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©2014 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.
Buildings across Time, 4th Edition
Chapter Eight: Early Medieval and
Romanesque Architecture
Introduction
Barbarian invasions into western Europe brought the gradual decline of Roman power in
the northern and western parts of the Empire, leaving the Christian church as the major
stabilizing force in society. Uncertain political and social conditions provided limited
opportunities for major building projects until the reign of the Great Carolingian leader
Charlemagne, who encouraged the revival of masonry construction. Charlemagne was
crowned Holy Roman Emperor in Rome, by Pope Leo III in 800.
The medieval church was the important patron of architecture. In the three centuries
following Charlemagne, bishops and abbots commissioned increasingly ambitious building
projects. These Romanesque churches and monasteries are based in Roman forms, with
influences also from Islam, Byzantium, and traditions of northern Europe.
Carolingian Architecture
Aachen
Plan of Charlemagne’s Palace at Aachen,
792-814. The sixteen-sided building is the
Palatine Chapel, connected by a
passageway to a basilica-shaped audience
hall. Note that the Chapel was preceded by
a forecourt or atrium. From a loggia at the
second level of the Chapel, Charlemagne
could address an audience assembled there.
The Chapel contained a sixteen-sided aisle,
covered by an octagonal cloister vault (a
vaulted and colonnaded walk surrounding a
court) under the dome, a westwerk
(elaborate west-facing entrance façade with
towers), and polychrome arches in the
interior. San Vitale at Ravenna served as a
model for this building.Basilica or
Audience
Hall
Octagonal
Cloister
Vault
Westwerk
Atrium
16-sided
Aisle
Carolingian Architecture
Aachen
Carolingian Architecture
Lorsch
The Abbey Gatehouse at Lorsch,
800. Influences from Roman
architecture can be seen in the
overall form, derived from the
Roman triumphal arch, and the
arch-and-column motif used on
the ground level. Novel elements
include the red-and-white tiles on
the façade and the steeply
pitched roof, necessary to shed
rain and snow in a northern
climate.
Carolingian Architecture
Germigny
Oratory at Germigny-des-Prés,
806-810. This small centrally
planned building borrows
elements from Byzantium (the
central quincunx plan) and
reflects connections between
the Carolingian court and
Constantinople. In buildings
such as this, Carolingian
architects laid the basis for an
original style unique to western
Europe.
Plan of the Oratory at
Germigny-des-Pres. The
horseshoe arch is evident in the
shape of the apse and its
flanking chapels.
Carolingian Architecture
St. Gall
The Plan of St. Gall,
817. This drawing
was developed at a
monastic conference
to resolve differences
in the interpretation
of the Benedictine
Rule and sets forth
the major elements
of a Benedictine
monastery,
establishing a model
that would be used
for the next 400 or
more years as the
basis for monastic
design.
Carolingian Architecture
St. Gall
The Plan of St. Gall,
817. This drawing
was developed at a
monastic conference
to resolve differences
in the interpretation
of the Benedictine
Rule and sets forth
the major elements
of a Benedictine
monastery,
establishing a model
that would be used
for the next 400 or
more years as the
basis for monastic
design.
Carolingian Architecture
St. Gall
Axonometric section
through the cloister of St.
Gall. Walter Horn and
Ernest Born have studied
Carolingian building to
make an interpretation of
the architecture envisioned
by those who drew the
Plan of St. Gall. In this
drawing, the monks’ beds
in the dormitory, the tables
in the refectory, and the
barrels of stored food are
shown in the buildings
surrounding the cloister,
with the south face of the
church in the background.
The kitchens, warming
room, and latrines are also
detailed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsRR7SBZW7U
Anglo-Saxons and Vikings
Urnes
Exterior of the stave
church at Urnes,
Norway, 1125-40.
This is the oldest
existing stave
church. The building
volumes reflect plan
elements: the tall
nave with lower
aisles, the choir, and
apse extension
each have a
separate
expression.
NaveSide
Aisles
ChoirApse
Anglo-Saxons and Vikings
Urnes
Section and plan of the stave
church at Urnes. The basis of this
building is a rectangular chassis
laid on foundation stones resting
on the ground. On this frame rests
the ends of upright poles or staves
that form the structure of the
church.
Nave
Aisle
Aisle
Choir Apse
Anglo-Saxons and Vikings
Urnes
The carved portal from an
earlier church is installed on the
lower side (north) wall. The
intertwined snakes and dragons
represent the end of the world
according to the Norse legend
of Ragnarok. Christian
missionaries substituted this
local imagery for the Last
Judgment as a way of making
Christian teaching more
accessible.
Anglo-Saxons and Vikings
Urnes
Interior of the stave church at Urnes.
Anglo-Saxons and Vikings
Borgund
The stave church at
Borgund, Norway, 1150.
While this church looks
considerably more
elaborate than Urnes, it is
fundamentally the same in
structure, having additional
roof turrets and an external
gallery at the base.
As with Urnes, the stave
church at Borgund relies on
small openings or wind
eyes high in the wall to
admit light and air and
relieve wind pressure
against the sides of the
structure.
Anglo-Saxons and Vikings
Borgund
Wind
eyes
The stave church at
Borgund, Norway, 1150.
While this church looks
considerably more
elaborate than Urnes, it is
fundamentally the same in
structure, having additional
roof turrets and an external
gallery at the base.
As with Urnes, the stave
church at Borgund relies on
small openings or wind
eyes high in the wall to
admit light and air and
relieve wind pressure
against the sides of the
structure.
Anglo-Saxons and Vikings
Stave Church
Diagram explaining the
construction of a stave church.
The church illustrated here
comes from Gol, one of a
number of stave churches that
were restored in the twentieth
century according to features
seen in the church at Borgund.
The internal structure, including
diagonal bracing of the staves
and configuration of the roof
trusses, can be seen clearly
here.
Early Romanesque
Canigou, southwestern France
The monastery of St.
Martin at Canigou,
1001-1026. Founded as
a pious act by the Count
of Cerdagne, this
monastery has a
mountainous site that is
difficult to access even
today. The presence of
a freely-running spring
made habituation
possible here, and a
small monastic
community continues to
occupy the buildings.
Early Romanesque
Canigou, southwestern France
St. Martin at Canigou is one of
the earliest completely vaulted
Romanesque churches.
Romanesque buildings have a
certain affinity with Roman
architecture, primarily because
they tend to employ the
semicircular or Roman arch.
The Romanesque style
flourished from around 1000 to
1250. Romanesque buildings
tend to be massive and heavy.
Romanesque builders used
windows very sparingly to avoid
weakening the supporting
exterior wall. St. Martin at
Canigou employs masonry
vaulting, including the arch, the
barrel vault, and the groin vault
(two barrel vaults at right angles
to each other).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGXzhZrtoN0
Early Romanesque
Cathedral Plans
Plans of the Cathedral at
Speyer, St. Philibert at
Tournus, and St. Michael at
Hildesheim.
Philibert is notable for its
radiating chapels off an
ambulatory and transverse
barrel vaults in the nave.
St. Michael is an interesting
example of a double-ended
basilica with wooden roofing,
and the Cathedral at
Speyer was one of the most
ambitious Romanesque
buildings of its time, built at a
large scale comparable with
major Roman bath buildings.
St. Philibert,
Tournus
Cathedral at Speyer
St. Michael,
Hildesheim
Early Romanesque
Cathedral at Speyer
Interior of the Cathedral at Speyer. The nave
received groin vaults set over paired bays and
separated by transverse arch bands, between
1082 and 1137. At 107 feet above the floor,
these groin vaults rank as the highest built in
the Romanesque period.
Transverse Arch Band
Groin Vault
Early Romanesque
Cathedral at Speyer
On the Cathedral at
Speyer’s exterior, the
combination of corbel tables
and pilaster strips is known
as Lombard bands.
The cathedral’s westwerk is
the monumental, west-facing
entrance section of a
Carolingian or Ottonian
Romanesque church. The
exterior consists of multiple
stories between two towers.
Ottonian architecture is the
German version of
Romanesque.
Lombard
Bands
Mature Romanesque
Cathedral Plans
Plans of S. Ambrogio
in Milan and S.
Miniato al Monte in
Florence.
S. Ambrogio includes
an atrium and two
separate belfries, while
S. Miniato preserves
the plan of simple
Early Christian
basilicas.
S. Ambrogio
S. Miniato
Mature Romanesque
S. Miniato al Monte
The west façade of S.
Miniato al Monte
would not have
seemed strange to the
ancient Romans, for it
continues the use of
marble veneers in
geometric patterns
combined with arch
and column motifs
familiar from the
classical past.
Motif: a repeated
artistic theme.
Mature Romanesque
Cathedral at Pisa
The Cathedral at Pisa has
a cruciform plan, with
transepts that are treated
as smaller basilicas. Pisa’s
oval crossing dome
provided the inspiration for
Florence to attempt an
even more ambitious dome
on its cathedral.
Transepts
Crossing
Mature Romanesque
Cathedral at Pisa
The cylindrical
campanile, or
freestanding bell
tower, of the
Cathedral at
Pisa is better
known as the
Leaning Tower of
Pisa, a building
that has never
been vertical
because of
difficult
foundation
conditions.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trZgC8icFVU
Pilgrimage Roads Churches
Church Plans
Plans of St. Sernin at
Toulouse, St. Foy at Conques,
and St. James at Compostela.
All three of these churches are
located along the pilgrimage
routes to Santiago de
Compostela, and they share
common traits, including aisles
linking to an ambulatory and so
providing a continuous path for
pilgrims to access relics in the
chapels.
These chapels could be visited
by pilgrims without interrupting
monastic services being sung in
the choir.
St. Sernin
Toulouse
St. Foy, Conques
St. James,
Compostela
Ambulatory
Chapels
Aisle
Choir
Pilgrimage Roads Churches
St. Sernin at Toulouse
Worm’s eye axonometric
view explaining the
structure of St. Sernin at
Toulouse, 1077-1119.
The paired aisle vaults
work together with the
gallery vaults over the
innermost aisle as
bracing, to resist the
outward-directed thrust
from the high barrel
vaults with transverse
arches in the nave and
choir.
Tranverse arch Barrel vault
Gallery vault
Aisle
vaults
Nave
Pilgrimage Roads Churches
St. Foy at Conques
St. Foy at Conques, 1050-1130. Set in a remote mountain valley, this is the
smallest of the great pilgrimage roads churches. Site restrictions limited the
length of the building.
Pilgrimage Roads Churches
St. Foy at Conques
Interior of St. Foy, showing the gallery over
the aisle and the squinches supporting the
octagonal lantern (a windowed structure
crowning a roof or dome) at the crossing.
Compare this to St. Sernin to see how
similar the design features are in these
churches.
Lantern
Squinch
Gallery
Aisle
Pilgrimage Roads Churches
St. Foy at Conques
West front of St. Foy at Conques, showing the large
tympanum depicting the Last Judgment set over the
doors.
In church architecture, the tympanum is the space
between the lintel of a doorway and the arch above it. It is
often used as space for religious artwork, as Church
authorities used sculptures such as this one to
communicate Christian teachings to a largely illiterate
public.
https://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=nIR4CItxQ7o
Monastery at Cluny
Cluny, France
Reconstruction view
of the monastery of
Cluny III (11th
century), seen from
the east. This was the
largest church in
western Christendom
at the time of its
construction, a
suitable monument to
the influential order
that was
headquartered here.
In the foreground, to
the left, stand the
infirmary and the
abbot’s palace.
Monastery at Cluny
Cluny, France
Plan of the monastery of Cluny
III. Remains of the atrium and
east end of the church of Cluny
II survive to the right of the new
church.
Based on the basilican plan, the
church was enriched by a
double set of transepts and
further augmented by a series
of radiating chapels around the
apse and eastern walls of the
transepts. The nave, 100 feet
high and 496 feet long, was
large enough to accommodate
impressive processions.
Most of this monastery was
destroyed after the French
Revolution.
Transepts
Chapels
Apse
Monastery at Cluny
Cluny, France
Section through the church of Cluny III,
showing how the paired aisles worked to
brace the nave vaults.
The architects of Cluny III found that
vaults constructed on the profile of a
pointed arch exert less outward thrust
than the Roman arch and they exploited
this discovery in the vaulting of the nave
and aisles.
Monastery at Cluny
Cluny, France
A capital from the choir
of Cluny III, depicting
one of the tones of the
musical scale shown as
a figure playing an
instrument similar to a
lute. The monks of
Cluny were great
patrons of the arts, as
they believed beautiful
surroundings, including
lovely music, helped the
mind to contemplate
spiritual values.
The surviving south transept of Cluny III, all
that remains of the once grand monastic
church.
Cluinac Church at St. Lazare
Autun, France
One of the outstanding capitals
formerly in the choir at St. Lazare
(1120-1132), this work shows the
Flight into Egypt, with Mary and
Jesus riding a donkey led by
Joseph. Note the nimbus or halo
behind the heads of Mary and Jesus.
Romanesque sculpture often
exaggerate the sizes of heads and
hands, as these are the most
expressive parts of the body.
The art of stonecutting is known as
stereotomy.
Aquitaine and Provence
St. Front, Perigueux
St. Front, Perigueux, 1120:
In the south of France, it is
unexpected to find a centrally
planned church having domes
resting on pendentives, which
is a characteristically Eastern
architectural device. This
reflects a Byzantine influence
on design.
St. Front is loosely modeled on
the plan of St. Mark’s in Venice
but lacks the mosaics that clad
the interior of St. Mark’s, giving
it a rather austere look.
Cistercian Monasteries
Fontenay
Plan of the abbey of Fontenay,
1139-1147. This Cistercian plan
recalls the Plan of St. Gall, with
church, dormitory, and refectory
(dining hall) defining three sides
of the cloister, a covered walk
surrounding a court, that links
the church to other buildings in a
monastery. The original refectory
is missing.
On the south side is the forge, a
utilitarian building equipped with
water-powered machinery that
could full cloth, forge iron, or
accomplish other heavy tasks.
The monastery’s vegetable
garden was located immediately
to the east.
Cloister
Church
Refectory
Dormitory
On second floor
Forge
Cistercian Monasteries
Fontenay
Structure of the
abbey church of
Fontenay, showing
how the transverse
broken barrel vaults
of the aisles help to
brace the nave
vaulting.
AisleAisle
Nave
Cistercian Monasteries
Fontenay
The cloister walk at Fontenay
connected major monastic buildings
and served as a covered passage
for meditation or exercise. In good
weather, monks sat on the ledges
under arches, to read. Modular
proportions and restrained
architectural detail create a sense of
repose.
Norman Architecture
St. Cuthbert, Durham, England
Drawing of St. Cuthbert at Durham
(1093-1133) and castle showing the
city’s site in a bend of the River
Wear. The Cathedral of St. Cuthbert
straddles the narrow peninsula,
leaving no room for the traditional
west front entrance, so the church is
entered through a door in the north
aisle.
It remains one of the best-preserved
major Norman churches in England,
interesting for its impressive
massing and early use of rib vaulting
and creation of striking geometric
patterns on its piers, arches, and ribs.
Norman Architecture
St. Cuthbert, Durham, England
Section through the Cathedral of St.
Cuthbert at Durham, 1093-1160.
The builders reduced the height of
the gallery over the aisle to leave
room for a clerestory window tucked
between the folds of the rib
vaulting.
Rib vaulting is a rounded ceiling
vault, in which curved structural
members (ribs) support and define
the edges of the vault.
Clerestory
Gallery
Aisle
Ribs
Norman Architecture
St. Cuthbert, Durham, England
Plan of St. Cuthbert, Durham. By finding ways to exploit
the advantages of rib vaults and the structural efficiency
of pointed arches, Norman builders reduced the
material (and thus, the weight and cost) required to vault
a building. Notice how the crossed ribs form a network of
pointed arches over the nave.
Norman Architecture
St. Cuthbert, Durham, England
Uninterrupted walls that were
so important to structural
stability in early Romanesque
vaulted buildings were
abandoned in favor of a
skeletal system with loads
concentrated at specific
points and a new aesthetic of
spaciousness and light came
into being in the style we
term Gothic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N
vtYLOWRVFI

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Chapter Eight: Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture

  • 1. ©2014 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Buildings across Time, 4th Edition Chapter Eight: Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture Introduction Barbarian invasions into western Europe brought the gradual decline of Roman power in the northern and western parts of the Empire, leaving the Christian church as the major stabilizing force in society. Uncertain political and social conditions provided limited opportunities for major building projects until the reign of the Great Carolingian leader Charlemagne, who encouraged the revival of masonry construction. Charlemagne was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in Rome, by Pope Leo III in 800. The medieval church was the important patron of architecture. In the three centuries following Charlemagne, bishops and abbots commissioned increasingly ambitious building projects. These Romanesque churches and monasteries are based in Roman forms, with influences also from Islam, Byzantium, and traditions of northern Europe.
  • 2. Carolingian Architecture Aachen Plan of Charlemagne’s Palace at Aachen, 792-814. The sixteen-sided building is the Palatine Chapel, connected by a passageway to a basilica-shaped audience hall. Note that the Chapel was preceded by a forecourt or atrium. From a loggia at the second level of the Chapel, Charlemagne could address an audience assembled there. The Chapel contained a sixteen-sided aisle, covered by an octagonal cloister vault (a vaulted and colonnaded walk surrounding a court) under the dome, a westwerk (elaborate west-facing entrance façade with towers), and polychrome arches in the interior. San Vitale at Ravenna served as a model for this building.Basilica or Audience Hall Octagonal Cloister Vault Westwerk Atrium 16-sided Aisle
  • 4. Carolingian Architecture Lorsch The Abbey Gatehouse at Lorsch, 800. Influences from Roman architecture can be seen in the overall form, derived from the Roman triumphal arch, and the arch-and-column motif used on the ground level. Novel elements include the red-and-white tiles on the façade and the steeply pitched roof, necessary to shed rain and snow in a northern climate.
  • 5. Carolingian Architecture Germigny Oratory at Germigny-des-Prés, 806-810. This small centrally planned building borrows elements from Byzantium (the central quincunx plan) and reflects connections between the Carolingian court and Constantinople. In buildings such as this, Carolingian architects laid the basis for an original style unique to western Europe. Plan of the Oratory at Germigny-des-Pres. The horseshoe arch is evident in the shape of the apse and its flanking chapels.
  • 6. Carolingian Architecture St. Gall The Plan of St. Gall, 817. This drawing was developed at a monastic conference to resolve differences in the interpretation of the Benedictine Rule and sets forth the major elements of a Benedictine monastery, establishing a model that would be used for the next 400 or more years as the basis for monastic design.
  • 7. Carolingian Architecture St. Gall The Plan of St. Gall, 817. This drawing was developed at a monastic conference to resolve differences in the interpretation of the Benedictine Rule and sets forth the major elements of a Benedictine monastery, establishing a model that would be used for the next 400 or more years as the basis for monastic design.
  • 8. Carolingian Architecture St. Gall Axonometric section through the cloister of St. Gall. Walter Horn and Ernest Born have studied Carolingian building to make an interpretation of the architecture envisioned by those who drew the Plan of St. Gall. In this drawing, the monks’ beds in the dormitory, the tables in the refectory, and the barrels of stored food are shown in the buildings surrounding the cloister, with the south face of the church in the background. The kitchens, warming room, and latrines are also detailed. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsRR7SBZW7U
  • 9. Anglo-Saxons and Vikings Urnes Exterior of the stave church at Urnes, Norway, 1125-40. This is the oldest existing stave church. The building volumes reflect plan elements: the tall nave with lower aisles, the choir, and apse extension each have a separate expression. NaveSide Aisles ChoirApse
  • 10. Anglo-Saxons and Vikings Urnes Section and plan of the stave church at Urnes. The basis of this building is a rectangular chassis laid on foundation stones resting on the ground. On this frame rests the ends of upright poles or staves that form the structure of the church. Nave Aisle Aisle Choir Apse
  • 11. Anglo-Saxons and Vikings Urnes The carved portal from an earlier church is installed on the lower side (north) wall. The intertwined snakes and dragons represent the end of the world according to the Norse legend of Ragnarok. Christian missionaries substituted this local imagery for the Last Judgment as a way of making Christian teaching more accessible.
  • 12. Anglo-Saxons and Vikings Urnes Interior of the stave church at Urnes.
  • 13. Anglo-Saxons and Vikings Borgund The stave church at Borgund, Norway, 1150. While this church looks considerably more elaborate than Urnes, it is fundamentally the same in structure, having additional roof turrets and an external gallery at the base. As with Urnes, the stave church at Borgund relies on small openings or wind eyes high in the wall to admit light and air and relieve wind pressure against the sides of the structure.
  • 14. Anglo-Saxons and Vikings Borgund Wind eyes The stave church at Borgund, Norway, 1150. While this church looks considerably more elaborate than Urnes, it is fundamentally the same in structure, having additional roof turrets and an external gallery at the base. As with Urnes, the stave church at Borgund relies on small openings or wind eyes high in the wall to admit light and air and relieve wind pressure against the sides of the structure.
  • 15. Anglo-Saxons and Vikings Stave Church Diagram explaining the construction of a stave church. The church illustrated here comes from Gol, one of a number of stave churches that were restored in the twentieth century according to features seen in the church at Borgund. The internal structure, including diagonal bracing of the staves and configuration of the roof trusses, can be seen clearly here.
  • 16. Early Romanesque Canigou, southwestern France The monastery of St. Martin at Canigou, 1001-1026. Founded as a pious act by the Count of Cerdagne, this monastery has a mountainous site that is difficult to access even today. The presence of a freely-running spring made habituation possible here, and a small monastic community continues to occupy the buildings.
  • 17. Early Romanesque Canigou, southwestern France St. Martin at Canigou is one of the earliest completely vaulted Romanesque churches. Romanesque buildings have a certain affinity with Roman architecture, primarily because they tend to employ the semicircular or Roman arch. The Romanesque style flourished from around 1000 to 1250. Romanesque buildings tend to be massive and heavy. Romanesque builders used windows very sparingly to avoid weakening the supporting exterior wall. St. Martin at Canigou employs masonry vaulting, including the arch, the barrel vault, and the groin vault (two barrel vaults at right angles to each other). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGXzhZrtoN0
  • 18. Early Romanesque Cathedral Plans Plans of the Cathedral at Speyer, St. Philibert at Tournus, and St. Michael at Hildesheim. Philibert is notable for its radiating chapels off an ambulatory and transverse barrel vaults in the nave. St. Michael is an interesting example of a double-ended basilica with wooden roofing, and the Cathedral at Speyer was one of the most ambitious Romanesque buildings of its time, built at a large scale comparable with major Roman bath buildings. St. Philibert, Tournus Cathedral at Speyer St. Michael, Hildesheim
  • 19. Early Romanesque Cathedral at Speyer Interior of the Cathedral at Speyer. The nave received groin vaults set over paired bays and separated by transverse arch bands, between 1082 and 1137. At 107 feet above the floor, these groin vaults rank as the highest built in the Romanesque period. Transverse Arch Band Groin Vault
  • 20. Early Romanesque Cathedral at Speyer On the Cathedral at Speyer’s exterior, the combination of corbel tables and pilaster strips is known as Lombard bands. The cathedral’s westwerk is the monumental, west-facing entrance section of a Carolingian or Ottonian Romanesque church. The exterior consists of multiple stories between two towers. Ottonian architecture is the German version of Romanesque. Lombard Bands
  • 21. Mature Romanesque Cathedral Plans Plans of S. Ambrogio in Milan and S. Miniato al Monte in Florence. S. Ambrogio includes an atrium and two separate belfries, while S. Miniato preserves the plan of simple Early Christian basilicas. S. Ambrogio S. Miniato
  • 22. Mature Romanesque S. Miniato al Monte The west façade of S. Miniato al Monte would not have seemed strange to the ancient Romans, for it continues the use of marble veneers in geometric patterns combined with arch and column motifs familiar from the classical past. Motif: a repeated artistic theme.
  • 23. Mature Romanesque Cathedral at Pisa The Cathedral at Pisa has a cruciform plan, with transepts that are treated as smaller basilicas. Pisa’s oval crossing dome provided the inspiration for Florence to attempt an even more ambitious dome on its cathedral. Transepts Crossing
  • 24. Mature Romanesque Cathedral at Pisa The cylindrical campanile, or freestanding bell tower, of the Cathedral at Pisa is better known as the Leaning Tower of Pisa, a building that has never been vertical because of difficult foundation conditions. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trZgC8icFVU
  • 25. Pilgrimage Roads Churches Church Plans Plans of St. Sernin at Toulouse, St. Foy at Conques, and St. James at Compostela. All three of these churches are located along the pilgrimage routes to Santiago de Compostela, and they share common traits, including aisles linking to an ambulatory and so providing a continuous path for pilgrims to access relics in the chapels. These chapels could be visited by pilgrims without interrupting monastic services being sung in the choir. St. Sernin Toulouse St. Foy, Conques St. James, Compostela Ambulatory Chapels Aisle Choir
  • 26. Pilgrimage Roads Churches St. Sernin at Toulouse Worm’s eye axonometric view explaining the structure of St. Sernin at Toulouse, 1077-1119. The paired aisle vaults work together with the gallery vaults over the innermost aisle as bracing, to resist the outward-directed thrust from the high barrel vaults with transverse arches in the nave and choir. Tranverse arch Barrel vault Gallery vault Aisle vaults Nave
  • 27. Pilgrimage Roads Churches St. Foy at Conques St. Foy at Conques, 1050-1130. Set in a remote mountain valley, this is the smallest of the great pilgrimage roads churches. Site restrictions limited the length of the building.
  • 28. Pilgrimage Roads Churches St. Foy at Conques Interior of St. Foy, showing the gallery over the aisle and the squinches supporting the octagonal lantern (a windowed structure crowning a roof or dome) at the crossing. Compare this to St. Sernin to see how similar the design features are in these churches. Lantern Squinch Gallery Aisle
  • 29. Pilgrimage Roads Churches St. Foy at Conques West front of St. Foy at Conques, showing the large tympanum depicting the Last Judgment set over the doors. In church architecture, the tympanum is the space between the lintel of a doorway and the arch above it. It is often used as space for religious artwork, as Church authorities used sculptures such as this one to communicate Christian teachings to a largely illiterate public. https://www.youtube.com/watch ?v=nIR4CItxQ7o
  • 30. Monastery at Cluny Cluny, France Reconstruction view of the monastery of Cluny III (11th century), seen from the east. This was the largest church in western Christendom at the time of its construction, a suitable monument to the influential order that was headquartered here. In the foreground, to the left, stand the infirmary and the abbot’s palace.
  • 31. Monastery at Cluny Cluny, France Plan of the monastery of Cluny III. Remains of the atrium and east end of the church of Cluny II survive to the right of the new church. Based on the basilican plan, the church was enriched by a double set of transepts and further augmented by a series of radiating chapels around the apse and eastern walls of the transepts. The nave, 100 feet high and 496 feet long, was large enough to accommodate impressive processions. Most of this monastery was destroyed after the French Revolution. Transepts Chapels Apse
  • 32. Monastery at Cluny Cluny, France Section through the church of Cluny III, showing how the paired aisles worked to brace the nave vaults. The architects of Cluny III found that vaults constructed on the profile of a pointed arch exert less outward thrust than the Roman arch and they exploited this discovery in the vaulting of the nave and aisles.
  • 33. Monastery at Cluny Cluny, France A capital from the choir of Cluny III, depicting one of the tones of the musical scale shown as a figure playing an instrument similar to a lute. The monks of Cluny were great patrons of the arts, as they believed beautiful surroundings, including lovely music, helped the mind to contemplate spiritual values. The surviving south transept of Cluny III, all that remains of the once grand monastic church.
  • 34. Cluinac Church at St. Lazare Autun, France One of the outstanding capitals formerly in the choir at St. Lazare (1120-1132), this work shows the Flight into Egypt, with Mary and Jesus riding a donkey led by Joseph. Note the nimbus or halo behind the heads of Mary and Jesus. Romanesque sculpture often exaggerate the sizes of heads and hands, as these are the most expressive parts of the body. The art of stonecutting is known as stereotomy.
  • 35. Aquitaine and Provence St. Front, Perigueux St. Front, Perigueux, 1120: In the south of France, it is unexpected to find a centrally planned church having domes resting on pendentives, which is a characteristically Eastern architectural device. This reflects a Byzantine influence on design. St. Front is loosely modeled on the plan of St. Mark’s in Venice but lacks the mosaics that clad the interior of St. Mark’s, giving it a rather austere look.
  • 36. Cistercian Monasteries Fontenay Plan of the abbey of Fontenay, 1139-1147. This Cistercian plan recalls the Plan of St. Gall, with church, dormitory, and refectory (dining hall) defining three sides of the cloister, a covered walk surrounding a court, that links the church to other buildings in a monastery. The original refectory is missing. On the south side is the forge, a utilitarian building equipped with water-powered machinery that could full cloth, forge iron, or accomplish other heavy tasks. The monastery’s vegetable garden was located immediately to the east. Cloister Church Refectory Dormitory On second floor Forge
  • 37. Cistercian Monasteries Fontenay Structure of the abbey church of Fontenay, showing how the transverse broken barrel vaults of the aisles help to brace the nave vaulting. AisleAisle Nave
  • 38. Cistercian Monasteries Fontenay The cloister walk at Fontenay connected major monastic buildings and served as a covered passage for meditation or exercise. In good weather, monks sat on the ledges under arches, to read. Modular proportions and restrained architectural detail create a sense of repose.
  • 39. Norman Architecture St. Cuthbert, Durham, England Drawing of St. Cuthbert at Durham (1093-1133) and castle showing the city’s site in a bend of the River Wear. The Cathedral of St. Cuthbert straddles the narrow peninsula, leaving no room for the traditional west front entrance, so the church is entered through a door in the north aisle. It remains one of the best-preserved major Norman churches in England, interesting for its impressive massing and early use of rib vaulting and creation of striking geometric patterns on its piers, arches, and ribs.
  • 40. Norman Architecture St. Cuthbert, Durham, England Section through the Cathedral of St. Cuthbert at Durham, 1093-1160. The builders reduced the height of the gallery over the aisle to leave room for a clerestory window tucked between the folds of the rib vaulting. Rib vaulting is a rounded ceiling vault, in which curved structural members (ribs) support and define the edges of the vault. Clerestory Gallery Aisle Ribs
  • 41. Norman Architecture St. Cuthbert, Durham, England Plan of St. Cuthbert, Durham. By finding ways to exploit the advantages of rib vaults and the structural efficiency of pointed arches, Norman builders reduced the material (and thus, the weight and cost) required to vault a building. Notice how the crossed ribs form a network of pointed arches over the nave.
  • 42. Norman Architecture St. Cuthbert, Durham, England Uninterrupted walls that were so important to structural stability in early Romanesque vaulted buildings were abandoned in favor of a skeletal system with loads concentrated at specific points and a new aesthetic of spaciousness and light came into being in the style we term Gothic. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N vtYLOWRVFI