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Effigy

An effigy is a sculptural representation, often life-size, of a specific person or a prototypical figure.[1] The term is mostly used for the makeshift dummies used for symbolic punishment in political protests and for the figures burned in certain traditions around New Year, Carnival and Easter. In European cultures, effigies were used in the past for punishment in formal justice when the perpetrator could not be apprehended, and in popular justice practices of social shaming and exclusion. Additionally, "effigy" is used for certain traditional forms of sculpture, namely tomb effigies, funeral effigies and coin effigies.

Burning of Judas Iscariot, Brazil, 1909
Effigy of Ravana, a figure from the Ramayana, with burning sparklers, in Manchester, England, in 2006

There is a large overlap and exchange between the ephemeral forms of effigies.[2] Traditional holiday effigies are often politically charged, for instance, when the generalised figures Año Viejo (the Old Year) or Judas in Latin America are substituted by the effigy of a despised politician. Traditional forms are also borrowed for political protests. In India, for instance, effigies in protests regularly take the form of the ten-headed demon king Ravana, as they figure in the traditional Ramlila. In Mexico and the United States piñatas depicting a politician are sometimes taken to protests and beaten to a pulp.[3] Procedures of formal and popular justice are appropriated when the effigy of a politician in a protest figures in a mock trial, mock execution and mock funeral.

In all cases, except the traditional effigies, there is an emphasis on the social and political aspects of the depicted person. Tomb effigies and funeral effigies exhibit attire and office insignia that indicate social status; coin effigies are signs of sovereignty; formal punishment of an effigy was synonymous to social death; popular punishment was meant to humiliate and ostracise the depicted; effigies in political protests ridicule and attack the honour of the targeted politician.[4]

Etymology edit

The word efigy is first documented in English in 1539 and comes, perhaps via French, from the Latin singular form effigies,[1] meaning "copy, image, likeness, portrait, and statue".[5] This spelling was originally used in English for singular senses: even a single image was "the effigies of ...". (This spelling seems to have been later reanalyzed as a plural, creating the singular effigy.) In effigie was probably understood as a Latin phrase until the 18th century.[1] The word occurs in Shakespeare's As You Like It of 1600 (II, vii, 193), where scansion suggests that the second syllable is to be emphasized, as in the Latin pronunciation (but unlike the modern English pronunciation).

Political effigies edit

Hanging or burning the effigy of a political enemy to ridicule and dishonour them is a very old and very widespread practice. It is reported that in 1328, the troops of Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV, on their campaign in Italy to unseat Pope John XXII, burned a straw puppet of the pope.[6] Burning effigies in political protests is especially widespread in India and Pakistan. In the Philippines, the practice came up during the successful People Power Revolution against the regime of President Marcos. Since then effigy protests against the successive presidents developed into elaborate spectacles.[7] US President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama have been burned in effigy numerous times in protests against military operations and occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq in the countries in the region as well as elsewhere. During the Arab Spring of 2011 and onward, effigies of the countries' leaders have been hanged in Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Syria.

In the British colonies in New England, effigy performances gained prominence as an effective tool in the protests against the 1765 Stamp Act, leading to the American Revolution and the founding of the United States of America. Afterwards, it became an established form of political expression in US politics, and almost every US President has been burned in effigy at some point in his career.

The best known British example of a political effigy is the figure of Guy Fawkes, one of the conspirators in the Gunpowder Plot who tried to assassinate King James I in 1605 by blowing up the House of Lords. Already a year later, the 5th of November was declared a holiday to celebrate the survival of the king and was celebrated with bonfires. Soon after, effigies of Guy Fawkes were burned. Traditionally, children make effigies from old clothing filled with straw to beg for "a penny for the guy", and communities build their own bonfires. Currently, Lewes, on the south coast of England has the most elaborate celebrations of Guy Fawkes Night. Competing bonfire societies make effigies of important and unpopular figures in current affairs and burn them alongside effigies of Guy Fawkes and the Pope.

In Port Said, Egypt, the al-Limby (formerly known as Allenby) is burned during Spring Festival. The tradition started after the First World War, when demonstrators burned an effigy of British High Commissioner for Egypt Lord Allenby during a protest against the presence of British troops in the city.[8] In the second half of the 20th century it became custom to portray contemporary enemies of Egypt as the al-Limby. During the Arab Spring, effigies of President Mubarak and other Egyptian politicians were exhibited and burned as the al-Limby.[9][dead link]

Traditional effigies edit

Burning effigies is part of many rituals to mark the change of the seasons, performed all over Europe in locally distinct traditions. The figures usually personify adverse forces of life (winter, the old year, the witch, Judas Iscariot) and their burning marks and celebrates the annual cycle of life—death and rebirth, the defeat of winter and the return of spring. Most traditions are staged around New Year, at the end of Carnival or in the week before Easter.

Many of these traditions have been exported by migrating people to other countries. European settlers brought their traditions to the colonies, where they might have merged with local traditions. In countries of Latin America, the Spanish tradition of burning Año Viejo (the Old Year) on New Year Eve and Judas on Good Friday is widely practiced. Judas is also burned in the Philippines. The tradition of burning Guy Fawkes has been brought to New England, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and other British colonies. The Indian and Pakistani tradition of burning Ravana is also practiced in Trinidad and in Edinburgh and Manchester, UK. In the 1970s German students established the burning of Winter in the form of a snowman at Lake Superior State University in Michigan, US.

The Marzanna ritual represents the end of the dark days of winter, the victory over death, and the welcoming of the spring rebirth. Marzanna is a Slavic goddess of death, associated with winter. The rite involves burning a female straw effigy or drowning it in a river, or both. It is a folk custom in Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, taking place on the day of the vernal equinox.

Funeral effigies edit

Funeral effigies made from wood, cloth and wax played a role in the royal funeral rituals in early modern France and England.[10] Following the medieval European doctrine of the double body of the king, these effigies represented the immortal and divine kingship.[11] The effigy was dressed in the royal regalia and waited upon as if alive, while the monarch's physical remains remained hidden in the coffin. After the coronation of the new king, these effigies were stored away. The museum of Westminster Abbey has a collection of English royal wax effigies reaching back to Edward III of England, who died in 1377. In the 18th century also other important personalities were honoured with a funeral effigy, for instance British prime minister Pitt the Elder, the naval hero Horatio Nelson, French emperor Napoleon, and Frances Stewart, Duchess of Richmond, who also had her parrot stuffed and displayed at her own request and expense.[citation needed]

From the time of the funeral of Charles II in 1685, effigies were no longer placed on the coffin but were still made for later display.[12] The effigy of Charles II was displayed over his tomb until the early 19th century, when all effigies were removed from the abbey.[citation needed] Nelson's effigy was a tourist attraction, commissioned the year after his death and his burial in St Paul's Cathedral in 1805. The government had decided that major public figures with State funerals should in future be buried at St Paul's. Concerned for their revenue from visitors, the Abbey decided it needed a rival attraction for admirers of Nelson.[13]

Tomb effigies edit

 
Double tomb effigies or gisants, Josselin, France, 15th century

A tomb effigy, in French gisant (French, "recumbent") is the usually life-size sculpted figure depicting the deceased on a tomb monument. Although these funeary and commemorative reliefs were first developed in Ancient Egyptian and Etruscan cultures, they appear most numerously in Western Europe tombs from the later 11th century, in a style that continued in use through the Renaissance and early modern period, and are still sometimes used. They typically represent the deceased in a state of "eternal repose", with hands folded in prayer, lying on a pillow, awaiting resurrection with a dog or lion at their feet. A husband and wife may be depicted lying side by side.[14]

A related type of tomb effigy, the cadaver monument, shows the corpse in a state of decomposition as a reminder of human mortality.[15]

Other types edit

In the field of numismatics, effigy describes the portrait on the obverse of a coin.[16][17] A practice evident in reference literature of the 19th century,[18] the obverse of a coin was said to depict "the ruler's effigy".[19] The appearance and style of effigy used varies according to the preference of the monarch or ruler being depicted - for example, some, such as George VI of the United Kingdom have preferred to be shown uncrowned, while others have favoured highly-formal representations. It can also be the case that the monarch's reign becomes long enough to merit issuing a succession of effigies so that their appearance continues to be current. Such has been the case for Queen Victoria (three effigies over 63 years) and Elizabeth II, who was depicted by five different effigies on British coins and three different effigies on British postage stamps between her ascension to the throne in 1953 and her death in 2022.

Effigy mound is a term used in the archaeology of (mainly) Pre-Columbian America for a large earthwork in the shape of a stylized animal, symbol, human, or other figure and generally containing one or more human burials.

Effigy vessel is a term used in the archeology of (mainly) Pre-Columbian America for ceramic or stone containers, pots, vases, cups, etc., in the shape of an animal or human.

In the past, criminals sentenced to death in absentia might be officially executed "in effigy" as a symbolic act. In southern India, effigies of the demon-king Ravana from the epic poem the Ramayana are traditionally burnt during the festival of Navrati.

A wicker man was a large human-shaped wicker statue allegedly used in Celtic paganism for human sacrifice by burning it, when loaded with captives.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "effigy, n.". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ Florian Göttke, "Burning Images: Performing Effigies as Political Protest", (PhD dissertation, University of Amsterdam, 2019), 54–55.
  3. ^ Semko, Elizabeth (Apr 26, 2016). . Riverfront Times. Archived from the original on Aug 18, 2021.
  4. ^ Florian Göttke, Burning Images: Performing Effigies as Political Protest, (PhD dissertation, University of Amsterdam, 2019), 39–40.
  5. ^ Latdict, s.v. "effigies", http://www.latin-dictionary.net/search/latin/effigies
  6. ^ Wolfgang Brückner, Bildnis und Brauch: Studien zur Bildfunktion der Effigies (Berlin: Erich Schmidt Verlag, 1966), 197–201.
  7. ^ Florian Göttke, "Burning Images for Punishment and Change", Trigger, Fotomuseum Antwerpen, BE, November 2019.
  8. ^ Mériam N. Belli, An Incurable Past: Nasser's Egypt Then and Now (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2013), 75–162.
  9. ^ Trevor Mostyn, "Will militant Islam hijack Egypt’s beautiful revolution?", weblog Planetary Movement, April 21, 2011, http://www.planetarymovement.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=536&Itemid=61
  10. ^ Ernst H. Kantorowicz, The King's Two Bodies: A Study in Mediaeval Political Theology (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1957), 419–37.
  11. ^ Ernst H. Kantorowicz, The King's Two Bodies: A Study in Mediaeval Political Theology (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1957), 382–84.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2013-11-10.
  13. ^ Westminster Abbey, "Horatio, Viscount Nelson".
  14. ^ Fozi (2021), pp. 12, 13, 58
  15. ^ Bass (2017), p. 163
  16. ^ Cuhaj, George S. (2012). 2012 Standard Catalog of World Coins - 1901-2000 (39 ed.). Krause Publications. pp. 333, 968, 991, 1523, and 1966. ISBN 978-1-4402-1572-8.
  17. ^ Cuhaj, George S. (2013). 2014 Standard Catalog of World Coins, 2001-Date (8 ed.). Krause Publications. pp. 152, 177, 179, 191, 225, and 655. ISBN 978-1-4402-3568-9.
  18. ^ The Encyclopædia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General Literature. Vol. 17 (9 ed.). The Henry G. Allen Company. 1890. p. 630. ISBN 9781276858373.
  19. ^ Hilsdale, Cecily J. (2014). Byzantine Art and Diplomacy in an Age of Decline. Cambridge University Press. p. 169. ISBN 978-1-107-03330-6.

Sources edit

  • Bass, Marisa Anne. "The transi tomb and the genius of sixteenth century Netherlandish funerary sculpture". Netherlands Yearbook for the History of Art, volume 67, 2017. JSTOR 26593102
  • Fozi, Shirin. Romanesque Tomb Effigies: Death and Redemption in Medieval Europe, 1000–1200. University Park (PA): Penn State University Press, 2021. ISBN 978-0-2710-8917-1

External links edit

  • Statua loricatus: Roel Renmans's database about military effigies and tombs from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance

effigy, other, uses, disambiguation, effigy, sculptural, representation, often, life, size, specific, person, prototypical, figure, term, mostly, used, makeshift, dummies, used, symbolic, punishment, political, protests, figures, burned, certain, traditions, a. For other uses see Effigy disambiguation An effigy is a sculptural representation often life size of a specific person or a prototypical figure 1 The term is mostly used for the makeshift dummies used for symbolic punishment in political protests and for the figures burned in certain traditions around New Year Carnival and Easter In European cultures effigies were used in the past for punishment in formal justice when the perpetrator could not be apprehended and in popular justice practices of social shaming and exclusion Additionally effigy is used for certain traditional forms of sculpture namely tomb effigies funeral effigies and coin effigies Burning of Judas Iscariot Brazil 1909 Effigy of Ravana a figure from the Ramayana with burning sparklers in Manchester England in 2006 There is a large overlap and exchange between the ephemeral forms of effigies 2 Traditional holiday effigies are often politically charged for instance when the generalised figures Ano Viejo the Old Year or Judas in Latin America are substituted by the effigy of a despised politician Traditional forms are also borrowed for political protests In India for instance effigies in protests regularly take the form of the ten headed demon king Ravana as they figure in the traditional Ramlila In Mexico and the United States pinatas depicting a politician are sometimes taken to protests and beaten to a pulp 3 Procedures of formal and popular justice are appropriated when the effigy of a politician in a protest figures in a mock trial mock execution and mock funeral In all cases except the traditional effigies there is an emphasis on the social and political aspects of the depicted person Tomb effigies and funeral effigies exhibit attire and office insignia that indicate social status coin effigies are signs of sovereignty formal punishment of an effigy was synonymous to social death popular punishment was meant to humiliate and ostracise the depicted effigies in political protests ridicule and attack the honour of the targeted politician 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Political effigies 3 Traditional effigies 4 Funeral effigies 5 Tomb effigies 6 Other types 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksEtymology editThe word efigy is first documented in English in 1539 and comes perhaps via French from the Latin singular form effigies 1 meaning copy image likeness portrait and statue 5 This spelling was originally used in English for singular senses even a single image was the effigies of This spelling seems to have been later reanalyzed as a plural creating the singular effigy In effigie was probably understood as a Latin phrase until the 18th century 1 The word occurs in Shakespeare s As You Like It of 1600 II vii 193 where scansion suggests that the second syllable is to be emphasized as in the Latin pronunciation but unlike the modern English pronunciation Political effigies editHanging or burning the effigy of a political enemy to ridicule and dishonour them is a very old and very widespread practice It is reported that in 1328 the troops of Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV on their campaign in Italy to unseat Pope John XXII burned a straw puppet of the pope 6 Burning effigies in political protests is especially widespread in India and Pakistan In the Philippines the practice came up during the successful People Power Revolution against the regime of President Marcos Since then effigy protests against the successive presidents developed into elaborate spectacles 7 US President George W Bush and President Barack Obama have been burned in effigy numerous times in protests against military operations and occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq in the countries in the region as well as elsewhere During the Arab Spring of 2011 and onward effigies of the countries leaders have been hanged in Egypt Libya Yemen and Syria In the British colonies in New England effigy performances gained prominence as an effective tool in the protests against the 1765 Stamp Act leading to the American Revolution and the founding of the United States of America Afterwards it became an established form of political expression in US politics and almost every US President has been burned in effigy at some point in his career The best known British example of a political effigy is the figure of Guy Fawkes one of the conspirators in the Gunpowder Plot who tried to assassinate King James I in 1605 by blowing up the House of Lords Already a year later the 5th of November was declared a holiday to celebrate the survival of the king and was celebrated with bonfires Soon after effigies of Guy Fawkes were burned Traditionally children make effigies from old clothing filled with straw to beg for a penny for the guy and communities build their own bonfires Currently Lewes on the south coast of England has the most elaborate celebrations of Guy Fawkes Night Competing bonfire societies make effigies of important and unpopular figures in current affairs and burn them alongside effigies of Guy Fawkes and the Pope In Port Said Egypt the al Limby formerly known as Allenby is burned during Spring Festival The tradition started after the First World War when demonstrators burned an effigy of British High Commissioner for Egypt Lord Allenby during a protest against the presence of British troops in the city 8 In the second half of the 20th century it became custom to portray contemporary enemies of Egypt as the al Limby During the Arab Spring effigies of President Mubarak and other Egyptian politicians were exhibited and burned as the al Limby 9 dead link Traditional effigies editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Effigy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Burning effigies is part of many rituals to mark the change of the seasons performed all over Europe in locally distinct traditions The figures usually personify adverse forces of life winter the old year the witch Judas Iscariot and their burning marks and celebrates the annual cycle of life death and rebirth the defeat of winter and the return of spring Most traditions are staged around New Year at the end of Carnival or in the week before Easter Many of these traditions have been exported by migrating people to other countries European settlers brought their traditions to the colonies where they might have merged with local traditions In countries of Latin America the Spanish tradition of burning Ano Viejo the Old Year on New Year Eve and Judas on Good Friday is widely practiced Judas is also burned in the Philippines The tradition of burning Guy Fawkes has been brought to New England Canada Australia New Zealand and other British colonies The Indian and Pakistani tradition of burning Ravana is also practiced in Trinidad and in Edinburgh and Manchester UK In the 1970s German students established the burning of Winter in the form of a snowman at Lake Superior State University in Michigan US The Marzanna ritual represents the end of the dark days of winter the victory over death and the welcoming of the spring rebirth Marzanna is a Slavic goddess of death associated with winter The rite involves burning a female straw effigy or drowning it in a river or both It is a folk custom in Poland Slovakia and the Czech Republic taking place on the day of the vernal equinox Funeral effigies editFuneral effigies made from wood cloth and wax played a role in the royal funeral rituals in early modern France and England 10 Following the medieval European doctrine of the double body of the king these effigies represented the immortal and divine kingship 11 The effigy was dressed in the royal regalia and waited upon as if alive while the monarch s physical remains remained hidden in the coffin After the coronation of the new king these effigies were stored away The museum of Westminster Abbey has a collection of English royal wax effigies reaching back to Edward III of England who died in 1377 In the 18th century also other important personalities were honoured with a funeral effigy for instance British prime minister Pitt the Elder the naval hero Horatio Nelson French emperor Napoleon and Frances Stewart Duchess of Richmond who also had her parrot stuffed and displayed at her own request and expense citation needed From the time of the funeral of Charles II in 1685 effigies were no longer placed on the coffin but were still made for later display 12 The effigy of Charles II was displayed over his tomb until the early 19th century when all effigies were removed from the abbey citation needed Nelson s effigy was a tourist attraction commissioned the year after his death and his burial in St Paul s Cathedral in 1805 The government had decided that major public figures with State funerals should in future be buried at St Paul s Concerned for their revenue from visitors the Abbey decided it needed a rival attraction for admirers of Nelson 13 Tomb effigies edit nbsp Double tomb effigies or gisants Josselin France 15th century A tomb effigy in French gisant French recumbent is the usually life size sculpted figure depicting the deceased on a tomb monument Although these funeary and commemorative reliefs were first developed in Ancient Egyptian and Etruscan cultures they appear most numerously in Western Europe tombs from the later 11th century in a style that continued in use through the Renaissance and early modern period and are still sometimes used They typically represent the deceased in a state of eternal repose with hands folded in prayer lying on a pillow awaiting resurrection with a dog or lion at their feet A husband and wife may be depicted lying side by side 14 A related type of tomb effigy the cadaver monument shows the corpse in a state of decomposition as a reminder of human mortality 15 Other types editIn the field of numismatics effigy describes the portrait on the obverse of a coin 16 17 A practice evident in reference literature of the 19th century 18 the obverse of a coin was said to depict the ruler s effigy 19 The appearance and style of effigy used varies according to the preference of the monarch or ruler being depicted for example some such as George VI of the United Kingdom have preferred to be shown uncrowned while others have favoured highly formal representations It can also be the case that the monarch s reign becomes long enough to merit issuing a succession of effigies so that their appearance continues to be current Such has been the case for Queen Victoria three effigies over 63 years and Elizabeth II who was depicted by five different effigies on British coins and three different effigies on British postage stamps between her ascension to the throne in 1953 and her death in 2022 Effigy mound is a term used in the archaeology of mainly Pre Columbian America for a large earthwork in the shape of a stylized animal symbol human or other figure and generally containing one or more human burials Effigy vessel is a term used in the archeology of mainly Pre Columbian America for ceramic or stone containers pots vases cups etc in the shape of an animal or human In the past criminals sentenced to death in absentia might be officially executed in effigy as a symbolic act In southern India effigies of the demon king Ravana from the epic poem the Ramayana are traditionally burnt during the festival of Navrati A wicker man was a large human shaped wicker statue allegedly used in Celtic paganism for human sacrifice by burning it when loaded with captives nbsp The funeral effigy without clothes of Elizabeth of York mother of King Henry VIII 1503 Westminster Abbey nbsp A rare wax funerary effigy of a private person who stipulated it be made in her will England 1744 Holy Trinity Church Stow Bardolph Norfolk nbsp Grand Rababou from the French word rababouet or wood thief is burnt annually in the carnival of Fribourg Switzerland nbsp Modern Marzanna goddess effigy Poland nbsp An 18th century engraving of a Celtic wicker man ready for burning nbsp Welsh children with their Guy Fawkes effigy in November 1962 The sign reads Penny for the Guy nbsp Every year The Man is burned at the Burning Man festival Nevada nbsp Falla monument for the Falles festival in Valencia SpainSee also editVoodoo doll Poppet Burning Man Madame Tussauds Flag burning Self immolation Death maskReferences edit a b c effigy n Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Florian Gottke Burning Images Performing Effigies as Political Protest PhD dissertation University of Amsterdam 2019 54 55 Semko Elizabeth Apr 26 2016 Cherokee Street s Giant Trump Pinata Will Help Release Your Political Frustrations Riverfront Times Archived from the original on Aug 18 2021 Florian Gottke Burning Images Performing Effigies as Political Protest PhD dissertation University of Amsterdam 2019 39 40 Latdict s v effigies http www latin dictionary net search latin effigies Wolfgang Bruckner Bildnis und Brauch Studien zur Bildfunktion der Effigies Berlin Erich Schmidt Verlag 1966 197 201 Florian Gottke Burning Images for Punishment and Change Trigger Fotomuseum Antwerpen BE November 2019 Meriam N Belli An Incurable Past Nasser s Egypt Then and Now Gainesville University Press of Florida 2013 75 162 Trevor Mostyn Will militant Islam hijack Egypt s beautiful revolution weblog Planetary Movement April 21 2011 http www planetarymovement org index php option com content amp task view amp id 536 amp Itemid 61 Ernst H Kantorowicz The King s Two Bodies A Study in Mediaeval Political Theology Princeton Princeton University Press 1957 419 37 Ernst H Kantorowicz The King s Two Bodies A Study in Mediaeval Political Theology Princeton Princeton University Press 1957 382 84 Westminster Abbey Royal funerals Archived from the original on 2014 07 14 Retrieved 2013 11 10 Westminster Abbey Horatio Viscount Nelson Fozi 2021 pp 12 13 58 Bass 2017 p 163 Cuhaj George S 2012 2012 Standard Catalog of World Coins 1901 2000 39 ed Krause Publications pp 333 968 991 1523 and 1966 ISBN 978 1 4402 1572 8 Cuhaj George S 2013 2014 Standard Catalog of World Coins 2001 Date 8 ed Krause Publications pp 152 177 179 191 225 and 655 ISBN 978 1 4402 3568 9 The Encyclopaedia Britannica A Dictionary of Arts Sciences and General Literature Vol 17 9 ed The Henry G Allen Company 1890 p 630 ISBN 9781276858373 Hilsdale Cecily J 2014 Byzantine Art and Diplomacy in an Age of Decline Cambridge University Press p 169 ISBN 978 1 107 03330 6 Sources editBass Marisa Anne The transi tomb and the genius of sixteenth century Netherlandish funerary sculpture Netherlands Yearbook for the History of Art volume 67 2017 JSTOR 26593102 Fozi Shirin Romanesque Tomb Effigies Death and Redemption in Medieval Europe 1000 1200 University Park PA Penn State University Press 2021 ISBN 978 0 2710 8917 1External links edit nbsp Look up effigy in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to effigies Statua loricatus Roel Renmans s database about military effigies and tombs from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Effigy amp oldid 1219025366, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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