New Books in History

Lucy Donkin, "Standing on Holy Ground in the Middle Ages" (Cornell UP, 2022)

Feb 9, 2026
Lucy Donkin, cultural and art historian of the Middle Ages, explores how floors and ground shaped sacred spaces. She discusses holy footprints as contact relics, consecration rituals written in ash, and how paving, materials, and carpets marked status and liturgical roles. She also covers trampling, buried graves beneath feet, and surprising modern parallels.
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ANECDOTE

Otranto Holiday Sparked A Research Career

  • Lucy Donkin began researching floor mosaics after a family holiday visit to Otranto Cathedral with its large 12th-century nave mosaic centered on a tree.
  • A fellow MA student asked what it meant to 'walk up the tree', sparking decades of research into ground as a point of encounter.
INSIGHT

Layered Ground Shapes Sacred Encounters

  • Donkin uses a 'stratigraphic' approach to view the ground as layered: earth, coverings, living bodies, and the dead beneath.
  • These layers together shaped meaning and embodied encounters in medieval sacred spaces.
INSIGHT

Footprints Acted As Contact Relics

  • 'Vestigia' (footprints) functioned as contact relics that transferred sanctity from holy bodies to places.
  • Footprints in the Holy Land served as proof of presence and allowed soil or rock to be moved and venerated elsewhere.
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