From Her Head to Her Toes: Gender-Bending Regalia in the Tomb of Constance of Aragon, Queen of Hungary and Sicily

This article re-examines József Deér’s claim that the crown uncovered in the tomb of Constance of Aragon (d. 1222) was originally her husband’s. His argument is based entirely on the shape of the crown itself, and ignores the context of her burial and the other idiosyncrasies of Frederick II’s buria...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Christopher Mielke
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Winchester University Press 2018-12-01
Series:Royal Studies Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rsj.winchester.ac.uk/articles/161
id doaj-0db1685ae07c455eb29ddbdaee5c4a02
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0db1685ae07c455eb29ddbdaee5c4a022021-06-21T15:42:17ZdeuWinchester University PressRoyal Studies Journal2057-67302018-12-0152496210.21039/rsj.161165From Her Head to Her Toes: Gender-Bending Regalia in the Tomb of Constance of Aragon, Queen of Hungary and SicilyChristopher Mielke0Al-Quds Bard College for Arts and SciencesThis article re-examines József Deér’s claim that the crown uncovered in the tomb of Constance of Aragon (d. 1222) was originally her husband’s. His argument is based entirely on the shape of the crown itself, and ignores the context of her burial and the other idiosyncrasies of Frederick II’s burial provisions at Palermo Cathedral. By examining the contents of the grave of Constance, and by discussing patterns related to the size of medieval crowns recovered from archaeological context, the evidence indicates that this crown would have originally adorned the buried queen’s head. Rather than identifying it as a ‘male’ crown that found its way into the queen’s sarcophagus as a gift from her husband, this article argues that Constance’s crown is evidence that as a category of analysis, gender is not as simple as it may appear. In fact, medieval crowns often had multiple owners and sometimes a crown could be owned, or even worn, by someone who had a different gender than the original owner. This fact demonstrates the need for a more complex, nuanced interpretation of regalia found in an archaeological context.https://rsj.winchester.ac.uk/articles/161crownregalia, genderburialqueenmiddle ages
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher Mielke
spellingShingle Christopher Mielke
From Her Head to Her Toes: Gender-Bending Regalia in the Tomb of Constance of Aragon, Queen of Hungary and Sicily
Royal Studies Journal
crown
regalia, gender
burial
queen
middle ages
author_facet Christopher Mielke
author_sort Christopher Mielke
title From Her Head to Her Toes: Gender-Bending Regalia in the Tomb of Constance of Aragon, Queen of Hungary and Sicily
title_short From Her Head to Her Toes: Gender-Bending Regalia in the Tomb of Constance of Aragon, Queen of Hungary and Sicily
title_full From Her Head to Her Toes: Gender-Bending Regalia in the Tomb of Constance of Aragon, Queen of Hungary and Sicily
title_fullStr From Her Head to Her Toes: Gender-Bending Regalia in the Tomb of Constance of Aragon, Queen of Hungary and Sicily
title_full_unstemmed From Her Head to Her Toes: Gender-Bending Regalia in the Tomb of Constance of Aragon, Queen of Hungary and Sicily
title_sort from her head to her toes: gender-bending regalia in the tomb of constance of aragon, queen of hungary and sicily
publisher Winchester University Press
series Royal Studies Journal
issn 2057-6730
publishDate 2018-12-01
description This article re-examines József Deér’s claim that the crown uncovered in the tomb of Constance of Aragon (d. 1222) was originally her husband’s. His argument is based entirely on the shape of the crown itself, and ignores the context of her burial and the other idiosyncrasies of Frederick II’s burial provisions at Palermo Cathedral. By examining the contents of the grave of Constance, and by discussing patterns related to the size of medieval crowns recovered from archaeological context, the evidence indicates that this crown would have originally adorned the buried queen’s head. Rather than identifying it as a ‘male’ crown that found its way into the queen’s sarcophagus as a gift from her husband, this article argues that Constance’s crown is evidence that as a category of analysis, gender is not as simple as it may appear. In fact, medieval crowns often had multiple owners and sometimes a crown could be owned, or even worn, by someone who had a different gender than the original owner. This fact demonstrates the need for a more complex, nuanced interpretation of regalia found in an archaeological context.
topic crown
regalia, gender
burial
queen
middle ages
url https://rsj.winchester.ac.uk/articles/161
work_keys_str_mv AT christophermielke fromherheadtohertoesgenderbendingregaliainthetombofconstanceofaragonqueenofhungaryandsicily
_version_ 1721364199130529792