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This book deals with S. Maria in Aracoeli, the headquarters of the Franciscan Order in Rome, built on the Capitoline hill by the Friar Minors soon after they took over from the Benedictines in the mid-thirteenth century. The approach is to work from the monument as a whole outwards to broader questions concerning the Franciscans' physical and theoretical appropriation of the past, the adaptation of an ancient site by a 'modern' religious order, the relationship between deployment of spolia and Mendicant beliefs, the contribution of the Roman Franciscans to the development of Marian devotion,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book deals with S. Maria in Aracoeli, the headquarters of the Franciscan Order in Rome, built on the Capitoline hill by the Friar Minors soon after they took over from the Benedictines in the mid-thirteenth century. The approach is to work from the monument as a whole outwards to broader questions concerning the Franciscans' physical and theoretical appropriation of the past, the adaptation of an ancient site by a 'modern' religious order, the relationship between deployment of spolia and Mendicant beliefs, the contribution of the Roman Franciscans to the development of Marian devotion, and to the transmission and reception of ideas across time and space.
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Autorenporträt
Claudia Bolgia is Senior Lecturer in History of Art at the University of Edinburgh. She has published extensively on medieval Rome and Franciscan Art and Architecture in a range of international peer-reviewed journals. Co-editor, with Rosamond McKitterick and John Osborne, of Rome across Time and Space: Cultural Translation and the Exchange of Ideas, c. 500-1400 (2011), her research has attracted major Fellowships, including Villa I Tatti - The Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies (2009-10), The British School at Rome (2012-14), CASVA - The Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts (2016-17), The Newberry Library (2016-17), and The Leverhulme Trust (2017-18).