Gazing at the inside or outside of an historic church, your eyes are likely to encounter strange beasts, frolicking figures and twisted foliage staring back at you from doorways, windows, friezes, corbel tables, roof bosses and stained glass – although plenty are just hidden enough to fool the eye. What are these strange images? Hidden messages and tongue-in-cheek depictions were actually widespread throughout medieval churches. Was the period simply rife with satire or did these etchings and carvings hold deeper meanings? Here, we will explore some of the most curious examples.
Views: 801 | Enquiries: 1Dr Emma J. Wells is an academic, author, and broadcaster. She is an ecclesiastical and architectural historian as well as public historian at the University of York, specialising in the English parish church/cathedral, pilgrimage, the cult of saints, and the ‘senses’, as well as built heritage more generally.
In addition to her research and teaching, Emma is Secretary & Assistant Editor for the Society and Journal of Church Archaeology, sits on the Newcastle Diocesan Advisory Committee (DAC), sits on the Academic Advisory Board of the Centre for Parish Church Studies (CPCS), was elected as a Guardian for the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB), and is a member of the editorial board of Royal Studies Journal. In 2017, she was also elected as a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (SFHEA) and, in 2018, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA). She is also a full member of the Chartered Institute for Archaeologists (MCIfA) and a Patron of the Walpole Old Chapel, Suffolk Unwrapped fundraising Project.
A published author and editor, Emma’s publication repertoire includes trade books, edited volumes, renowned academic journals and collections, handbooks, magazine editorials, and websites. Her most recent book, Pilgrim Routes of the British Isles, was released in 2016. Her next book, entitled Heaven On Earth: The Lives & Legacies of the World’s Greatest Cathedrals is to be published by Head of Zeus in 2022.
An experienced and busy public speaker, the list of lectures and presentations she has given is extensive, and have covered a wide array of subjects associated with social, cultural and religious history, historic buildings, art and architecture. She has been invited to present talks and keynotes for the Churches Conservation Trusts, at Canterbury Cathedral, Ripon Minster, Courtauld Institute of Art, Oxford University, the Listed Property Show, Who Do You Think You Are?, Durham’s World Heritage Site and the Institute for Historical Research.
If you are interested in this talk and wish to contact the speaker, please complete the following form: