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Book Review

Romanesque Renaissance: Carolingian, Byzantine and Romanesque Buildings (800–1200) as a Source for New All’Antica Architecture in Early Modern Europe (1400–1700)

Edited by Konrad Adriaan Ottenheym. Leiden, Brill (NIKI Studies in Netherlandish-Italian Art History, vol. 14), 2021. xxiv + 432 pp., 228 illus. isbn 9789004446618. €165 (hb)

 

Notes

1 A. Nagel and C. S. Wood, ‘What Counted as an “Antiquity” in the Renaissance?’, in Renaissance Medievalisms, ed. K. Eisenbichler (Toronto 2009), 53–74.

2 H. Burns, ‘Quattrocento Architecture and the Antique: Some Problems’, in Classical Influences on European Culture A.D. 500–1500, ed. R. R. Bolgar (Cambridge 1971), 269–87; M. Chatenet ed., Le gothique de la Renaissance (Paris 2011). See also the work by the authors of this volume, including B. de Divitiis and K. Christian ed., Local Antiquities, Local Identities: Art, Literature and Antiquarianism in Europe, c. 1400–1700 (Manchester 2019); H. Günther, Was ist Renaissance? Eine Charakteristik der Architektur zu Beginn der Neuzeit (Darmstadt 2009); K. A. E. Enenkel and K. A. Ottenheym ed., The Quest for an Appropriate Past in Literature, Art and Architecture (Leiden 2018).

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