Urban soundscape: defining space and community in twelfth-century of Jerusalem

פרסום מחקרי: פרק בספר / בדוח / בכנספרקביקורת עמיתים

תקציר

The First Crusade was imagined by a twelfth-century author as carrying a pleasant sound that resonated throughout the world; The sonus et amor, the sound and love, of the pilgrims' way to Jerusalem was to become the sound of victory and hope of perpetual happiness when the first crusaders established their kingdom and gave thanks at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The study of sounds as an important component in the shaping of medieval cities contributes greatly to representing the diversity of activity in the medieval public sphere. In the medieval city, sounds often gave the urban space a particular meaning in the cycle of the year, month, week or day. The installation of church bells in Jerusalem by Godfrey's early command exemplifies many of the attributes of bells just mentioned, but this was just one sound among many others that refashioned Jerusalem's soundscape in the early 12th century.
שפה מקוריתאנגלית
כותר פרסום המארחCommunicating the Middle Ages
כותר משנה של פרסום המארחEssays in honour of Sophia Menache
עורכיםIris Shagrir , Benjamin Z. Kedar, Michel Balard
מקום הפרסוםAbingdon
מוציא לאורRoutledge
עמודים103-120
מספר עמודים18
מסת"ב (אלקטרוני)9781315158211
מסת"ב (מודפס)9781138068193
סטטוס פרסוםפורסם - 2018

סדרות פרסומים

שםCrusades-Subsidia

RAMBI publications

  • rambi
  • Sounds -- Israel -- Jerusalem
  • Church bells -- Israel -- Jerusalem -- History
  • Jerusalem (Israel) -- Religious life and customs
  • Jerusalem (Israel) -- History -- 1099-1244, Latin Kingdom, Crusaders

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