romanesque style - winston-salem/forsyth county · ppt file · web...

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Romanesque Style

Romanesque Churches

Look at the fronts of these different churches and see what

they have in common.

St. Ambrogio

Vezelay

You notice that they all are basically earthbound. The

emphasis is on the horizontal rather than on the vertical.

Look at the back of these churches and see what they have

in common.

Vezelay Back

The backs show the apse of each as well as the side chapels. They

look like a cluster or cylinders and cubes.

There are several components of a church that you need to know:

nave, apse, transcept, ambulatory, clerestory and

tympanum.

Nave: the long central aisle of the church.

Vezelay Nave

• Apse: a large semicircular recess in a church, arched or with a domed roof, typically at the eastern end, and usually containing the altar.

Apse interior:

Ambulatory: the walkway around the back of the church behind the

altar.

Ambulatory Plan

Ambulatory

Transcept turns the church into the shape of a cross

Clerestory: a high series of windows to illuminate the

church.

The clerestory is here

Clerestory

Tympanum: a sculptural panel above the front door. The subject is always religious. It marks the crossing from the secular world

to the spiritual and reminds people of Biblical stories.

Notice how the sculpture is designed to fit the oddly shaped space much as the sculpture in

the pediment of a Greek temple.

Tympanum

Because the church was part of a monastery, there is an addition that you don’t normally see in

churches: the cloister.

Mont St. Michel

Montecassino original plan

Monastery Plan

Cluny Plan

Cluny Church Model

Cluny Jigsaw

Illuminated Manuscript Covers

St. Etienne: Late Romanesque

St. Etienne back

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