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During the summer of the year 2000, Medieval Art Historian Scott Montgomery and Early Modern Historian Alice Bauer undertook the task of retracing the medieval pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela. This book documents their thousand-mile, sixty-seven-day journey walking from Le Puy en Velay, France to the tomb of St. James at Santiago de Compostela, Spain. It also examines the historical background and numerous historical lessons gleaned from the experience. As academics, Montgomery and Bauer sought to understand the daily life and experience of medieval pilgrims through their own…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
During the summer of the year 2000, Medieval Art Historian Scott Montgomery and Early Modern Historian Alice Bauer undertook the task of retracing the medieval pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela. This book documents their thousand-mile, sixty-seven-day journey walking from Le Puy en Velay, France to the tomb of St. James at Santiago de Compostela, Spain. It also examines the historical background and numerous historical lessons gleaned from the experience. As academics, Montgomery and Bauer sought to understand the daily life and experience of medieval pilgrims through their own observations, emotions, and limbs. In exploring the temporal and geographical aspects of the pilgrimage, the authors discuss the varied motivations and experiences of pilgrims then and now, unraveling the connections between past and present in the cultures and practices of the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela. Terrain, art, cuisine, community, emotion and belief are all explored in their manifold inter-relationships. The authors also seek to situate the medieval art of the pilgrimage road within the context of the pilgrims' experience.
Autorenporträt
SCOTT B. MONTGOMERY is Associate Professor of Medieval and Renaissance Art History at the University of Denver. He specializes in the art of the medieval cult of the saints, pilgrimage, relics, and reliquaries. His book Saint Ursula and the Eleven Thousand Virgins of Cologne. Relics, Reliquaries and the Visual Culture of Group Sanctity in Late Medieval Europe was published in 2009. ALICE A. BAUER is Affiliate Professor of History at Metropolitan State College of Denver. She specializes in Early Modern European History, particularly the sixteenth-century Ottoman occupation of Hungary.