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Picture of Mária Prokopp

Mária Prokopp

MÁRIA PROKOPP (Budapest, 1939), has been Professor of Medieval and Renaissance Art at Eötvös Loránd University since 1969 – Professor Emerita since 2010. Her main field of research is European art of the 14th and 15th centuries, but she is also an expert in 19th century art. She published books on Italian masters like Giotto, Sassetta and Lorenzetti, and on the late Gothic art of Hungary. Almost for forty years, she has conducted research on the mural paintings of the 15th century Esztergom palace of Archbishop János Vitéz and their Italian Renaissance connections with the art of Botticelli. She is a holder of the Officer’s Rank of the Hungarian Order of Merit (2010) and the Order of Merit of Hungary with the Cross (2019).

THE RENAISSANCE STUDIOLO IN EUROPE

International Conference in the Esztergom Castle Museum of the Hungarian National Museum Esztergom, perched over the Danube, was the first capital of the Kingdom of Hungary between 1000 and 1256, as well as the oldest and most important cultural centre of the country. In 1256 the king moved to Buda

THE CASTLE CHAPEL IN ESZTERGOM – THE ROYAL SEAT OF BÉLA III

The city of Esztergom (known as Strigonium in Latin and as Gran in German), perched on a rocky plateau rising above the Danube in the middle of the Carpathian Basin, directly along the limes of the Roman empire, was the location chosen by the Grand Princes of Hungary to hold

BOTICELLI IN ESZTERGOM

The news was first announced at an international conference in Florence in 2007 entitled Humanism and Renaissance in Hungary.1 Painting conservator Zsuzsanna Wierdl and I presented the major findings of art historical and conservation research which has been underway in Esztergom since 2000. The restorer has been cleaning the Renaissance frescoes