TFF3221 – Material Religion in Medieval Christianity

Schedule, syllabus and examination date

Course content

What can objects, images and rituals tell us about religious practices and beliefs of the past? The theoretical framework of Material religion challenges the traditional supremacy of texts and acknowledges that religious meaning and personal piety was created, shaped, altered, and sustained through contact and engagement with material artefacts and places, and through performances. By engaging with a variety of materials and practices, the aim of the course is to broaden the perspectives on, and nuance traditional approaches to, medieval Christianity, in the East as well as in the West. Moreover, by showing how the study of images, relics, shrines, as well as rituals, performances, and text-bearing artifacts, such as books, rolls, ostraca, or amulets, are important to our understanding of how medieval Christians engaged with religious texts and objects, the course will demonstrate why studies based on texts alone cannot capture the full extent of medieval lived religion.

Through investigations of material artefacts and rituals, this course will provide the students with insight in medieval religious understandings and experiences. The aim of this course is to identify and elucidate religious beliefs and practices in the Middle Ages in harmony and in contrast to normative theological dogmas and institutional instructions.

The course is based on ongoing frontier research at the Faculty of Theology and offers insight into the most up-to-date research methods and debates. 

Throughout this course, students will be offered examinations of artefacts and rituals that in different ways are understood as instrumental for the medieval spirituality and religious understanding, The course is structured around six different categories of artefacts to be examined:

  • Images and sculptures
  • Relics and Eucharistic elements
  • Manuscripts and other text-bearing objects
  • Magical objects and practices
  • Pilgrimage, votive offerings, and shrines
  • Liturgical objects and practices

Learning outcome

  • The students will obtain critical skills in analysing, discussing, and interpreting material objects as primary sources.
  • Through investigations of a variety of artefacts and rituals, the students will be able to explore medieval religious expressions against the backdrop of historical developments.
  • The students will be able to identify material dimensions of religious beliefs and practices in harmony with, and contrast to, authoritative texts and religious instructions. They will also gain insight into significant medieval theological debates and controversies. 

This course is offered on both Bachelor's and Master's level. The Master's level syllabus will be more comprehensive than that of the Bachelor's level, and a higher level of knowledge and reflection will be expected from the Master students at the written exam, compared to the Bachelor's level students.

Admission

Students who are admitted to study programmes at UiO must each semester register which courses and exams they wish to sign up for in Studentweb.

If you are not already enrolled as a student at UiO, please see our information about admission requirements and procedures.

See also how to apply to become a single course student.

Prerequisites

Recommended previous knowledge

A minimum of one year of studies in Religion, Theology, Archeology, History, Art History, Cultural History or similar fields.

Overlapping courses