فهرست مطالب :
Acknowledgements
Contents
Notes on Contributors
List of Figures
Introduction: The Memorialisation of Monarchs in an International Context
Representations of Rulers in Art and Architecture
Commemoration in Literature and Popular Media
The Importance of Memorialisation
Bibliography
Part I: Representations of Monarchs in Art and Architecture
“The Whole Stature of a Goodly Man and a Large Horse”: Memorialising Henry VIII’s Manly, Knightly and Warrior Status
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Unpublished Thesis
Internet Resources
Papal Commemoration, 1300–1700: Institutional Memory and Dynasticism
Liturgical Commemoration
Encouraging Dynasticism Via Commemoration
Papal Tombs
Papal Self-commemoration and Damnatio Memoriae
Strategies of Commemoration: Portraits, Arms, and Objects
Commemoration by Lay Papal Relatives
Conclusion
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Online Sources
Island Queens: Appropriated Portraits of Royal Samoan Women
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
King Sigismund III Vasa’s Column in Warsaw: A Memorial in Honour of the King, A Representation of Power, and a Commemoration of the Father
Introduction
The Column’s History
The Monument and Its Origins
Florentine Inspirations
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Personal or Perfunctory? Philippa of Hainault’s Legacy Through Religious Patronage and St Katharine’s by the Tower
Queenly Religious Patronage
St Katharine’s by the Tower
Personal Piety
Conclusion
Bibliography
Unpublished Primary Sources
Published Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
The Heroes Who Turned Into Stones and Songs: The Memory of the Monarch Reflected in the Old Tamil Caṅkam Literature
Introduction
Heroic Death in the Old Tamil Caṅkam Literature
The Promises of the Upper Sphere
Funerals of the Kings
Memorial Stones for the Heroes
The Memory of the King in the Caṅkam Literature
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Part II: Commemoration in Literature and Popular Media
Memories and Memorials of Literature and Art at the Turn of the First Millennium
Memorialising Ottonian Monarchs
Female Rulers: Spiritual Portraits and Generations
Image 1 [Fig. 2] (The Gospels of Saint-Géréon, W 312, fol. 22r): Lamb, Otto III, Theophanu and Adelheid18
Images 2 and 3 (Gospel Book from Metz, MS 9395, fols 15r and 15v): Adelheid, Christ and an Abbot; Liber Generationis with Lamb28
Image 4 [Fig. 3] (Pericopes Book of Henry II, MS 4452, fol. 2r): Henry II, Christ, and Kunigunde36
Dating the Images and Implications
Return to Image 1 [Fig. 2] (W 312, folio 22r)
Return to Images 2, 3 (MS 9395, fols 15r and 15v) and Image 4 [Fig. 3] (MS 4452, fol. 2r)
Conclusion
Bibliography
Manuscripts and Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Memory and Kingship in the Manuscripts of Matthew Paris
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Maria Theresia and Catherine II: The Bodies of a Female Ruler in Propaganda, Criticism, and Retrospect
Introduction
The Bodies of Legitimacy
The Problems of Using and Overcoming the Female Body in Female Rule
Motherhood and Motherliness
Symbolic Commemoration
The Challenges of Dissecting Stereotyped Symbols on a Multilevel Basis
Conclusion
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Mighty Lady and True Husband: Queen Margaret of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden in Norwegian Memory
Margrete and the Royal House of Norway
Margrete in Textbooks
Margrete in a Novel
Margrete for Children
Conclusion
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Oh to be a Queen: Representations of Eleanor of Aquitaine and Isabella of Angoulême, Two Scandalous Queens, in Popular Fiction
Introduction
Reception, Context, and Audience
Eleanor and Isabella in Historiography
Eleanor and Isabella’s Legends
Eleanor, The Second Crusade, and Sexual Scandal
Isabella: A Scandalous Queen
Eleanor and Family Politics
Isabella and Family Life
Conclusion
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
From “She-Wolf” to “Badass”: Remembering Isabella of France in Modern Culture
The Making of a “She-Wolf”
The “She-Wolf” in Popular History
Maurice Druon’s Les Rois maudits, and Isabella in Fiction
Online Re-evaluations
“Iron Lady”
“Badass”
Conclusion
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Online Sources
Index