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medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

 

Oddly enough I had just forwarded the email to Elizabeth when yours
arrived in my inbox! She may have some ideas - if so I'll forward them. 

Maddy 

---
Prof. Madeleine Gray
University of South Wales
http://www.heritagetortoise.co.uk
http://twitter.com/heritagepilgrim

'You say to yourself in your mid-60s, how much time am I going to have,
do I want to slow down?' (Charlotte Rampling)

On 15/11/2015 17:15, Rosemary Hayes-Milligan and Andrew Milligan wrote: 

> medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture 
> As a starting point Meg, you could look at Elizabeth A New, _Seals and Sealing Practices_, British Records Association, Archives and the User, No 11 (London, 2010). This is available from the BRA (www.britishrecordsassociation.org.uk [1]) for £7 and has quite a good bibliography. It does concentrate on Britain but may offer ideas of where else to look. 
> 
> I don't know whether Elizabeth lurks on this list. No doubt she will pipe up if she does. 
> 
> Rosemary Hayes 
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> FROM: Genevra Kornbluth 
> TO: [log in to unmask] 
> SENT: Sunday, November 15, 2015 4:40 PM 
> SUBJECT: Re: [M-R] seal carving / casting 
> medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture 
> Meg, these days the best place to start looking at any seals question is the 2014 bibliographic article by Brigitte Bedos-Rezak in _Oxford Bibliographies Online_. Unfortunately full access is by subscription, but the articles are worth it!
> Genevra
> 
> On 11/15/2015 11:09 AM, Cormack, Margaret Jean wrote: 
> 
> medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
> 
> Greetings learned ones,
> This is really a question for an art historian - Genevra? But I thought the list as a whole might be able to shed some light on the subject. In the Middle Ages there must have been a large industry in creating seals for individuals and corporations, but, unlike coins, the seal would presumably be made only once. Then again, one can imagine 'standardized' seals which only needed to have the individual´s name added. Do we have any knowledge of the process of creating such items? Would the abbess of a new monastery, for example, order (from whom?) a seal, specifying the size, shape, text, perhaps type of script, and image? Could she send a sketch of what the image should look like, or trust to the maker to have a set of images on hand? Maybe she went and had a look at them? The trouble with this is that my abbess is in Iceland, and I´m guessing (with no real evidence) that her seal would have been produced in Norway, so that would have been quite a journey. The woman in q
> uestion was, however, quite well off, so the journey is not out of the question. We can´t examine the object itself, all we have is a drawing of the wax impression. I can also imagine that seals with ready-made images were imported, and the desired text then added. I´m sure there must be literature about this somewhere, but don´t know where to start!
> Meg
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