The maps of Matthew Paris
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The maps of Matthew Paris

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224 pages 2009

About This Book

"The illustrations of the Benedictine monk, artist, and chronicler Matthew Paris offer a gateway into the thirteenth-century world. This new study of his cartography emphasizes the striking innovations he brought to it, and shows how the maps became an investment and repository of certain medieval spatial practices: travel through the world, the occurrence of history in that world, and the religious practices and devotional attitudes that were assiduously cultivated within the larger visual culture of St. Albans abbey (in great measure produced by Matthew's own images)." "Travel (i.e. space), history (time ), and devotion (liturgy) are the primary issues and meanings deposited in and registered by Matthew Paris' cartographic landscape. In searching out these contexts, the book explores the paradigm of imagined pilgrimage as an organizing principle that pushes into greater relief medieval understanding of the arrangements of places and of histories: thus travelling through --

geography could enact that geography's meanings in a dynamic, religious, even devotional performance of the maps' materials." --Book Jacket.

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