Sunday, August 18, 2013

ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE


ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE



As elsewhere, the development of Romanesque sculpture in Italy was connected to the flowering of contemporary architecture. Nonetheless, sculpture here was not dictated by the structural requirements of architecture to the same extent as it was in France, as the demands were more of a liturgical nature. Instead, early works display strong decorative intentions, with the use of animal ornaments and abstract interlaced patterns derived from Lombard art.
The façade of the church of Santa Maria in Pomposa (Emilia-Romagna), placed in front of an atrium, is rather low and wide, constructed of many different colours of brick. In the centre the wall is broken up by three entrance arcades. Their archivolts are decorated with friezes of vine foliage, and on the front side these are framed by archivolts made of radially and tangentially arranged bricks. The three horizontal areas of the façade are produced by two long bands of terracotta. It is thought that the unknown master and his craftsmen came from Ravenna, as the structure of the façade is so Oriental, even Byzantine, in style.



Architectural Styles
Romanesque Revival Style (1860-1900)


This style is named for the massive masonry forms found in Medieval European churches. Not widely used for houses in Lancaster, the Romanesque Revival style is more commonly used for public buildings, schools and churches. Characteristics include:
  • use of brick or stone, giving a heavy appearance
  • smooth wall surfaces contrast with rough stone trim
  • dark colors
  • massive round-headed arched windows and doorways
  • deeply recessed openings
  • round or square towers of differing heights


Typical English Romanesque bay (from Peterborough Cathedral). (left) External elevation. (middle) Internal elevation. (right) Section through bay

 

ROMANESQUE CHURCH DESIGN 



The standard design was that of the Roman basilica-the meeting hall. The basilica consisted of a two story structure that could measure up to 65 ft wide.   To this was added one  or two story side aisle on each side. The building was very wide and the clerestory windows at the top of the  nave or middle section provided sufficient light for the entire building.

 

 

 

Often side arms, called transepts, were added on either side of the nave to accommodate the great number of people who came to worship.  These additions gave the churches a Latin Cross floor plan. The apse or the east end was the place of the court in the Roman basilica.  In the new church it became the holy of holies- the sanctuary- the place of the altar. Between the apse and the nave was an area known as the chancel or choir.  In the earliest days, the clergy, known as the cathedral chapter, occupied this space for worship.  With the advent of popularity of relics, a means of “crowd control” was needed so the area in the apse behind the altar became known as the ambulatory.  Often small altars or chapels were constructed in the ambulatory. The chapels generally contained a relic.  Worshipper would enter one side and “amble” around the apse to venerate these relics and exit on the other side. Tall towers were added to the exterior.  Often their was a pair on either side of the front -West Facade.  There were also towers build over the great cross - the point where the nave, the transepts and the chancel met.  






Capital of Corinthian form with anthropomorphised details, Pisa Campanile
Capital of Corinthian form with Byzantine decoration and carved dosseret, San Martín de Tours Church, Frómista, Palencia
Capital of simplified concave Corinthian form with billeted abacus, simple dosseret and pronounced annulet. Church of Santa Maria, San Martín de Castañeda
Capital of convex cubic form with its abacus, concave dosseret and cable decoration defined by polychrome. Herina. Capitals of this shape are often decorated with "Barbaric" carvings of foliage, and mythical creatures.
Capital of amorphous form surmounting a cluster of shafts. The figurative carving shows a winged devil directing Herod to slaughter the Innocents. Monastery of San Juan de Duero, Soria
Capital retaining Corinthian form decorated with intertwined beasts derived from Irish manuscripts. Grande-Sauve Abbey, France

Vaults
The painted barrel vault at the Abbey Church of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe is supported on tall marbled columns.
The Church of St Philibert, Tournus, has a series of transverse barrel vaults supported on arches.
The aisle of the Abbey Church at Mozac has a groin vault supported on transverse arches.
The aisles at Peterborough Cathedral have quadripartite ribbed vaults. (The nave has an ancient painted wooden ceiling.)
The ribbed vaults at Saint-Étienne, Caen, are sexpartite and span two bays of the nave.
This drawing is a reconstruction by Dehio of the appearance of the Romanesque Konstanz Cathedral before its alterations in the Gothic style. It has a typical elevation of nave and aisles with wooden panelled ceilings and an apsidal east end.
This nave elevation of Arnsburg Abbey, Germany, shows the typical arrangement of the nave arcade, aisle, clerestory windows and ribbed vault
Exterior elevation, Peterborough Cathedral
Interiors (see also sections illustrating columns and roofs)
St Gertrude, Nivelles, Belgium, (consecrated 1046) has a nave and aisles divided by piers supporting a clerestorey. The nave is divided by transverse arches. The interior would have been plastered and painted.
San Miniato al Monte, Florence, (1013-1090) has basilical form, open timber roof and decoration of polychrome marble and mosaic. The decoration continued harmoniously until the apsidal mosaic of 1260.
The Church of St Philibert, Tournus, (990-1019) has tall circular piers supporting the arcade and is roofed with a series of barrel vaults supported on arches. Small clerestory windows light the vault.
Abbey of St Mary Magdalene, Vézelay, (consecrated 1104) has clusters of vertical shafts rising to support transverse arches and a groin vault. The dressed polychrome stonework has exquisitely detailed mouldings. East end is Gothic.
The nave of Peterborough Cathedral (1118-93) in three stages of arcade, gallery & clerestory, typical of Norman abbey churches. The rare wooden ceiling retains its original decoration (c. 1230). Gothic arches beneath tower (c. 1350).