Error Pop-Up - Close Button This group has been designated for adults age 18 or older. Please sign in and confirm your date of birth in your profile so we can verify your eligibility. You may opt to make your date of birth private.

Medievalism

Medievalism is the system of belief and practice characteristic of the Middle Ages, or devotion to elements of that period, which has been expressed in areas such as architecture, literature, music, art, philosophy, scholarship, and various vehicles of popular culture. Since the eighteenth century, a variety of movements have used the medieval period as a model or inspiration for creative activity, including Romanticism, the Gothic revival, the Pre-Raphaelite and arts and crafts movements and neo-medievalism (a term often used interchangeably with medievalism). The words "medievalism" and "Med ...more

Beowulf
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Le Morte d'Arthur: King Arthur and the Legends of the Round Table
A Game of Thrones (A Song of Ice and Fire, #1)
A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century
The History of the Kings of Britain
The Name of the Rose
Arthurian Romances
The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century
Idylls of the King
Medievalism: a Critical History
Medievalisms
The Once and Future King (The Once and Future King, #1-5)
The Pillars of the Earth (Kingsbridge, #1)
The Fall of Arthur

Most Read This Week

Weird Medieval Guys: How to Live, Laugh, Love (and Die) in Dark Times

Douglas Wilson
Modernity has abandoned the household gods, not because we have rejected the idolatry as all Christians must, but because we have rejected the very idea of the household. We no longer worship Vesta, but have only turned away from her because our homes no longer have any hearths. Now we worship Motor Oil. If our rejection of the old idols were Christian repentance, God would bless it, but what is actually happening is that we are sinking below the level of the ancient pagans. But when we turn to ...more
Douglas Wilson, Angels in the Architecture: A Protestant Vision for Middle Earth

Caroline Walker Bynum
The very implausibility of the restoration of pared down fingernails and amputated limbs at the end of time underlines, for me, the despicableness of human beings who, in fact, torture and mutilate their fellow human beings. Yet, the implausible, even risible doctrine of the resurrection of the body asserts that—if there is such a thing as redemption—it must redeem our experience of enduring and even inflicting such acts. If there is meaning to the history we tell and the corruption (both moral ...more
Caroline Walker Bynum, Fragmentation and Redemption: Essays on Gender and the Human Body in Medieval Religion

More quotes...

Tags

Tags contributing to this page include: medievalism and medievalisms