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“A Tombe once Stood in this Room”: Memorials to Memorials in Early Modern England

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posted on 2025-07-31, 18:51 authored by PA Schwyzer
The century after the Reformation witnessed a profusion of artworks commemorating lost or failed monuments. In different ways, these memorials to memorials sought to register, if not necessarily to repair, a rupture in cultural memory. Early modern memorials to memorials could take the form of paintings, such as Pieter Saenredam’s St. Bavokerk with Fictive Bishop’s Tomb, or of poems recollecting vanished monuments, such as Shakespeare’s sonnets, Drayton’s Poly-Olbion, and Spenser’s Ruines of Time. A clutch of early seventeenth-century poetic memorials to lost tombs and shrines in St. Albans Abbey Church are of interest both as evidence of the local reception of Shakespeare and Drayton and as situated verses that challenge the dichotomy between text and object. Drawing attention to the impermanence of physical monuments, they also acknowledge their own ephemerality, calling into question the capacity of memorials of any kind to carry the burden of remembrance.

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Copyright © 2018 by Duke University Press

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This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Duke University Press via the DOI in this record

Journal

Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies

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Duke University Press

Language

en

Citation

Vol. 48 (2), pp. 365-385

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