Honors Theses

Date of Award

2015

Document Type

Undergraduate Thesis

Department

Art and Art History

First Advisor

Nancy L. Wicker

Relational Format

Dissertation/Thesis

Abstract

During my studies as an undergraduate student with an interest for medieval art, I found myself drawn to the beautifully painted works of illuminated manuscripts. Especially interested in the history, culture, and tradition of the British Isles, I became intrigued by the oftentimes-interchangeable term Insular. Textbooks, scholars, and various journal articles that I read all viewed Insularity in a slightly different light. So when given the chance to explore a unique topic for my honors thesis, I immediately knew that I had to research this problematic designation. My research began with a broad reading of the core of books, journals, and essays written on the topic of Insular art and history. I honed in on the tendency by scholars to limit the Insular world to works produced only in the British Isles. To examine this problem in more detail, I extended my research in the summer of 2014 beyond the classroom and library cubicle. I visited ten European countries over a ten-week period in the summer. I made connections and relationships with professors, curators, and librarians. I was able to first-hand examine medieval manuscripts and illuminations. Many of the illuminations in this thesis are from text and images that I examined myself. Upon return from my exploratory research, I built a database of manuscripts that I thought were of the Insular tradition or were the foundation for my own redefinition of the complicated term. In this thesis, I propose two major assertions that differ from those of many other scholars — I propose a later dating of the Insular tradition and I assert its autonomy apart from the Hiberno-Saxon tradition. After extensive research I decided that the Insular tradition is not fully formed until the ninth century and that Insularity extends beyond the British Isles. In fact, the Insular orbit extends far beyond the coast of Britain and deserves to be rightfully redefined.

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