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Almost the Richest City - Bristol in the Middle Ages (Hardcover)
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Almost the Richest City - Bristol in the Middle Ages (Hardcover)
Series: The British Archaeological Association Conference Transactions, v. 19
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Almost the richest city of all in the country with a harbour for a
thousand ships may well be an exaggerated description of Bristol by
the writer Gesta Stephani but it sums up the twelfth-century view
of the city as second to London in status with an important
international port, producing wealth that directly influenced the
art and architecture of the city throughout the Middle Ages.
Bristol, according to Sir Nikolaus Pevsner 'shortly before
1300suddenly jumped onto the front rank of English and indeed
European architecture', with the early eastern arm of the abbey
church being 'superior to anything else built in England and indeed
Europe at the same time'. The abbey church alone would have been
sufficient reason for holding a conference in Bristol, but St Mary
Redcliffe and the other parish churches, together with many other
aspects of the city's medieval art and archaeology, provided
justification for arranging a conference in the city in July 1996.
The articles in this volume were delivered as lectures during that
conference. These studies explore the international trade of
Bristol and its documentary and archaeological evidence, and offer
a radical new interpretation for its early development.
Architectural studies provide fresh insight into the links between
the Elder Lady Chapel of the abbey and Wells Cathedral, a
re-evaluation of the eastern arm of the abbey, setting it into a
regional context and revising its international importance and
prodigy status, and a new study of St Mary Redcliffe, which
assesses the contribution of the Canynges family and clarifies the
reconstruction of the church in the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries. Other important articles examine the 'Harrowing of Hell'
relief, mesericords and the Lady Chapel glass in the cathedral, the
monumental effigies of Bristol and the early sixteeth-century
paintings in St Mark's hospital. Of additional interest is the
first modern appraisal of the Roman mosaic from Newton St Loe, in
the care of the City Museum: fragments of the pavement were
especially displayed in the Museum for the conference. The volume
provides a much needed assessment of Bristol's artistic and
architectural status and its historical and archaeological
importance.
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