Animalia: Animal and Human Interaction in Daily Living in the Early Medieval English World is the fifth in a series of volumes exploring daily lives, material culture and environment in the early medieval English world. Like its fellow volumes, it explores the interactions and intersections between the peoples of early medieval England and their material surroundings, in this case, the relationship between people and other living creatures in their natural environment and the imagined creatures depicted in their literature and art. The collection is deeply interdisciplinary, using forensic archaeology, genetic testing, textual analysis of literary and documentary sources, and art historical study to assess the evidence for these relationships and interactions.
The volume is organized in three parts. The first section, Insights from Archaeology, looks carefully at recent, additional evidence for the existence and role of animals in early medieval England through evidence for animal husbandry and medieval falconry to what surviving books and pages can tell us about animals through biocodicology, a new and important contribution to archaeology for the period.
The second section, Insights from Text, focuses attention on how textual sources portray human perception of animal reality and animal-human interaction and relationships, including the role of enslavement and violence between man and beast. From the Beasts of Battle to mundane animals, from poetry to documentary and homiletic text, the textual evidence evinces the highly symbolic role animals held in the early medieval English mind.
The third section, Insights from the Visual Arts, continues the volume’s exploration of perception of animals, but in the highly abstract and symbolic realm of early medieval English art. Abstract depictions of animals as iconographic motifs raises again the question of animal voice and agency in metals, ceramics, and stone, as well as animal symbolism in textile and animals as monstrosities in illustrated “monster” collections.
Introduction
Maren Clegg Hyer and Gale R. Owen-Crocker
Animals: Insights from Archaeology
Chapter 1: Hidden in the Archives: How Biocodicology Can Reveal Biological Histories of Animals
Sarah Fiddyment and Matthew Teasdale
Chapter 2: Animal Husbandry in Anglo-Saxon England: Origins and Developments
Mauro Rizzetto
Chapter 3: ‘The Hawk in Hand’: Human-Raptor Sociality and Falconry in Early Medieval England
Robert J. Wallis
Animals: Insights from Text
Chapter 4: From Oxford to Gatwick via Swindon: Animals in English Place-names
Carole Hough
Chapter 5: Animals in Old English Poetry
Jill Frederick
Chapter 6: Unwitting Oxen: Visual Language and Verbal Play in Four Old English Riddles
Sarah M. Anderson
Chapter 7: Wandering Wolves and Wild Birds: Animals in Early Medieval English Hagiography
Maren Clegg Hyer
Chapter 8: Geese Behaving Like Geese: Accurate Renditions of Anserine Behaviour in the Lives of Three Anglo-Saxon Abbesses
Marian Hessink
Chapter 9: A Man between Two Beasts: Faces, Animals, and Epistemology in Old English Literature
E.J. Christie
Animals: Insights from the Visual Arts
Chapter 10: Revisiting the Animal Wonders of London, British Library, MS Cotton Vitellius A. xv
John Friedman
Chapter 11: Cloth Creatures: Animals on Textiles from England and Wales, Seventh to Eleventh Centuries
Gale R. Owen-Crocker
Chapter 12: Animals in Stone
Lilla Kopár
Chapter 13: The Burden of Beasts in Anglo-Saxon Arts
Danielle Joyner
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