The Imperial abbeys and the Imperial court …
Years: 975 - 975
The Imperial abbeys and the Imperial court have become the centers of religious and spiritual life, led by the example of women of the royal family.
A limited renaissance of the arts and architecture has depended on court patronage of Otto I and his immediate successors.
The "Ottonian Renaissance" is manifest in some revived cathedral schools, such as that of Bruno I, Archbishop of Cologne, who died in 965, and in the production of illuminated manuscripts, the major art form of the age, from a handful of elite scriptoria, such as that at Quedlinburg Abbey, founded by Otto in 936.
Ottonian illuminators are less concerned with naturalism and more with expression through sober, dramatic gesture and heightened coloration.
Locations
People
Groups
- Germans
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Mainz, Electoral Archbishopric of
- Saxony, Duchy of
- Cologne, Electorate of
- German, or Ottonian (Roman) Empire
- Magdeburg, Archbishopric of
