J 2021

“Romanesque” Conques as a Neo-Carolingian Project

FOLETTI, Ivan; Adrien PALLADINO; Vincent DEBIAIS; Eric SPARHUBERT; Cécile VOYER et al.

Basic information

Original name

“Romanesque” Conques as a Neo-Carolingian Project

Authors

FOLETTI, Ivan; Adrien PALLADINO; Vincent DEBIAIS; Eric SPARHUBERT and Cécile VOYER

Edition

Convivium : Exchanges and Interactions in the Arts of Medieval Europe, Byzantium, and Mediterranean, Brno, Masarykova univerzita, 2021, 2336-3452

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

Belgium

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

URL

Marked to be transferred to RIV

Yes

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14210/21:00123163

Organization

Filozofická fakulta – Repository – Repository

UT WoS

000752404100010

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-85134488616

Keywords in English

Abbey Church of Sainte-Foy at Conques; Carolingian past; Catholic ; longue durée; medievalism; memory space

Links

101007770, interní kód Repo.
Changed: 29/8/2024 00:50, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

Begun in 2021, the first team encounter of the project “Conques in the Global World”generated an innovative reinterpretation of the site. Departing from the nineteenth- and twentieth-century explication of Conques as the ideal image of the Romanesque Middle Ages, the site is here envisaged as a space of memorialization of the past for the present. This memorialization, we argue, began in fact at the church’s conception, with the founders’ decision to reflect the character and significance of Carolingian antecedents. This Carolingian echo is evident in the material and epigraphic culture created at Conques around 1100, from the portal inscriptions to the reliquaries held below ground in the treasure. What is postulated here, and proposed for future research, is the understanding that Conques has been a memory space since it was conceived the eleventh century – a space in which a specific memory of an authoritative past is reinvented for the longue durée to confer legitimacy to a place and its religious community.
Displayed: 2/5/2026 20:50