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Crouching crossbowmen in early twelfth-century sculpture: a nasty, brutish, and short(-lived) iconography

  • Autores: Therese Martin
  • Localización: Gesta, ISSN 0016-920X, Vol. 54, Nº. 2, 2015, págs. 143-164
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Arround the turn of the twelfth century, a new iconography arose in northern Sapnish and southern French lands. The sculpted image of a naked crossbowman, crouching to arm his weapon, flourished briefly and then vanished within a few decades. The crossbow was just coming into common usage at this time; with little trainig, it could be wielded by peasants or women to defeat mounted knights and thus had the potential to destabilize social structures. I analyze the display of the Romanesque crouching crossbowman to understand this heretofore unexamined iconography, investigating the reasons behind its initial conception, layered content, and rapid disappearance. Even more than the textual references to crossbows that have come down to us, I contend that visual analysis, together with an understanding of the specific historical context that encompassed the short life of this iconography, enables us to decipher the multiple meanings behind the image.


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