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Conspicuous Architecture : Medieval Round Churches in Scandinavia

Wienberg, Jes LU orcid (2017) Church Archaeology in the Baltic Sea Region p.2-31
Abstract
Medieval round churches are often seen as riddles in need of special explanation. Deviant architecture has been explained by three major theories – fortification, multi-functionality and symbolic copying. However, I claim that the round churches were normal except for their elite context and extraordinary plan. I then argue, that the elite consciously choose a “conspicuous architecture”, to use a concept inspired by Thorstein Veblen, as a social strategy of status and rivalry. Finally I discuss the theory by Richard Krautheimer on medieval imitation, where selected elements represented a symbolic wholeness, as far as the period was able to produce copies. The medieval building was an active process, where architectural elements from plenty... (More)
Medieval round churches are often seen as riddles in need of special explanation. Deviant architecture has been explained by three major theories – fortification, multi-functionality and symbolic copying. However, I claim that the round churches were normal except for their elite context and extraordinary plan. I then argue, that the elite consciously choose a “conspicuous architecture”, to use a concept inspired by Thorstein Veblen, as a social strategy of status and rivalry. Finally I discuss the theory by Richard Krautheimer on medieval imitation, where selected elements represented a symbolic wholeness, as far as the period was able to produce copies. The medieval building was an active process, where architectural elements from plenty of sources were reused to create something new, as in the medieval reuse of “spolia”. Every church is unique as a node in a web of relations, where the architecture is related to an infinite number of other buildings. I also shortly present an updated overview of the 34 medieval round churches in Scandinavia (fig. 2) as the latest overview for many still is the influential dissertation by Hugo F. Frölen from 1910-11, which wrongly stated, that all round churches were fortified. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
round church, conspicuous architecture
host publication
Sacred Monuments and Practices in the Baltic Sea Region : New Visits to Old Churches - New Visits to Old Churches
editor
Harjula, Janne ; Hukantaival, Sonja ; Randla, Anneli and Ratilainen, Tanja
pages
2 - 31
publisher
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
conference name
Church Archaeology in the Baltic Sea Region
conference location
Turku University/Åbo, Finland
conference dates
2013-08-26 - 2013-08-30
ISBN
978-1-5275-0024-2
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d6f6d85b-6b52-4324-8b67-5b733506307c (old id 4124540)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:19:23
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:58:05
@inbook{d6f6d85b-6b52-4324-8b67-5b733506307c,
  abstract     = {{Medieval round churches are often seen as riddles in need of special explanation. Deviant architecture has been explained by three major theories – fortification, multi-functionality and symbolic copying. However, I claim that the round churches were normal except for their elite context and extraordinary plan. I then argue, that the elite consciously choose a “conspicuous architecture”, to use a concept inspired by Thorstein Veblen, as a social strategy of status and rivalry. Finally I discuss the theory by Richard Krautheimer on medieval imitation, where selected elements represented a symbolic wholeness, as far as the period was able to produce copies. The medieval building was an active process, where architectural elements from plenty of sources were reused to create something new, as in the medieval reuse of “spolia”. Every church is unique as a node in a web of relations, where the architecture is related to an infinite number of other buildings. I also shortly present an updated overview of the 34 medieval round churches in Scandinavia (fig. 2) as the latest overview for many still is the influential dissertation by Hugo F. Frölen from 1910-11, which wrongly stated, that all round churches were fortified.}},
  author       = {{Wienberg, Jes}},
  booktitle    = {{Sacred Monuments and Practices in the Baltic Sea Region : New Visits to Old Churches}},
  editor       = {{Harjula, Janne and Hukantaival, Sonja and Randla, Anneli and Ratilainen, Tanja}},
  isbn         = {{978-1-5275-0024-2}},
  keywords     = {{round church; conspicuous architecture}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{2--31}},
  publisher    = {{Cambridge Scholars Publishing}},
  title        = {{Conspicuous Architecture : Medieval Round Churches in Scandinavia}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}