University Press of America
Pages: 126
Trim: 6 x 9⅛
978-0-7618-3889-0 • Paperback • February 2008 • $46.99 • (£36.00)
Earnestine Jenkins is Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Memphis. She has written on African and African Diaspora social and cultural history, gender, and visual studies.
Part 1 List of Illustrations
Chapter 2 Introduction: The Political and Visual Culture in Eighteenth Century Shewa: Chiefs, Patronage, and Early Images of Authority
Chapter 3 Eighteenth Century Political Culture in Shewan Province: Chiefs, Wars, and Conquests
Chapter 4 Shewa's First Patron of the Arts: Amha Iyasus and His Miracles of Mary Manuscript
Chapter 5 Ruler and Saint: Asfa Wassan and Holy Man, Takla Haymanot: Secular Themes in Late Eighteenth Century Manuscript Painting
Part 6 The Ninteenth Century: King Sahle Selassie and the Court Art Tradition
Chapter 7 King Sahle Selassie and the Infrastructure of Patronage in Early Nineteenth Century Shewa
Chapter 8 Painting Authority: A Double Portrait, Shared Power: the 'Queen Mother' and the King
Chapter 9 Sahle Selassie Iconography, and the Ideal King: King David as a Model of Christian Leadership
Chapter 10 A 'Killer of Heathens' and a Leader of Men: Sahle Selassie the Christian Warrior King
Chapter 11 Duty and Leisure: King Sahle Selassie at Court
Chapter 12 On a Patriarchal Note: Painting History and Honoring the Father in Sahle Selassie's Prayer Book
Chapter 13 Coda: The Cultural Legacy of the 'House of Shewa'
Part 14 Bibliography
Part 15 Index
Jenkin's analysis of the thirty images she utilizes is meticulous and thorough, and clearly demonstrates her argument that Shewa's rulers influenced the production of illuminated manuscripts, particularly with regard to the inclusion of secular imagery and unique aspects of their lives and courts…. A Kingly Craft will certainly be of interest to Ethiopianists, particularly those in the field of history or visual culture….Jenkins's in-depth analysis of individual images is excellent, and her argument regarding Shewan rulers' impact on the increasing use of secular imagery in Ethiopian painting is convincing and well supported.
— African Arts Magazine, Spring 2010
This study is well-written, interesting, and epistemologically important. Jenkins' analyses and arguments are informed, interesting, sometimes provocative, and often fun to read.
— Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Summer 2009