ITINERARIES OF MEDIEVAL WRITTEN RECORDS
- Academic year
- 2024/2025 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- ITINERARI DELLE TESTIMONIANZE SCRITTE MEDIEVALI
- Course code
- FM0610 (AF:519953 AR:289510)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
- Educational sector code
- M-STO/09
- Period
- 2nd Semester
- Where
- VENEZIA
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
The course is part of the common curriculum of the Master's degrees in Archival and Library Science, History from the Middle Ages to Present and History of Art and Conservation of Artistic Heritage.
Expected learning outcomes
- Knowledge of the main types of medieval written records;
- Knowledge of palaeographic and epigraphic terminology;
- Learning the methods of analysis and analytical description of written evidences;
- Learning the methods of analysis of extemporaneous inscriptions.
2. Ability to apply knowledge and understanding
- Ability to place written records in their relevant historical and cultural context;
- Ability to derive socio-cultural information from textual, material and palaeographic analysis of written records;
- Ability to process data for the reconstruction of spatial and monumental contexts;
3. Judgment
- Ability to formulate and argue hypotheses for the historical and chronological contextualisation of written records.
4. Communication skills.
- Know how to develop strategies and techniques for interpreting and communicating research results, including to the general public.
Pre-requirements
Contents
The leitmotif of the entire course will be "places of writing":
- Chancelleries, Notaries, Archives | Writing to certify: production, characteristics, writings and uses of public and private documentary evidence.
- Scriptoria, schools and libraries | In and from the codex: the manuscript book, material aspects and writings. The 'reception' of the codex in non-library spaces (mise en page, writing and colour in epigraphy, sculpture and painting). [Focus on the activity of the copyist and the places/practices of teaching (exercitationes scribendi on various supports).
- Public buildings, streets, squares, walls | Writing in the city: public or private, dedicatory and celebratory inscriptions on public buildings, fountains, palaces, city walls.
- Churches, sanctuaries and monasteries | Sacred writing: liturgical, didactic or dedicatory inscriptions on walls, furniture, capitals, floors. Writings on altars.
- Cemeteries | On, around and inside the tomb: strategies of signalling, 'exploitation' and valorisation of burials through engraved, graffiti or painted inscriptions. [Focus on funerary inscriptions, fixed or mobile, located inside tombs].
- Mobile sites | The 'itinerant' records: texts written on everyday objects and on different types of mobile artefacts within civil and religious contexts.
Referral texts
2) A. PETRUCCI, Medioevo da leggere. Guida allo studio delle testimonianze scritte del Medioevo italiano, Torino, Einaudi, 1992.
3) Focus on the activity of the copyist and the places/practices of teaching: M.L. AGATI, Il libro manoscritto da Oriente a Occidente. Per una codicologia comparata, Roma, L'Erma di Bretschneider, 2009, pp.175-200; 241-271; F. DE RUBEIS, D. FERRAIUOLO, Frammenti di uno 'scriptorium': San Vincenzo al Volturno, in Frammenti di un discorso storico. Per una grammatica dell'al di là del frammento, a cura di C. Tristano, Spoleto, CISAM, 2019, pp. 179-203.
4) Focus on inscriptions located inside tombs: C. TREFFORT, Mémoires carolingiennes: l'épitaphe entre célébration mémorielle, genre littéraire et manifeste politique (milieu du VIIIe - début XIe siècle), Rennes, PUR, 2007, pp. 23-42.
Assessment methods
The exam will consist of four questions: two related to Armando Petrucci’s book and two concerning the other reference texts. The exam will be graded with honors if the student also demonstrates the ability to formulate and argue hypotheses of historical, chronological, or palaeographical contextualization based on a case presented by the professor.
* Active participation in lectures and class discussions will be a positive element of assessment in the examination.
Teaching methods
* Part of the course will be devoted to the discussion of a case of the students' choice from the Italian context.
Teaching language
Further information
Type of exam
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals
This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Human capital, health, education" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development