14th-century Castile was characterized by great creativity in the field of architecture, culminating with the construction of the famous Alcazar of Seville and reforms to the Alcazar of Segovia. Those monuments were possible thanks to the previous decade’s artistic experimentation in which cross-cultural exchanges with al-Andalus and the Mamluks played a key role. During this time, the kingdom of Castile was marked by a profound political crisis and architecture, sculpture and literature were crucial in the construction of an ideal image of power, in which queens assumed a leading role.
This talk will analyze the process of codification of royal spaces in Castile in the 14th century. The objective is twofold. On the one hand, it will analyze the development of this architecture in parallel to the development of a courtly and chivalrous image of the Castilian monarchs in which Islamic models played a fundamental role. On the other hand, it will present the active role of the queens in the realm of architecture.
Elena Paulino-Montero is lecturer of Medieval Art at the Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia. Previously she was assistant professor at the Complutense and postdoctoral fellow at the UNED. Her research is devoted to patronage and transcultural artistic during the Late Middle Ages in the Iberian Peninsula. She is part of the Cost-Action 18129 “Islamic Legacy. Narratives East, West, South North of the Mediterranean (1350-1750)”. She is also the principal investigator of the project “Women and the Arts in Medieval Castile: Patronage, reception and agency”, funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation.
Organised by Dr Tom Nickson (The Courtauld) as part of the Medieval Lecture and Seminar Series.