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This book explores the way in which church architecture from the earliest centuries of Christianity has been shaped by holy bones - the physical remains or 'relics' of those whom the Church venerated as saints. The Church's holy dead continued to exercise an influence on the living from beyond the grave, and their earthly remains provided a focus for prayer. The memoriae, house-churches and crypts of early Christian Rome; the elaborately decorated monuments containing the bodies of the bishops of Merovingian Gaul; the revival of ring crypts in the Carshingian empire; the crypts, 'tomb-shrines', and later high shrines of medieval England, all demonstrate how the presence of a holy body within a church influenced its very architecture. This is the first complete modern study of this hitherto somewhat neglected aspect of medieval church architecture in western Europe.
Part time Research Fellow, University of Reading, independent architectural historian / archaeological consultant
The balanced use of documentary and archaeological methods combine with the excellent use of plans and photographs to provide a detailed and scholarly work which will be welcomed by all students of the early Church.
^BArthur^R ^BAsseraf^R, University of Cambridge) ^BAsseraf^R, ^BArthur^R (Lecturer in the history of France and the Francophone World, Lecturer in the history of France and the Francophone World, ^Basseraf^r