An exploration of how power and political society were imagined,
represented and reflected on in medieval English art
Images and imagery played a major role in medieval political thought and
culture, but their influence has rarely been explored. This book
provides a full assessment of the subject. Starting with an examination
of the writings of late twelfth-century courtier-clerics, and their new
vision of English political life as a heightened religious drama, it
argues that visual images were key to the development and expression of
medieval English political ideas andarguments. It discusses the vivid
pictorial metaphors used in contemporary political treatises, and
highlights their interaction with public decorative schemas in English
great churches, private devotional imagery, seal iconography,
illustrations of English history and a range of other visual sources.
Meanwhile, through an exploration of events such as the Thomas Becket
conflict, the making of Magna Carta, the Barons' War and the deposition
of Edward II, it provides new perspectives on the political role of art,
especially in reshaping basic assumptions and expectations about
government and political society in medieval England.
LAURA SLATER is a Fulford Junior ResearchFellow at Somerville College,
University of Oxford.