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12 Results Found

  • Article
  • Open Access
6,106 Views
30 Pages

27 July 2022

From the early studies of Tancred Borenius (1885–1948) to the present, the iconography of the archbishop Thomas Becket has drawn attention among scholars. Numerous studies have been published on the representation of Becket’s martyrdom in...

  • Article
  • Open Access
3,259 Views
16 Pages

25 October 2022

Through a survey of archival and primary source material, this article discusses the existence of St. Thomas Becket’s relics in Siena cathedral. The institution’s inventories indicate that, from 1482 until ca. 1529, the relics were housed...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
4,475 Views
19 Pages

30 November 2021

The wall paintings adorning the south transept apse of Santa Maria at Terrassa are among the most notable surviving items pertaining to the iconography of St. Thomas Becket. Recently found documents in which diplomatic archives reveal English connect...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
4,881 Views
24 Pages

26 July 2021

The triple anniversary in 2020 of Thomas Becket’s birth, death and translation has been an occasion to review and revisit many of the artefacts associated with the saint and his cult in England and across Europe. Many of these are items directly asso...

  • Review
  • Open Access
4,617 Views
6 Pages

10 August 2021

This review considers the British Museum’s exhibition, Thomas Becket: Murder and the Making of a Saint, curated by Lloyd de Beer and Naomi Speakman. Following a brief description of the show and its relationship to current art-historical scholarship,...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
5,623 Views
26 Pages

12 October 2021

On the 9th of October, 1170 Pope Alexander III resided in Anagni, which had been the ancient residence of the court of the Popes for at least two centuries. He wrote to two influential local archbishops for help in pacifying King Henry II and Archbis...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4,000 Views
18 Pages

26 October 2021

The church of San Miguel of Almazán (Soria, Spain) houses a twelfth-century antependium ornamented with scenes of Thomas Becket’s martyrdom. Discovered during restoration works in 1936, its origin and its original location are unknown. The aim of thi...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
3,615 Views
19 Pages

30 August 2021

The painting with St. Thomas Becket, St. Stephen and St. Nicholas of Bari that decorates one of the lunettes in the so-called lower church at the Sacro Speco in Subiaco is an enigma from an art-historical point of view, for two reasons. First, on an...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
5,293 Views
17 Pages

5 November 2022

This article discusses the relationship between the divine and the human, as it appears in T.S. Eliot’s play Murder in the Cathedral, written for and performed at the Cathedral of Canterbury in 1935. On the one hand, and most obviously, this pl...

  • Article
  • Open Access
3 Citations
4,630 Views
22 Pages

Maya Blue Used in Wall Paintings in Mexican Colonial Convents of the XVI Century

  • Luisa Straulino-Mainou,
  • Teresa Pi-Puig,
  • Becket Lailson-Tinoco,
  • Karla Castro-Chong,
  • María Fernanda Urbina-Lemus,
  • Pablo Escalante-Gonzalbo,
  • Sergey Sedov and
  • Aban Flores-Morán

14 January 2021

Maya blue is a well-known pre-Hispanic pigment, composed of palygorskite or sepiolite and indigo blue, which was used by various Mesoamerican cultures for centuries. There has been limited research about its continued use during the Viceroyalty perio...