Color of the Middle Ages Reimagined : A Retrospective of Dr. Carl Nordenfalk and his 1976 Exhibition of Medieval Manuscript FacsimilesMain MenuColor of the Middle AgesMarch 12, 1976 - April 18, 1976, University of PittsburghCarl NordenfalkFormer Director of the Swedish Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, Kress Professor at the National Gallery (USA), Mellon Professor at the University of Pittsburgh -- Medieval Manuscript ScholarCodex Caesareus Upsaliensis or the Goslar Gospels of Henry IIIAlso know as the Emperor Bible, 11th century EchternachDer Uta-CodexIlluminated lectionary (382 × 274 mm; Munich, Bayer. Staatsbib., Clm. 13601)Codex Aureus Epternacensis or The Golden Gospels of EchternachNuremberg Germany , Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Shelfmark Hs. 156142, ca. 1030 − Benedictine Abbey of Echternach, GermanyImages Médiévales (1949)Directed by William Novak, Manuscripts from the Bibliothèque nationale de FranceKenneth Wahrenberger12bc481e2d521b55dca201b72463133efe056a1dKenneth Wahrenberger, University of Pittsburgh, 2019
Opened March 11, 1976 and ran through April 18, 1976
12019-02-11T18:51:29-08:00Kenneth Wahrenberger12bc481e2d521b55dca201b72463133efe056a1dColor of the Middle Ages Floor Plan1The numbers in this floor plan correspond to a supplementary document that details the facsimiles associated with the numbers. The three facsimiles that are addressed in this Scalar book (The Goslar Gospels of Henry III, the Uta Codex, and the Golden Gospels of Echternach) are circled and identified. According to Nordenfalk's exhibition catalogue, all three books can be classified under the theme "Ottonian Art (10th - 11th century)"media/Color of the Middle Ages Floor Plan.pngplain2019-02-11T18:51:29-08:00Kenneth Wahrenberger12bc481e2d521b55dca201b72463133efe056a1d