GREAT MIGRATIONGREAT MIGRATION c. 400-550 CE
CELTICCELTIC c. 500 BCE-1200 CEBritish Isles & parts of north, western & central
Europe
VENDEL PERIODVENDEL PERIOD c. 550-800 CE SCANDANAVIA
VIKINGVIKING AGE c. 800-1100 CE SCANDANAVIA
CAROLINGIANCAROLINGIAN PERIOD c. 768-877 CE
OTTONIANOTTONIAN PEROD c. 919-1002 CE
HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE
MAP ofMedievalEurope
NORSE MYTHOLOGY
14-2 MIGRATION
LATE ROMANEARLY BYZANTINE
Map of
Celtic Britain
CELTIC ARTCELTIC ARTCeltic, pronounced Kel’-tik (from the Greek Κελτοι or Keltoi), is a term that encompasses cultures in the British Isles & parts of north, western & central Europe. Art forms are made in a variety of mediums and materials – metalwork, jewelry, illuminated manuscripts, shipbuilding, enameling, wood, leather, ivory, bone, antler, stone and more. Celtic art has been described thusly: “Its most outstanding characteristic is its eclecticism and variety,” at times borrowing from Greek, Eastern, Roman and Viking art. Some common design elements, motifs and terms are as follows:animal style – the use of animals as motifs, usually very decorative and abstract. Often limbs and other body parts are extended into complex interlaced designs, sometimes in combat. Often, the human figure is treated similarly. By contrast, when a naturalistic approach is attempted on either animal or human, it can leave the viewer wondering if the artist had ever witnessed his/her subject.chip carving – a technique of cutting metal into faceted surfaces, to reflect light, often in the form of reversed ‘pyramids’. True chip carving is rare; pseudo-chip carving, produced by casting, is more usual.filigree – very fine wire work, e.g. in the detail showing the dragon in the Tara Brooch. folio – the page of a manuscript. A page of vellum has two sides, recto (smooth) & verso (rough, hair side).Hiberno-Saxon or Insular – are terms used to describe works of this period made specifically in the British Isles. Hiberno refers to Ireland.horror vacui – “fear of empty space”; the characteristic of filling negative space with decoration.interlacing – interwoven linear design, A.K.A. ribbon interlace or over-and-under interlace. niello – a black paste (silver sulphide w/ copper) used as inlay.nomad’s gear – small, portable and functional objects of art.penannular – the term, meaning ‘an almost complete ring’, is used for circular brooches with a break in the hoop. However, the heavy terminals of so-called penannulars were sometimes fused, i.e. the hoop was made as an unbroken circle. Such brooches are referred to as ‘pseudo-penannular’.zoomorphic ornament – of animal form.
CELTIC
CELTIC
SUTTON HOO - CELTIC
SUTTON HOO - CELTIC
SUTTON HOO+CELTIC
SUTTON HOO+ - CELTIC
SUTTON HOO+CELTIC
14-3 SUTTON HOO - CELTIC
SUTTON HOO+ - CELTIC
SUTTON HOO - CELTIC
14-4 CELTIC
INSULAR MAJUSCULE
14-1 BOOK OF KELLS
CELTIC
BOOK OF KELLS -CELTIC
BOOK OF
KELLS-
CELTIC
Lindisfarne Gospels - CELTIC
14-5CELTIC
(Hiberno-Saxon)
14-19 VENDEL
14-19 VENDEL
VENDEL & VIKING
14-20, 21 Oseberg Ship Burial VIKING
VIKING
THE VIKINGS1958
CAROLINGIANPERIOD768-877
14-10 CAROLINGIAN
14-11 CAROLINGIAN
14-12 CAROLINGIAN
7-26 San Vitale & 14-11 Palace Chapel
14-13 CAROLINGIAN
14-14 CAROLINGIAN
CAROLINGIAN
14-16 CAROLINGIAN
14-17 CAROLINGIAN
14-18 CAROLINGIAN
OTTONIAN PERIODOTTONIAN PERIOD c. 919-1002* CE
Henry the Fowler (919-36) Otto I (936-73) 1st Holy Roman Emperor
Otto II (973-83)Otto III (983-96/996-1002)
14-22, 23 & 24 OTTONIAN
14-25 OTTONIAN
14-26 OTTONIAN
14-28 OTTONIAN
14-30 OTTONIAN
LINKS AND SOURCES
NORSE MYTHOLOGYCELTIC MYTHOLOGY
SUTTON HOO SITESUTTON HOO SOCIETY
SUTTON HOO LINKSBRITISH MUSEUM
(click compass, continue compass, type sutton hoo in search)THE MUSEUM OF NATIONAL ANTIQUITIES (Sweden)
OSEBERG SHIP BURIALBackhouse, Janet. The Lindisfarne Gospels. London: Phaidon, 1981.
Harris, David.The Art of Calligraphy. New York: Dorling Kindersley, 1995.Kleiner, et al. Gardner’s Art Through The Ages. New York: Harcourt, 2001.
Laing, J. & L. Art of the Celts. New York: Thames & Hudson, 1994. Meehan, Bernard. The Book of Kells. New York: Thames & Hudson, 1994. Mutherich & Gaehde. Carolingian Painting. New York: G. Braziller, 1976.
Nordenfalk, Carl. Celtic and Anglo-Saxon Painting. New York: G. Braziller, 1977.
Stokstad, Marilyn. Art History. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 2002.
Suggested Movie: The Vikings, Kirk Douglas, 1958. (available at Blockbuster)