SNF78617 (Article in Serial) - The Sparham corpse panels: unique revelations of death from late fifteenth-century England
Please read our guidance about the use of Norfolk Historic Environment Record data.
| Source Type | Article in Serial |
|---|---|
| Title | The Sparham corpse panels: unique revelations of death from late fifteenth-century England |
| Author/Originator | Luxford, J. |
| Date/Year | 2010 |
| Journal Title | The Antiquaries Journal |
| Vol/Part/Page | Vol 90, pp299-340 |
Description
Two late fifteenth-century rood-screen panels display images of corpses that are apparently unique in surviving medieval art. One is painted with two standing corpses dressed in finery, the other with a corpse arising from a tomb within a church, with a font to one side. Both panels are notable for their surviving inscriptions, and others now lost. Together, these corks constitute one of the most significant English contributions to the genre of death imagery, yet their uniqueness and artistic importance has not been recognised to date. Using a range of medieval and antiquarian sources, this articles aims to provide a comprehensive account of the panels' physical and historical context, iconography and meaning. The strong possibility that they functioned as a 'surrogate sepulchral monument' is discussed.
Location
-