
Healing Arts. Representations and Practices of Medical Knowledge in Art and Literature (9th-12th centuries)
The project focuses on the intertwined histories of Botany and Art in the Early Middle Ages. Herbaria with elaborated plant images, poems with pharmacological content, as well as medical boxes used as reliquaries manifest the post-antique interest in pharmacology, especially in the 9th/ 10th century. These visualizations reveal systems of knowledge in which concrete medical practices were being actively articulated and negotiated. It furthermore connects questions that lead us to see plants as a way to approach nature and how the natural world transforms into a visual system beyond the question of resemblance.
Type of Data
ImageText
Data Languages
GermanEnglish
Keywords
Art and ScienceBotanyHerbalIatromagical PracticesManuscript StudiesMedicineMedieval Art HistoryPlantsPre-modern Health Care
Disciplines
10404 Visual arts and Art history10502 Romance languages and literature10603 Arts
Temporal Coverage
Middle Ages (en)
Spatial Coverage
Cite this Project
Citation
Holler, T.; Baptista Wilhelm, L; Von Kerssenbrock-Krosigk, G.: Healing Arts. Representations and Practices of Medical Knowledge in Art and Literature (9th-12th centuries) [database]. DaSCH. https://ark.dasch.swiss/ark:/72163/1/083E
Data Access
Access Rights
Open Access with Restrictions
Copyright
Healing Arts. Representations and Practices of Medical Knowledge in Art and Literature (9th-12th centuries)Contact
Theresa Holler
Post-doctoral Researcher
Universität Basel, Kunsthistorisches Seminar
theresa.holler@unibas.chProject Timeline
Period
2021-11-01 – 2025-10-30
Status
Ongoing
Funding
Grants
Data Management Plan
Not accessible