物证?重新审视中世纪晚期苏格兰精英女性的印章和特许状

Rachel Meredith Davis
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引用次数: 1

摘要

与中世纪英国其他地方关于印章和密封实践的学术研究相比,中世纪苏格兰女性的印章在很大程度上仍未被探索。这篇文章有两个主要目的。首先,它试图证明19世纪和20世纪苏格兰印章目录作为物质证据的中介记录的不足,以及在当前对中世纪晚期苏格兰的研究中将它们用作全面和参考文本的不足。这包括讨论中世纪印章作为原始印痕、铸模和插图保存下来的方式,以及如何利用这些不同类型的证据来构建和重建印章和宪章的背景。其次,本文将探讨印章及其所附宪章的重要性和相互关联性。对这两件物品的解读强调了印章的法律功能,并显示了其作为具象物品的独特目的。虽然印章被用于基本令状宪章以外的场合,但它仍然是一个具有法律功能和(自动)传记性的对象,因此,印章和宪章之间的关系在两者所表达的代表性身份中体现了意义。这篇文章将把这种方法应用到几个属于14世纪和15世纪苏格兰伯爵夫人的印章上。以这种方式审查的证据为苏格兰妇女的密封实践和女性使用纹章装置提供了新的见解。将强调认为妇女的设计是公式化的,或认为她们的印章可以与所附的宪章分开进行有用的解释的不足之处。文字和图像的相互联系传达了个人联系和精英野心,并在特许生产的法律背景下促进了贵族血统。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Material evidence? Re-approaching elite women’s seals and charters in late medieval Scotland
Medieval Scottish women’s seals remain largely unexplored compared to the scholarship on seals and sealing practice elsewhere in medieval Britain. This article has two chief aims. First, it seeks to demonstrate the insufficiencies of the 19th- and 20th-century Scottish seal catalogues as a mediated record of material evidence and the use of them as comprehensive and go-to reference texts within current research on late medieval Scotland. This includes a discussion of the ways in which medieval seals survive as original impressions, casts and illustrations and how these different types of evidence can be used in the construction and reconstruction of the seal’s and charter’s context. Second, this paper will explore the materiality and interconnectedness of seals and the charters to which they are attached. A reading of these two objects together emphasises the legal function of the seal and shows its distinctive purpose as a representational object. While the seal was used in con-texts beyond the basic writ charter, it remained a legally functional and (auto)biographical object, and, as such, the relationship between seal and charter informs meaning in representational identities expressed in both. The article will apply this approach to several examples of seals belonging to 14th- and 15th-century Scottish countesses. Evidence reviewed this way provides new insight into Scottish women’s sealing practice and female use of heraldic device. The deficiencies of assuming women’s design to be formulaic or that their seals can be usefully interpreted in isolation from the charters to which they were attached will be highlighted. The interconnectedness of word and image conveyed personal links and elite ambitions, and promoted noble lineage within the legal context of charter production.
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