Citations:clipeated


 * 1992 — V. Lech Kalinowski, "The 'Frieze' at Malmesbury", published in The Romanesque Frieze and Its Spectator: The Lincoln Symposium Papers, page 95
 * Presenting the clipeated portrait of the dead, or the bust or a monogram of Christ, the angels, positioned symmetrically on either side, generally turn their heads backwards.
 * 1998 — Maria P. Muñoz de Miguel, "Anglo-Saxon Figure Sculpture at St. Mary's Priory Church, Deerhurst", published in Transactions - Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, Volume 115, page 35
 * There is a clear distinction between the representation of the Virgin displaying the clipeated image of the Child, as shown at Deerhurst, and other images depicting the theme of the Virgin as the throne of Wisdom, the seat of the incarnate Christ, in the late Anglo-Saxon period.
 * 2015 — Carla Keyvanian, Hospitals and Urbanism in Rome, 1200-1500, page 132
 * Mandylia, clipeated faces of Christ surrounded by a white frame representing the cloth, became popular.