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  1. Cadaver monument - Wikipedia

    • A cadaver monument or transi is a type of funerary monument to a deceased person, featuring a sculpted tomb effigy of a skeleton, or of an emaciated or decomposing dead body, with closed eyes. It was particularly characteristic of the Late Middle Ages when they were designed as a memento mori to remind viewers of the transience and vanity of mortal lif… See more

    Development

    A depiction of a rotting cadaver in art (as opposed to a skeleton) is called a transi. However, the term "cadaver monument" can really be applied to other varieties of monuments, e.g. with skeletons or with the deceased c… See more

    Countries

    France has a long history of cadaver monuments, though not as many examples or varieties survive as in England. One of the earliest and anatomically convincing examples is the gaunt cadaver effigy of the medieval p… See more

     
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  2. Cadaver monuments first appeared in the 1380s and remained a popular form of funerary art for 200 subsequent years. [5]
    Learn more:
    Cadaver monuments first appeared in the 1380s and remained a popular form of funerary art for 200 subsequent years. [5]
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadaver_monument
    These monuments were particularly popular in the late medieval period. They served as a stark reminder of the transience of life and the physical decay that follows death. Often, they feature sculptures of skeletons or decomposing bodies.
    thebrainchamber.com/cadaver-monument/
    These are stone or sometimes wooden figures in churches and cathedrals carved between four and five hundred years ago that typically show an extraordinary thin person, dead, or nearing death, laying prone on a burial shroud that is draped in such a way to ensure their modesty is retained.
    www.cctdigital.com/medieval-death-exploring-cada…
     
  3. The Cult of the Macabre | English Church Monuments in the …

     
  4. Morbid Monday: Exquisite Corpses - The Art of the …

    Nov 28, 2011 · Something strange happened to funeral monuments in the 15th century. Across France, Italy and England the long standing practice of carving recumbant effigies in poses of gentle rest was...

  5. Medieval Death: The Cadaver Tomb (transi tomb)

    Aug 15, 2018 · Medieval Transi/Cadaver tombs are shockingly macabre. They depict a sculpture of the deceased in an advanced state of decomposition, sunken eyes, prominent ribs, even covered in toads, snakes and vermin. Who …

  6. Beyond Memento Mori – Cambridge Medieval Art …

    This short paper contextualizes a sub-set of Northern European cadaver monuments of the late-Medieval era, known as transi imagery. It explores 36 English carved cadaver monuments (ECCMs) dating from between c1425 to …

  7. English and Welsh Carved Cadavers: An Overview …

    During the film we visit churches, a college chapel, and a cathedral exploring the art, history & religious beliefs surrounding these amazing monuments looking at why they were created and what led to their eventual downfall.

  8. (PDF) Material Remains: Plantagenet Corpses, Burial …

    Carved cadaver monuments are a specific form of Transi art produced during the late Medieval, and thus Roman Catholic, era in much of Northern Europe.

  9. Contextualising English Late-Medieval Carved …

    This short paper contextualizes a sub-set of Northern European cadaver monuments of the late-Medieval era, known as transi imagery. It explores 36 English carved cadaver monuments (ECCMs) dating from between c1425 to …

  10. Cadaver Monuments - The Brain Chamber

    Cadaver monuments, also known as transi or memento mori tombs, are a type of funerary art. They depict the deceased in a state of decay. These monuments were particularly popular in the late medieval period.

  11. Cadaver monument - Wikiwand

  12. Medieval Death: Exploring Cadaver Tombs - CCT Digital

    In the late middle ages a macabre funerary monument came into fashion in England; the Cadaver or Transi Tomb. These typically showed an emaciated dead or dying person lying naked on a burial shroud. Why were they created? …

  13. Silver and Guilt: The Cadaver Tomb of John Baret of Bury St …

  14. Cadaver tombs | For UNESCO World Heritage Travellers

  15. A Lost Carved Cadaver Monument to a Member of the Norton …

  16. For Prayers and Pedagogy: Contextualising English …

    This short article contextualizes a subset of Northern European cadaver monuments of the late- Medieval/early-Modern era, known as transi imagery. It explores 37 English carved cadaver monuments (ECCMs) dating from …

  17. Llandaff Cathedral: a virtual study day - Church Monuments Society

  18. (PDF) Cadaver Monuments In England - Academia.edu

    This short paper contextualizes a sub-set of Northern European cadaver monuments of the late-Medieval era, known as transi imagery. It explores 36 English carved cadaver monuments (ECCMs) dating from between c1425 to …

  19. How The Medical Cadaver Finally Got the Respect it Deserves

  20. Silver and Guilt: The Cadaver Tomb of John Baret of Bury St …

  21. From grave robbing to giving your own body to science – a short …