The Development of Roman Military Costume on English Church Monuments
Abstract
This paper considers the development of the portrayal of Roman military costume on English church monuments of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The uses of such costume were rooted in the wider European Renaissance, the effects of which were felt in England from the early sixteenth century. Later Elizabethan and early Jacobean literature employed a wide variety of classical references, the culmination of which were the masques performed for the Jacobean and Caroline Courts which were the ultimate expression of classical ideas and ideals. The early seventeenth century saw the tentative uses of Roman military costume for commemorative sculpture but it was not until the post Restoration period that such costume became commonplace on the memorials of the social elites. The political significance of this dress is further explored as are the corresponding moral and civic associations. The paper concludes with the idea that by the mid eighteenth century such a costume style had become an anachronism and no longer appropriate for the monuments of the gentry.
Full Text: PDF DOI: 10.15640/ijaah.v8n1a3
Abstract
This paper considers the development of the portrayal of Roman military costume on English church monuments of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The uses of such costume were rooted in the wider European Renaissance, the effects of which were felt in England from the early sixteenth century. Later Elizabethan and early Jacobean literature employed a wide variety of classical references, the culmination of which were the masques performed for the Jacobean and Caroline Courts which were the ultimate expression of classical ideas and ideals. The early seventeenth century saw the tentative uses of Roman military costume for commemorative sculpture but it was not until the post Restoration period that such costume became commonplace on the memorials of the social elites. The political significance of this dress is further explored as are the corresponding moral and civic associations. The paper concludes with the idea that by the mid eighteenth century such a costume style had become an anachronism and no longer appropriate for the monuments of the gentry.
Full Text: PDF DOI: 10.15640/ijaah.v8n1a3
Browse Journals
Journal Policies
Information
Useful Links
- Call for Papers
- Submit Your Paper
- Publish in Your Native Language
- Subscribe the Journal
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Contact the Executive Editor
- Recommend this Journal to Librarian
- View the Current Issue
- View the Previous Issues
- Recommend this Journal to Friends
- Recommend a Special Issue
- Comment on the Journal
- Publish the Conference Proceedings
Latest Activities
Resources
Visiting Status
Today | 136 |
Yesterday | 67 |
This Month | 4291 |
Last Month | 4932 |
All Days | 1249297 |
Online | 10 |