Yorkshire Post

SCIENCE REWRITES HISTORY

Discovery reveals art’s pioneers were women

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david.behrens@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IT WAS a fluke of history – the chance discovery of specks of blue dust, preserved for centuries in the dental plaque of a medieval skeleton – that may finally colour in the unwritten story of the world’s first women artists.

Remarkable research, published last night by a Yorkshire academic, suggests that contrary to what was written at the time, the artists behind some of Europe’s most richly illustrate­d books may have been nuns and not monks – their roles subverted by the lack of esteem in which they were held.

The clue to a discovery that may change the way history views the scribes of the Middle Ages was contained in fragments of ultramarin­e pigment made from the precious stone lapis lazuli, which was mined in Afghanista­n during the medieval period and prized for its intense colour.

It was used in paintings and to decorate books of the highest quality, with which only the most skilled scribes and painters would have been trusted.

Yet it has now emerged that traces of the pigment were trapped within the teeth of a female skeleton in the grounds of a monastery that was once home to a community of nuns, and now stands in ruins at Dalheim in the German Rhineland.

“There were very many specks, and they were scattered across the carcass, suggesting that they had entered the mouth as air particles in the form of dust,” Dr Anita Radini, from the department of archaeolog­y at the University of York, told The Yorkshire Post.

Her research suggests that the pigments may have got into the woman’s mouth as she used her tongue to hone her brush

into a fine point in order to paint intricate detail on manuscript­s – a technique referred to in contempora­ry texts.

The discovery came, literally, out of the blue, Dr Radini said.

“In nature, there are a variety of pigments of red and yellow, but blue pigments are very rare. In the Middle Ages and earlier, the most important resource for the colour was lapis lazuli.

“I was surprised. It was the first time I had seen such strong evidence. It tells us that this woman was very likely involved in the activity of making pigments and painting.”

Dr Radini, whose research is published in the journal Science Advances, said the discovery – verified in York by examinatio­n of the dust using light and electron microscopy techniques – added to a growing body of evidence of the importance of nuns in medieval Europe.

“In Germany, women’s monastic communitie­s were made up of noble or aristocrat­ic women, many of whom were highly educated,” she said.

“These women would have lived lives free from hard labour and our skeleton fits this profile – it belonged to a middle-aged woman and showed no sign of occupation­al stress.”

She added: “Women were involved in more activities than we have seen so far. But they were less esteemed in society than men. We believe they were neglected. Now, archeology can help to track what they did.”

Her colleague Dr Christina Warinner, of the German Max Planck Institute, added: “Here we have direct evidence of a woman, not just painting, but painting with a very rare and expensive pigment, and at a very out-of-the way place. It makes me wonder how many other artists we might find in medieval cemeteries, if we only look.”

It makes me wonder how many other artists we might find.

Dr Christina Warinner, of the German Max Planck Institute,

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 ?? PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY ?? DISCOVERY: Dr Anita Radini, Emma Tong and Dr Roland Kröger of York University, top. Dr Radini found lapis lazuli, used to write manuscript­s, in the teeth of a woman’s skeleton.
PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY DISCOVERY: Dr Anita Radini, Emma Tong and Dr Roland Kröger of York University, top. Dr Radini found lapis lazuli, used to write manuscript­s, in the teeth of a woman’s skeleton.

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