
Spaces of Knowledge in Medieval Diagrams
- Authors:
- Series:
- Randgänge der Mediävistik, Volume 11
- Publisher:
- 08.12.2025
Summary
The spatial structure of diagrams can be described in algebraic, geometric, cognitive or semiotic terms. Based on the ʻUr-diagramʼ of the Divided Line in Platoʼs ʻRepublicʼ, diagrams can be understood as representations of the visible and the intelligible world. However, the knowledge thus conveyed is subject to the contingency of material and contextual, i.e., period-specific circumstances. How is the spatial organization of diagrams in medieval manuscripts structured under such conditions? The examples dealt with in this essay range from diagrammaric glosses to the late antique ʻCorpus Dionysiacumʼ to visualizations of the powers of perception and cognition by the Renaissance scholar Charles Bovelles. Medieval spaces of knowledge encompassed not only the confines of libraries or the extended social networks within which books were written, exchanged, and read; they also took shape on the page, most persuasively in the form of diagrams.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2025
- Publication date
- 08.12.2025
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-7965-5411-7
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-7965-5412-4
- Publisher
- Schwabe, Basel / Berlin
- Series
- Randgänge der Mediävistik
- Volume
- 11
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 67
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Table of Contents No access
- Defining the Diagram No access Pages 7 - 10
- From Plato to Peirce No access Pages 11 - 16
- The Scene of the Diagram No access Pages 17 - 20
- The Divided Line No access Pages 21 - 24
- Dimensions of Diairesis in the Pseudo-Dionysius No access Pages 25 - 42
- Figures of Thought No access Pages 43 - 52
- The Athletic Scholar No access Pages 53 - 62
- About the Author No access Pages 63 - 67




