Site banner
.
Home Forums Blogs Articles Photos Videos Contact FAQ                    
.
.
Wisdom Archive
Body Mind and Soul
Faith and Belief
God and Religion
Law of Attraction
Life and Beyond
Love and Happiness
Peace of Mind
Peace on Earth
Personal Faith
Spiritual Festivals
Spiritual Growth
Spiritual Guidance
Spiritual Inspiration
Spirituality and Science
Spiritual Retreats
More Wisdom
Buddhism Archives
Hinduism Archives
Sustainability
Theology Archives
Even more Wisdom
2012 - Year 2012
Affirmations
Aura
Ayurveda
Chakras
Consciousness
Cultural Creatives
Diksha (Deeksha)
Dream Dictionary
Dream Interpretation
Dream interpreter
Dreams
Enlightenment
Essential Oils
Feng Shui
Flower Essences
Gaia Hypothesis
Indigo Children
Kalki Bhagavan
Karma
Kundalini
Kundalini Yoga
Life after death
Mayan Calendar
Meaning of Dreams
Meditation
Morphogenetic Fields
Psychic Ability
Reincarnation
Spiritual Art, Music & Dance
Spiritual Awakening
Spiritual Enlightenment
Spiritual Healing
Spirituality and Health
Spiritual Jokes
Spiritual Parenting
Vastu Shastra
Womens Spirituality
Yoga Positions
Site map 2
Site map


Dream Sharing Forum

at Global Oneness Community.

Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum



.

Cathedral diagram

Cathedral diagram: Encyclopedia - Cathedral diagram

This article discusses cathedral diagrams. The floorplans show the sections of walls and piers, giving an idea of the profiles of their columns and ribbing. Light double lines in perimeter walls indicate glazed windows. Light lines show the ribs of the vaulting overhead. By convention, ecclesiastical floorplans are shown map-fashion, with north to the top and the liturgical east end to the right. Many abbey churches have floorplans that are comparable to cathedrals, though sometimes with more emphasis on the sanctuary and choir spaces that are reserved for the religious community. Small ...

Including:

Cathedral diagram, Cathedral diagram - Liturgical east end, Cathedral diagram - Nave, Cathedral diagram - Subsidiary buildings, Cathedral diagram - Transept, Cathedral diagram - West end

Cathedral diagram: Encyclopedia - Cathedral diagram



Cathedral diagram

This article discusses cathedral diagrams. The floorplans show the sections of walls and piers, giving an idea of the profiles of their columns and ribbing. Light double lines in perimeter walls indicate glazed windows. Light lines show the ribs of the vaulting overhead. By convention, ecclesiastical floorplans are shown map-fashion, with north to the top and the liturgical east end to the right.

Many abbey churches have floorplans that are comparable to cathedrals, though sometimes with more emphasis on the sanctuary and choir spaces that are reserved for the religious community. Smaller churches are similarly planned, with simplifications.

There is a separate article on Cathedral architecture.

Cathedral diagram - West end

The main doors are at the west end, and there are often towers on that end flanking an opening, sometimes a triple opening, into the nave, often below a stained glass "rose window." The presence or planned presence of towers reveals itself by more massive stonework at floorplan level: see Amiens (illustration right). The narthex forms a kind of lobby or interior porch on some plans, though not at Amiens, where the central door opens into the nave and the side doors open directly into the aisles.

Cathedral diagram - Nave

Main articles: Nave, Aisle.

The nave (from the Latin for "ship," navis) is the long central section directly inside the main (liturgical west end) doors, where the public attends services. The nave is ordinarily flanked by aisles. If the aisles are comparable in height and width, the plan may be described as having three naves. More often the aisles are lower, and a clerestory above their roofs lets light into the nave. Recesses in the walling of the aisles may provide spaces for shallow side chapels, as at Metz (illustration below, right).

The plans show structural stonework; they omit the usual rood screen ("rood" meaning "cross") dividing the nave from the choir (earlier, "quire"), which may be almost as long as the nave, as at Salisbury (below, left). There monks would attend their own services ("offices") in an abbey church; in a cathedral the canons would perform similar service. Against the screen, on its west side toward the nave where the public could see it, is usually an altar.

Cathedral diagram - Transept

In the cruciform (cross-shaped) churches, the arms of the cross (together, the "transept") which form an aisle across the building are quite pronounced; however, the transept arms might be so short as not to stick out past the sides of the building (as at Notre-Dame de Paris), or there may be two of them, as at Canterbury Cathedral and Salisbury (left). The transept itself may have an aisle as at St-Denis or Salisbury, or two aisles, or it may have none.

Some Gothic churches, such as Bourges, have no transepts at all and thus are not cruciform. At the ends of the transept are doors, too, and outside them are porches that were used for various rituals.

Cathedral diagram - Liturgical east end

The end with the altar in it is normally at the east (right in the diagrams), for symbolic religious reasons, though frequently the building cannot be disposed in such a way as to make that orientation very precise. Beyond the crossing where the transept intersects the nave are the choir and the presbytery which may be a single space and the sanctuary, site of the high altar.

The next section to the east after the choir is the presbytery (meaning "priestly"), where the priests who assist at Mass sit; that section is not usually separate and may be only a couple of fancy chairs at the side.

The heart of the building is the sanctuary where the "high altar" is. There are altars in many of the chapels, but this is the one where Mass is said for the public. This area was also where criminals seeking the right of sanctuary were safe from the law. Very often the sanctuary was raised a few steps above the floor level of the nave. Beneath the sanctuary is often a crypt, which may be earlier or may mark a pre-Christian holy space. When cathedrals are enlarged, the nave may be extended and a narthex added, the choir may be rebuilt with an ambulatory and chapels, but most usually the consecrated place that is the sanctuary remains at the same place.

The semi-circular end of the church around the high altar, which corresponds to the apse in Romanesque and Roman architecture, is often expanded into a passage called an ambulatory (from the Latin to walk), with radiating chapels disposed around the outer wall of the ambulatory. Thus users can make a complete circuit within the building, using the north and south aisles of the nave and the ambulatory, without trespassing upon the sanctuary. In the bays around the ambulatory, between the supporting columns, are shrines and chapels. At the far east end, on the axis formed by nave and sanctuary, a larger chapel is often dedicated to the patron saint of the church, or to Mary, the mother of Jesus, this in medieval English usageis a Lady Chapel.

"Chantries" are shrines or chapels where someone has paid an "endowment" to have the monks say (or "chant") prayers on a fixed schedule for someone who died.

The apse did not last long as an architectural fashion; in Europe it was replaced by the rounded "chevet," (Amiens, Metz) and in England by squared-off east ends, and as the cathedrals were rebuilt or repaired, their apses were often remodeled into the newer shapes.

Cathedral diagram - Subsidiary buildings

Outside the cathedral there is often a "chapter house" where the monks or priests whose church it was would hold their meetings about church business; chapter houses are often round and are usually connected to the church building. There is also usually a "cloister," a rectangular colonnade around an open space that often has a central well, set in a paved or graveled space, where the monks may walk;their work or study cubicles often open onto the cloister.

The cathedral often stands in its own walled precinct, called in England the close.

See also: Cathedral architecture




Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Cathedral diagram", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

More material related to Cathedral Diagram can be found here:
Main Page
for
Cathedral Diagram
Index of Articles
related to
Cathedral Diagram


« Back








Search the Global Oneness web site
Global Oneness is a huge, really huge, web site. Almost whatever you are searching for within health, spirituality, personal development and inspirationals - you will find it here!
Google
 
 

Rate this article!

Please rate this article with 10 as very good and 1 as very poor.

.








Sneak-Peek of Global Oneness Community

Hi friend! The Global Oneness Community, the place for information and sharing about Oneness is not really launched yet (you will see there is still some clean up to do) ...but it is now open for a sneak-peek! And if you wish - please register and become one of the very first members to do so! Jonas

Forum Home, Articles, Photo Gallery, Videos, News, Sitemap
...and much more!


Dream Sharing Forum

at Global Oneness Community.

Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum



Forum
Articles
Images Pictures
Videos
News
Sitemap




 

 

 

 

 


 








  » Home » » Home »