The set of 68 misericords in Beverley Minster, Yorkshire, carved
in 1520, are considered here both as a corpus of 'folkloric' imagery in
their own right, and in a eider cultural context.
A detailed iconographic examination of the individual misericords
under such headings as 'The Fool and Follies', 'Satires', 'The bestiary'
'Exempla', etc., leads to the isolation of a small number of motifs
which are seen not to belong to the native tradition. These non-English
motifs are traced to two main sources, the border woodcuts in early
Parisian printed Horae and Flemish & German prints.
The identification of these sources for the Beverley designs
leads to further identifications else here, and especially in the stalls
of St. George's Chapel, llindsor, c. 1430.
In the case of Beverley it is suggested that the means of transmission
of such Continental imagery is via the port of [lull (the Customs
Accounts for the port being examined in this light), and the printers
and book-sellers of York.
The local cultural milieu in which the Beverley stalls were
created is examined and Henry Percy, the 'Magnificent' Fifth Earl of
Northumberland, shown to be an influential patron of the arts; but other
local influences considered include the late medieval dramatic cycles
played in Beverley, the town 's patron saint John (portrayed as a 'hairy
anchorite') and a York & London printer known to have printed in
Beverley, Hugo Goes (whose unique woodblock-printed wallpaper is also
discussed).
Goes's Flemish origin leads to a consideration of the presence of
other alien artists and craftsmen (e. q. ! Maynard Weywick who provided the
patterns for Torrigiano's Westminster tombs) at work in late medieval
and early Tudor England -- much of it assembled here for the first time.
Date of Award | 1991 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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The misericords of Beverley Minister : a corpus of folkloric imagery and its cultural milieu, with special reference to the influence of Northern European iconography on Late Medieval and Early Modern English woodwork
Jones, M. H. (Author). 1991
Student thesis: PhD