'A memorial and a pledge of faith': portraiture and early modern diplomatic culture

Portraits of rulers, medals, and other images of politicians were widely used within early modern diplomatic practice. Historians have long appreciated the role of portrait exchange in early modern royal marriage negotiations. Far less appreciated are the prevalence of portrait exchanges between Eur...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sowerby, T
Format: Journal article
Published: Oxford University Press 2014
_version_ 1797094084848910336
author Sowerby, T
author_facet Sowerby, T
author_sort Sowerby, T
collection OXFORD
description Portraits of rulers, medals, and other images of politicians were widely used within early modern diplomatic practice. Historians have long appreciated the role of portrait exchange in early modern royal marriage negotiations. Far less appreciated are the prevalence of portrait exchanges between European monarchs outside of marriage negotiations and the diplomatic uses made of these, and other, royal portraits. Diplomatic art operated within a ceremonial and symbolic system where even small distinctions were imbued with considerable significance and where reciprocity, honour, prestige, magnificence, friendship, and concepts of gift-giving were crucial components in constructing its diplomatic meaning. Rulers’ images played an important role in diplomatic strategy; their display advertised current and past political alliances and suggested the direction of future policy, while portrait gifts and personal interactions with portraits during diplomatic audiences created political intimacies, established confidences, and helped to maintain relations in strained circumstances.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T04:09:15Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:c7487528-d4c9-4aaa-8324-8a5043808597
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-07T04:09:15Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:c7487528-d4c9-4aaa-8324-8a50438085972022-03-27T06:43:48Z'A memorial and a pledge of faith': portraiture and early modern diplomatic cultureJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:c7487528-d4c9-4aaa-8324-8a5043808597Symplectic Elements at OxfordOxford University Press2014Sowerby, TPortraits of rulers, medals, and other images of politicians were widely used within early modern diplomatic practice. Historians have long appreciated the role of portrait exchange in early modern royal marriage negotiations. Far less appreciated are the prevalence of portrait exchanges between European monarchs outside of marriage negotiations and the diplomatic uses made of these, and other, royal portraits. Diplomatic art operated within a ceremonial and symbolic system where even small distinctions were imbued with considerable significance and where reciprocity, honour, prestige, magnificence, friendship, and concepts of gift-giving were crucial components in constructing its diplomatic meaning. Rulers’ images played an important role in diplomatic strategy; their display advertised current and past political alliances and suggested the direction of future policy, while portrait gifts and personal interactions with portraits during diplomatic audiences created political intimacies, established confidences, and helped to maintain relations in strained circumstances.
spellingShingle Sowerby, T
'A memorial and a pledge of faith': portraiture and early modern diplomatic culture
title 'A memorial and a pledge of faith': portraiture and early modern diplomatic culture
title_full 'A memorial and a pledge of faith': portraiture and early modern diplomatic culture
title_fullStr 'A memorial and a pledge of faith': portraiture and early modern diplomatic culture
title_full_unstemmed 'A memorial and a pledge of faith': portraiture and early modern diplomatic culture
title_short 'A memorial and a pledge of faith': portraiture and early modern diplomatic culture
title_sort a memorial and a pledge of faith portraiture and early modern diplomatic culture
work_keys_str_mv AT sowerbyt amemorialandapledgeoffaithportraitureandearlymoderndiplomaticculture