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Romanesque artists

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Hildegard of Bingen
German Benedictine abbess, polymath, mystic and Doctor of Church (1098–1179)
Herrad of Landsberg
Abbess, author and illustrator from Alsace (c. 1130 – 1195)
Benedetto Antelami
Italian artist (1150-1230)
Nicholas of Verdun
French artist, goldsmith and enamelist (1130-1210)
Gislebertus
thumb|300px|Last Judgment by Gislebertus in the west tympanum at the Autun Cathedral thumb|300px|The Temptation of Eve, now at the Musée Rolin Gislebertus of Autun (also Giselbertus or Ghiselbertus; ), was a French Romanesque sculptor, whose decoration (about 1120–35) of the Cathedral of Saint Lazare at Autun, France – consisting of numerous doorways, tympanums and capitals – represents some of the most original work of the period.
Berlinghiero Berlinghieri
thumb|right|200px|Madonna and child, c. 1230, tempera on wood, now at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Berlinghiero, also known as Berlinghiero Berlinghieri or Berlinghiero of Lucca (fl. 1228 – between 1236 and 1242), was an Italian painter in the Italo-Byzantine style of the early thirteenth century. He was the father of the painters Barone Berlinghieri, Bonaventura Berlinghieri, and Marco Berlinghieri.
Guda
German nun and book illustrator
Diemoth
Diemoth (Latinised as Diemudus, Diemut, Diemud, Diemuth, Diemod or Diemudis) was a recluse at Wessobrunn Abbey in Upper Bavaria, Germany, born around 1060 and died on 30 March, probably in 1130. She worked on 45 manuscripts from 1075 to 1130. Her name comes from the Middle High German word for "humility" or "modesty")
Claricia
thumb|from a psalter on parchment, figure of a woman swinging diagonally over the page forms the tail of the letter Q that begins Psalm 51 (in the counting of the Vulgata, today: Psalm 52) the name, Claricia, is inscribed above her head, [[Walters Art Museum]] Claricia or Clarica was a 13th-century German illuminator. She is noted for including a self-portrait in a South German psalter of c. 1200, now in The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore. In the self-portrait, she depicts herself as swinging from the tail of a letter Q. Additionally, she inscribed her name over her head.
Radovan
Croatian architect, sculptor, 13th century
Master of Taüll
Catalan muralist
Master of Cabestany
French artist
Renier de Huy
goldsmith from the Southern Netherlands
Master Mateo
Spanish artist and architect
Master Sigraf
thumb|Baptismal font attributed to Master Sigraf in Grötlingbo church, [[Gotland (Sweden).]] Sigraf (also Sighraf, Sighrafr, fl. c.1175–1210) was a Romanesque stone sculptor, working on Gotland. He was mainly active as a sculptor of baptismal fonts, but also of reliquaries, carved pillars and reliefs. He was the most productive of several early medieval stone sculptors making baptismal fonts on Gotland.
Majestatis
thumb|Illustration of detail on the Tryde baptismal font, by Majestatis Majestatis (, The Master of Christ in Majesty, usually shortened to Majestatis and sometimes referred to as the Tryde Master, fl. second half of the 12th century) was a Romanesque stone sculptor and the creator of several richly decorated baptismal fonts mainly in Scania and on Gotland (present-day Sweden).
Master of Pedret
name given by historians to a Romanesque fresco painter active in Catalonia in the early twelfth century
Hugo d'Oignies
Augustinian lay brother of Oignies Abbey who was a metalworker and painter and is the last of the great jewelers of Mosan art
Master Hugo
British artist
Andrija Buvina
Croatian sculptor and painter
Roger of Helmarshausen
12th-century German goldsmith
Arnau Cadell
sculptor
Pere de Coma
Master Guglielmo
anonymous painter