European visual culture changed so fundamentally in the 13th century that, in retrospect,
we perceive an epochal boundary the stylistic change from Romanesque to Gothic, the
transition from the High to the Late Middle Ages. Some of the foundations for this were
laid in the previous century. Thus the developments initiated in the masons` lodges of
northern France in the middle of the 12th century not only led to the great architectural
achievements of the 13th century, but also to common standards in the sculpture of
Western, Central and partly Southern Europe. Another important impulse came with the
conquest of Constantinople in 1204. The half-familiar, half-exotic visual media of
Byzantine art were mainly received in Central Europe and Italy, leading to the
development of specific art forms that were distinct from Western painting. These
achievements were complemented by literary production, which took on an
unprecedented scale. In addition to the almost boundless quantities of religious writings
and specialist literature, mainly written in Latin, the tradition of extensive profane poetry
in national languages, which began at the end of the 12th century, intensified. The latter is
evidenced by a growing readership outside spiritual institutions and the manufacturing
structures that were formed to meet the new demand. This was inevitably accompanied
by innovations in book illumination and the creation of new secular picture cycles.
Which of the aforementioned dynamics were decisive in each individual case and whether
there were other important factors that contributed to this development was the subject of
an international conference that took place in 2017 at the Art History Institute of Vienna
University under the title "Image- and Book-Culture in 13th -Century Europe", the results of
which are presented in this volume. The contributions approach various aspects of the
developments from different angles. They offer a range of current research, including
approaches from the history of ideas and media research, as well as findings on
recipients, networks, the transfer of objects and technical innovations based on detailed
analyses. The starting point is formed by images - paintings and sculptures, stationary as
well as mobile, publically accessible as well as private.