Virtual Reconstructions in Bernardino Amico’s Treatise on the Plans and Images of the Sacred Buildings of the Holy Land

This essay explores the role of the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land in cultivating perceptions of the Catholic pilgrimage buildings as worthy of preservation, especially by employing techniques of representation in printed books that engaged with the potential restoration of the real buildings...

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Main Author: Kathryn Blair Moore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indiana University Office of Scholarly Publishing 2021-06-01
Series:Studies in Digital Heritage
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/sdh/article/view/31691
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spelling doaj-be115ae69bf3437c8eb43555e1464ddb2021-09-21T21:52:05ZengIndiana University Office of Scholarly PublishingStudies in Digital Heritage2574-17482021-06-0151Virtual Reconstructions in Bernardino Amico’s Treatise on the Plans and Images of the Sacred Buildings of the Holy LandKathryn Blair Moore0University of Connecticut This essay explores the role of the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land in cultivating perceptions of the Catholic pilgrimage buildings as worthy of preservation, especially by employing techniques of representation in printed books that engaged with the potential restoration of the real buildings in the Holy Land. The essay discusses the particular example of the printed book created by Bernardino Amico that was published in two editions of 1610 and 1620, with interactive perspectival renderings of the exteriors and interiors of the Christian pilgrimage churches in Palestine and Egypt, along with maps of ancient and modern Jerusalem. Centuries before the emergence of cyber archaeology, Franciscans like Bernardino Amico explored the potential for virtual reconstruction in the realm of printing to demonstrate the value of buildings as symbols of a shared history and faith, while also challenging those who actively sought to dismantle the same buildings in both real and virtual space.  Bernardino Amico’s treatise exemplifies the potential of such virtual reconstructions of historical buildings to blur the boundaries between the empirically observed present, the imagined past, and a desired future. https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/sdh/article/view/31691Bernardino Amico, Pilgrimage, Printed Books, Jerusalem, Holy Land
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kathryn Blair Moore
spellingShingle Kathryn Blair Moore
Virtual Reconstructions in Bernardino Amico’s Treatise on the Plans and Images of the Sacred Buildings of the Holy Land
Studies in Digital Heritage
Bernardino Amico, Pilgrimage, Printed Books, Jerusalem, Holy Land
author_facet Kathryn Blair Moore
author_sort Kathryn Blair Moore
title Virtual Reconstructions in Bernardino Amico’s Treatise on the Plans and Images of the Sacred Buildings of the Holy Land
title_short Virtual Reconstructions in Bernardino Amico’s Treatise on the Plans and Images of the Sacred Buildings of the Holy Land
title_full Virtual Reconstructions in Bernardino Amico’s Treatise on the Plans and Images of the Sacred Buildings of the Holy Land
title_fullStr Virtual Reconstructions in Bernardino Amico’s Treatise on the Plans and Images of the Sacred Buildings of the Holy Land
title_full_unstemmed Virtual Reconstructions in Bernardino Amico’s Treatise on the Plans and Images of the Sacred Buildings of the Holy Land
title_sort virtual reconstructions in bernardino amico’s treatise on the plans and images of the sacred buildings of the holy land
publisher Indiana University Office of Scholarly Publishing
series Studies in Digital Heritage
issn 2574-1748
publishDate 2021-06-01
description This essay explores the role of the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land in cultivating perceptions of the Catholic pilgrimage buildings as worthy of preservation, especially by employing techniques of representation in printed books that engaged with the potential restoration of the real buildings in the Holy Land. The essay discusses the particular example of the printed book created by Bernardino Amico that was published in two editions of 1610 and 1620, with interactive perspectival renderings of the exteriors and interiors of the Christian pilgrimage churches in Palestine and Egypt, along with maps of ancient and modern Jerusalem. Centuries before the emergence of cyber archaeology, Franciscans like Bernardino Amico explored the potential for virtual reconstruction in the realm of printing to demonstrate the value of buildings as symbols of a shared history and faith, while also challenging those who actively sought to dismantle the same buildings in both real and virtual space.  Bernardino Amico’s treatise exemplifies the potential of such virtual reconstructions of historical buildings to blur the boundaries between the empirically observed present, the imagined past, and a desired future.
topic Bernardino Amico, Pilgrimage, Printed Books, Jerusalem, Holy Land
url https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/sdh/article/view/31691
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