximate dates for single monuments can be obtained.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1936

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References

1 John, xv, i ff.

2 Le Blant, E. Les Sarcophages chrétiens de la Gaule, 1886 Google Scholar

3 Bulletin of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York 1922, p.41 Google Scholar

4 Clapham, A.W. English Romanesque Architecture before the Conquest, 1930 p.14 Google Scholar

5 Cf., for example, Le Blant, pis. xxiv, xxxvin, XLVI.

6 Dütschke, H. Ravennatische Studien, 1909 p.14 figs. 4b, 29c, 35, 36d ; Google Scholar Haseloff, A. Pre-romanesque Sculpture in Italy 1930pi. 36.Google Scholar

7 Toesca, Cf. Storia dell’Arte Italiana, 1, 1927 p.260 Google Scholar

8 Toesca, ibid. fig. 213 ; Haseloff, ibid. pi. 44 ; Serra, L’Arte nelle Marche, 1929 p. 34 ; Haseloff, pi. 53. A late example of a more classical scroll (7th-8th century) is to be found on the wooden door of S. Alessandro in Parma, if the date given by Bröndsted (p. 29) is right.

9 Haseloff, Cf. ibid. p. 34.Google Scholar

10 Burlington Mag, 1912, p.195 Google Scholar

11 Cf. the dates given by Duthuit, G., L’Art Copte 1931 Google Scholar

12 Cf. Berchem, M.v., in Creswell, K.A.C. Early Muslim Architecture 1, 1932, p.152. Google ScholarThe scrolls are part of the mosaics which bear the dated inscription.

13 Creswell ibid. p.230 and pi.36 ff.Google Scholar

14 Creswell, Cf. ibid. p.390ff.Google Scholar

15 Bröndsted, Cf. ibid. fig. 20390(Hexham slab) with fig. 4 (Jerusalem, mosaic) or with Peirce and Tyler, L'Art byzantin, 11, 1934, pi. 115 ff. (Sabratha).Google Scholar