1 / 14

Frankish Art

Frankish Art. Finger Ring with a Cross , 450–525 CE, Gold filigree, cloisonné cells inset with garnet; Generally worn by high ranking men and women Some used as seals but most were decorative Demonstrates sophistication of Frankish metalwork. Brooch with a runic inscription on back

ros
Download Presentation

Frankish Art

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Frankish Art

  2. Finger Ring with a Cross, 450–525 CE, Gold filigree, cloisonné cells inset with garnet; • Generally worn by high ranking men and women • Some used as seals but most were decorative • Demonstrates sophistication of Frankish metalwork

  3. Brooch with a runic inscription on back Merovingian, 6th century AD Length: 7.4 cm

  4. “The imagination of these wandering people teemed with fantastic creatures of all sorts. Their belief that the deep, dark forest of the north virtually swarmed zoomorphic and demonic populations was widely shared by the nomadic hunters of all tribes…. Medieval man, long after he ceased his wandering and despite Christianization, remained more than half pagan; his terrors were bound up with his tribal experience and the memory of fiend-filled forests and pagan rites.” – Horst de la Croix, Art Through the Ages. Animal head from Oseberg ship burial, ca. 825 CE, wood, about five feet tall Germanic animal style

  5. Situla (Bucket for Holy Water), ca. 860–880 Carolingian; Ivory • Used to dispense blessed water on the faithful during processionals

  6. Glass drinking-horn • Frankish/Merovingian, 5th century CE • Large horns would have been passed between guests • Shape derived from late Roman models

  7. Belt Buckle, 675–725 CE; Found in Germany; Iron with silver inlays.

  8. Iron and silver buckle Merovingian, 7th century CE

  9. Iron axe-head inlaid with silver • Merovingian, 7th century CEFrom Germany Length: 17.5 cm • A ceremonial or battle axe • The throwing axe was the favorite weapon of the Franks • Silver in-lay shows the status/military rank of original owner

  10. Frankish "Claw" Beaker, 400–600 CE

  11. Fragment of a Sarcophagus, 700s CE • Monogram of Christ (Chi and Ro) along with alpha and omega – common motifs • Non-Greek speaking sculptor

  12. Equestrian statuette of Charlemagne • 9th CenturyBronze, • Maximum height of horse: 21 cm • Artists took up the Gallo-Roman tradition of casting and based their works on examples from antiquity

  13. Pair of Bird-Shaped Brooches, 550–600 CEGold sheet, cloisonné cells • Women generally wore pairs of brooches • Birds were a favorite design form

More Related