The Middle Ages
So much of what the average person knows, or thinks they know, about the Middle Ages comes from film and tv. When I polled a group of well-educated friends on Facebook, they told me that the word “medieval” called to mind Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Blackadder, The Sword in the Stone, lusty wenches, feasting, courtly love, the plague, jousting and chain mail.
Perhaps someone who had seen (or better yet read) The Name of the Rose or Pillars of the Earth would add cathedrals, manuscripts, monasteries, feudalism, monks and friars.
Petrarch, an Italian poet and scholar of the fourteenth century, famously referred to the period of time between the fall of the Roman Empire (circa 476) and his own day (circa 1330s) as the Dark Ages.
Petrarch believed that the Dark Ages was a period of intellectual darkness due to the loss of the classical learning, which he saw as light. Later historians picked up on this idea and ultimately the term Dark Ages was transformed into Middle Ages. Broadly speaking, the Middle Ages is the period of time in Europe between the end of antiquity in the fifth century and the Renaissance, or rebirth of classical learning, in the fifteenth century and sixteenth centuries.
Characterizing the Middle Ages as a period of darkness falling between two greater, more intellectually significant periods in history is misleading. The Middle Ages was not a time of ignorance and backwardness, but rather a period during which Christianity flourished in Europe. Christianity, and specifically Catholicism in the Latin West, brought with it new views of life and the world that rejected the traditions and learning of the ancient world.
Matthew from the Lindisfarne Gospels, made on the island of Lindisfarne off the coast of England, late 7th century or early eighth century
During this time, the Roman Empire slowly fragmented into many smaller political entities. The geographical boundaries for European countries today were established during the Middle Ages. This was a period that heralded the formation and rise of universities, the establishment of the rule of law, numerous periods of ecclesiastical reform and the birth of the tourism industry. Many works of medieval literature, such as the Canterbury Tales, the Divine Comedy, and The Song of Roland, are widely read and studied today.
The visual arts prospered during Middles Ages, which created its own aesthetic values. The wealthiest and most influential members of society commissioned cathedrals, churches, sculpture, painting, textiles, manuscripts, jewelry and ritual items from artists. Many of these commissions were religious in nature but medieval artists also produced secular art. Few names of artists survive and fewer documents record their business dealings, but they left behind an impressive legacy of art and
culture.
In the European West, medieval art is often broken into smaller periods. These date ranges vary by location.
c.500-800 – Early Medieval Art
c.780-900 – Carolingian Art
c.900-1000 – Ottonian Art
c.1000-1200 – Romanesque Art
c.1200-1400 – Gothic Art
Text by Dr. Nancy Ross
Where and When

400-1300
Check this out as well
World Religions in Art: About Christianity and Christian Art (from the Minneapolis Museum of Art)
World Religions in Art: Islam (from the Minneapolis Museum of Art)
Art and Death in Medieval Art on the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
Art for the Christian Liturgy in the Middle Ages
Glimpses of Medieval Life, The Luttrell Psalter in the British Library
Medieval Stained Glass Archive by Painton Cowen and York University

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Nancy Thompson wrote on Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Medieval artists surely took pride in what they created! I think the lack of artists' names surviving from the Middle Ages also has to do with the fact that society was predominantly oral; there was no need to record the names of artists (if an artist him/herself was even literate) because the names of the creators were passed on and around by word of mouth.
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