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Romanesque Architecture Romanesque Architecture Is An Architectural Style of Medieval Europe Characterized by Semi-Circular Arches. There Is No

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Romanesque Architecture

Romanesque architecture is an architectural style of medieval Europe characterized by semi-circular arches. There is no
consensus for the beginning date of the Romanesque style, with proposals ranging from the 6th to the 11th century, this later date
being the most commonly held. In the 12th century it developed into the Gothic style, marked by pointed arches. Examples of
Romanesque architecture can be found across the continent, making it the first pan-European architectural style since Imperial Roman
architecture. The Romanesque style in England is traditionally referred to as Norman architecture.
Combining features of ancient Roman and Byzantine buildings and other local traditions, Romanesque architecture is known by
its massive quality, thick walls, round arches, sturdy pillars, barrel vaults, large towers and decorative arcading. Each building has
clearly defined forms, frequently of very regular, symmetrical plan; the overall appearance is one of simplicity when compared with
the Gothic buildings that were to follow. The style can be identified right across Europe, despite regional characteristics and different
materials.
Many castles were built during this period, but they are greatly outnumbered by churches. The most significant are the great
abbey churches, many of which are still standing, more or less complete and frequently in use. The enormous quantity of churches
built in the Romanesque period was succeeded by the still busier period of Gothic architecture, which partly or entirely rebuilt most
Romanesque churches in prosperous areas like England and Portugal. The largest groups of Romanesque survivors are in areas that
were less prosperous in subsequent periods, including parts of southern France, rural Spain and rural Italy. Survivals of unfortified
Romanesque secular houses and palaces, and the domestic quarters of monasteries are far rarer, but these used and adapted the
features found in church buildings, on a domestic scale.

Definition
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word "Romanesque" means
"descended from Roman" and was first used in English to designate what are now called
Romance languages (first cited 1715). The French term "romane" was first used in the
architectural sense by archaeologist Charles de Gerville in a letter of 18 December 1818 to
Auguste Le Prévost to describe what Gerville sees as a debased Roman architecture. In
1824 Gerville's friend Arcisse de Caumont adopted the label "roman" to describe the
"degraded" European architecture from the 5th to the 13th centuries, in his Essai sur
l'architecture religieuse du moyen-âge, particulièrement en Normandie, at a time when the
actual dates of many of the buildings so described had not been ascertained:
The name Roman (esque) we give to this architecture, which should be universal as it is the same everywhere with slight local
differences, also has the merit of indicating its origin and is not new since it is used already to describe the language of the same
period. Romance language is degenerated Latin language. Romanesque architecture is debased Roman architecture.
The first use in a published work is in William Gunn's An Inquiry into the Origin and Influence of Gothic Architecture (London
1819). The word was used by Gunn to describe the style that was identifiably Medieval and prefigured the Gothic, yet maintained the
rounded Roman arch and thus appeared to be a continuation of the Roman tradition of building.
The term is now used for the more restricted period from the late 10th to 12th centuries. The term "Pre-romanesque" is
sometimes applied to architecture in Germany of the Carolingian and Ottonian periods and Visigothic, Mozarab and Asturian
constructions between the 8th and the 10th centuries in the Iberian Peninsula while "First Romanesque" is applied to buildings in north
of Italy and Spain and parts of France that have Romanesque features but pre-date the
influence of the Abbey of Cluny.

Scope
Buildings of every type were constructed in the Romanesque style, with evidence
remaining of simple domestic buildings, elegant town houses, grand palaces, commercial
premises, civic buildings, castles, city walls, bridges, village churches, abbey churches,
abbey complexes and large cathedrals. Of these types of buildings, domestic and
commercial buildings are the most rare, with only a handful of survivors in the United Kingdom, several clusters in France, isolated
buildings across Europe and by far the largest number, often unidentified and altered over the centuries, in Italy. Many castles exist,
the foundations of which date from the Romanesque period. Most have been substantially altered, and many are in ruins.
By far the greatest number of surviving Romanesque buildings are churches. These range from tiny chapels to large cathedrals.
Although many have been extended and altered in different styles, a large number remain either substantially intact or sympathetically
restored, demonstrating the form, character and decoration of Romanesque church architecture.

History
Origin:
Romanesque architecture was the first distinctive style to spread across Europe
since the Roman Empire. With the decline of Rome, Roman building methods survived
to an extent in Western Europe, where successive Merovingian, Carolingian and
Ottonian architects continued to build large stone buildings such as monastery churches
and palaces. In the more northern countries, Roman building styles and techniques had
never been adopted except for official buildings, while in Scandinavia they were
unknown. Although the round arch continued in use, the engineering skills required to
vault large spaces and build large domes were lost. There was a loss of stylistic
continuity, particularly apparent in the decline of the formal vocabulary of the Classical
Orders. In Rome several great Constantinian basilicas continued in use as an inspiration to later builders. Some traditions of Roman
architecture also survived in Byzantine architecture with the 6th-century octagonal Byzantine Basilica of San Vitale in Ravenna being
the inspiration for the greatest building of the Dark Ages in Europe, the Emperor Charlemagne's Palatine Chapel, Aachen, Germany,
built around the year AD 800.
Dating shortly after the Palatine Chapel is a remarkable 9th-century Swiss manuscript known as the Plan of Saint Gall and
showing a very detailed plan of a monastic complex, with all its various monastic buildings and their functions labelled. The largest
building is the church, the plan of which is distinctly Germanic, having an apse at both ends, an arrangement not generally seen
elsewhere. Another feature of the church is its regular proportion, the square plan of the crossing tower providing a module for the rest
of the plan. These features can both be seen at the Proto-Romanesque St. Michael's Church, Hildesheim, 1001–1030.
Architecture of a Romanesque style also developed simultaneously in the north of Italy, parts of France and in the Iberian
Peninsula in the 10th century and prior to the later influence of the Abbey of Cluny. The style, sometimes called First Romanesque or
Lombard Romanesque, is characterised by thick walls, lack of sculpture and the presence of rhythmic ornamental arches known as a
Lombard band.
Politics:
Charlemagne was crowned by the Pope in Old St. Peter's Basilica on Christmas Day in the year 800, with an aim to re-
establishing the old Roman Empire. Charlemagne's political successors continued to rule much of Europe, with a gradual emergence
of the separate political states that were eventually to become welded into nations, either by allegiance or defeat, the Kingdom of
Germany giving rise to the Holy Roman Empire. The invasion of England by William, Duke of Normandy, in 1066, saw the building
of both castles and churches that reinforced the Norman presence. Several significant churches that were built at this time were
founded by rulers as seats of temporal and religious power, or places of coronation and burial. These include the Abbaye-Saint-Denis,
Speyer Cathedral and Westminster Abbey (where little of the Norman church now remains).
At a time when the remaining architectural structures of the Roman Empire were falling into decay and much of its learning and
technology lost, the building of masonry domes and the carving of decorative architectural details continued unabated, though greatly
evolved in style since the fall of Rome, in the enduring Byzantine Empire. The domed churches of Constantinople and Eastern Europe
were to greatly affect the architecture of certain towns, particularly through trade and through the Crusades. The most notable single
building that demonstrates this is St Mark's Basilica, Venice, but there are many lesser-known examples, particularly in France, such
as the church of Saint-Front, Périgueux and Angoulême Cathedral.
Much of Europe was affected by feudalism in which peasants held tenure from local rulers over the land that they farmed in
exchange for military service. The result of this was that they could be called upon, not only for local and regional spats, but to follow
their lord to travel across Europe to the Crusades, if they were required to do so. The Crusades, 1095–1270, brought about a very large
movement of people and, with them, ideas and trade skills, particularly those involved in the building of fortifications and the metal
working needed for the provision of arms, which was also applied to the fitting and decoration of buildings. The continual movement
of people, rulers, nobles, bishops, abbots, craftsmen and peasants, was an important factor in creating a homogeneity in building
methods and a recognizable Romanesque style, despite regional differences.
Life became generally less secure after the Carolingian period. This resulted in the building of castles at strategic points, many of
them being constructed as strongholds of the Normans, descendants of the Vikings who invaded northern France under Rollo in 911.
Political struggles also resulted in the fortification of many towns, or the rebuilding and strengthening of walls that remained from the
Roman period. One of the most notable surviving fortifications is that of the city of Carcassonne. The enclosure of towns brought
about a lack of living space within the walls, and resulted in a style of town house that was tall and narrow, often surrounding
communal courtyards, as at San Gimignano in Tuscany.
In Germany, the Holy Roman Emperors built a number of residences, fortified, but essentially palaces rather than castles, at
strategic points and on trade routes. The Imperial Palace of Goslar (heavily restored in the 19th century) was built in the early 11th
century by Otto III and Henry III, while the ruined Palace at Gelnhausen was received by Frederick Barbarossa prior to 1170. The
movement of people and armies also brought about the building of bridges, some of which have survived, including the 12th-century
bridge at Besalú, Catalonia, the 11th-century Puente de la Reina, Navarre and the Pont-Saint-Bénézet, Avignon.

Religion
Across Europe, the late 11th and 12th centuries saw an unprecedented growth in the
number of churches.[18] A great number of these buildings, both large and small, remain,
some almost intact and in others altered almost beyond recognition in later centuries. They
include many very well known churches such as Santa Maria in Cosmedin in Rome, the
Baptistery in Florence[20] and San Zeno Maggiore in Verona. In France, the famous abbeys
of Aux Dames and Les Hommes at Caen and Mont Saint-Michel date from this period, as well
as the abbeys of the pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela. Many cathedrals owe their
foundation to this date, with others beginning as abbey churches, and later becoming
cathedrals. In England, of the cathedrals of ancient foundation, all were begun in this period with the exception of Salisbury, where the
monks relocated from the Norman church at Old Sarum, and several, such as Canterbury, which were rebuilt on the site of Saxon
churches. In Spain, the most famous church of the period is Santiago de Compostela. In Germany, the Rhine and its tributaries were
the location of many Romanesque abbeys, notably Mainz, Worms, Speyer and Bamberg. In Cologne, then the largest city north of the
Alps, a very important group of large city churches survives largely intact. As monasticism spread across Europe, Romanesque
churches sprang up in Scotland, Scandinavia, Poland, Hungary, Sicily, Serbia and Tunisia. Several important Romanesque churches
were built in the Crusader kingdoms.

Monasticism
The system of monasticism in which the religious become members of an order, with common ties and a common rule, living in
a mutually dependent community, rather than as a group of hermits living in proximity but essentially separate, was established by the
monk Benedict in the 6th century. The Benedictine monasteries spread from Italy throughout Europe, being always by far the most
numerous in England. They were followed by the Cluniac order, the Cistercians, Carthusians and Augustinian Canons. During the
Crusades, the military orders of the Knights Hospitaller and the Knights Templar were founded.
The monasteries, which sometimes also functioned as cathedrals, and the cathedrals that had bodies of secular clergy often living
in community, were a major source of power in Europe. Bishops and the abbots of important monasteries lived and functioned like
princes. The monasteries were the major seats of learning of all sorts. Benedict had ordered that all the arts were to be taught and
practiced in the monasteries. Within the monasteries books were transcribed by hand, and few people outside the monasteries could
read or write.
In France, Burgundy was the centre of monasticism. The enormous and powerful monastery at Cluny was to have lasting effect
on the layout of other monasteries and the design of their churches. Unfortunately, very little of the abbey church at Cluny remains;
the "Cluny II" rebuilding of 963 onwards has completely vanished, but we have a good idea of the design of "Cluny III" from 1088 to
1130, which until the Renaissance remained the largest building in Europe. However, the church of St. Sernin at Toulouse, 1080–1120,
has remained intact and demonstrates the regularity of Romanesque design with its modular form, its massive appearance and the
repetition of the simple arched window motif.

Pilgrimage and Crusade


One of the effects of the Crusades, which were intended to wrest the Holy Places of
Palestine from Islamic control, was to excite a great deal of religious fervour, which in
turn inspired great building programs. The Nobility of Europe, upon safe return, thanked
God by the building of a new church or the enhancement of an old one. Likewise, those
who did not return from the Crusades could be suitably commemorated by their family
in a work of stone and mortar.
The Crusades resulted in the transfer of, among other things, a great number of Holy
Relics of saints and apostles. Many churches, like Saint-Front, Périgueux, had their own
home grown saint while others, most notably Santiago de Compostela, claimed the
remains and the patronage of a powerful saint, in this case one of the Twelve Apostles. Santiago de Compostela, located near Galicia
(present day Spain) became one of the most important pilgrimage destinations in Europe. Most of the pilgrims travelled the Way of St.
James on foot, many of them barefooted as a sign of penance. They moved along one of the four main routes that passed through
France, congregating for the journey at Jumièges, Paris, Vézelay, Cluny, Arles and St. Gall in Switzerland. They crossed two passes in
the Pyrenees and converged into a single stream to traverse north-western Spain. Along the route they were urged on by those pilgrims
returning from the journey. On each of the routes abbeys such as those at Moissac, Toulouse, Roncesvalles, Conques, Limoges and
Burgos catered for the flow of people and grew wealthy from the passing trade. Saint-Benoît-du-Sault, in the Berry province, is typical
of the churches that were founded on the pilgrim route.
Characteristics
The general impression given by Romanesque architecture, in both ecclesiastical and secular buildings, is one of massive solidity
and strength. In contrast with both the preceding Roman and later Gothic architecture, in which the load-bearing structural members
are, or appear to be, columns, pilasters and arches, Romanesque architecture, in common with Byzantine architecture, relies upon its
walls, or sections of walls called piers.
Romanesque architecture is often divided into two periods known as the "First Romanesque" style and the "Romanesque" style.
The difference is chiefly a matter of the expertise with which the buildings were constructed. The First Romanesque employed rubble
walls, smaller windows and unvaulted roofs. A greater refinement marks the Second Romanesque, along with increased use of the
vault and dressed stone.

Walls
The walls of Romanesque buildings are often of massive thickness with few and comparatively small openings. They are often
double shells, filled with rubble.
The building material differs greatly across Europe, depending upon the local stone and
building traditions. In Italy, Poland, much of Germany and parts of the Netherlands, brick is
generally used. Other areas saw extensive use of limestone, granite and flint. The building
stone was often used in comparatively small and irregular pieces, bedded in thick mortar.
Smooth ashlar masonry was not a distinguishing feature of the style, particularly in the earlier
part of the period, but occurred chiefly where easily worked limestone was available.

Buttresses
Because of the massive nature of Romanesque walls, buttresses are not a highly significant feature, as they are in Gothic
architecture. Romanesque buttresses are generally of flat square profile and do not project a great deal beyond the wall. In the case of
aisled churches, barrel vaults, or half-barrel vaults over the aisles helped to buttress the nave, if it was vaulted.
In the cases where half-barrel vaults were used, they effectively became like flying buttresses. Often aisles extended through two
storeys, rather than the one usual in Gothic architecture, so as to better support the weight of a vaulted nave. In the case of Durham
Cathedral, flying buttresses have been employed, but are hidden inside the triforium gallery.

Arches and openings


The arches used in Romanesque architecture are nearly always semicircular, for openings
such as doors and windows, for vaults and for arcades. Wide doorways are usually surmounted by a
semi-circular arch, except where a door with a lintel is set into a large arched recess and
surmounted by a semi-circular "lunette" with decorative carving. These doors sometimes have a
carved central jamb.
Narrow doors and small windows might be surmounted by a solid stone lintel. Larger
openings are nearly always arched. A characteristic feature of Romanesque architecture, both
ecclesiastic and domestic, is the pairing of two arched windows or arcade openings, separated by a
pillar or colonette and often set within a larger arch. Ocular windows are common in Italy,
particularly in the facade gable and are also seen in Germany. Later Romanesque churches may have wheel windows or rose windows
with plate tracery.
There are a very small number of buildings in the Romanesque style, such as Autun Cathedral in France and Monreale Cathedral
in Sicily in which pointed arches have been used extensively, apparently for stylistic reasons. It is believed that in these cases there is a
direct imitation of Islamic architecture. At other late Romanesque churches such as Durham Cathedral, and Cefalù Cathedral, the
pointed arch was introduced as a structural device in ribbed vaulting. Its increasing application was fundamental to the development of
Gothic architecture.
Arcades
An arcade is a row of arches, supported on piers or columns. They occur in the interior of large churches, separating the nave
from the aisles, and in large secular interiors spaces, such as the great hall of a castle, supporting the timbers of a roof or upper floor.
Arcades also occur in cloisters and atriums, enclosing an open space.
Arcades can occur in storey or stages. While the arcade of a cloister is typically of a single stage, the arcade that divides the nave
and aisles in a church is typically of two stages, with a third stage of window openings known as the clerestory rising above them.
Arcading on a large scale generally fulfils a structural purpose, but it is also used, generally on a smaller scale, as a decorative feature,
both internally and externally where it is frequently "blind arcading" with only a wall or a narrow passage behind it.

Piers
In Romanesque architecture, piers were often employed to support arches. They were built of masonry and square or rectangular
in section, generally having a horizontal molding representing a capital at the springing of the arch. Sometimes piers have vertical
shafts attached to them, and may also have horizontal moldings at the level of the base.
Although basically rectangular, piers can often be of highly complex form, with half-segments of large hollow-core columns on
the inner surface supporting the arch, or a clustered group of smaller shafts leading into the moldings of the arch. Piers that occur at
the intersection of two large arches, such as those under the crossing of the nave and transept, are
commonly cruciform in shape, each arch having its own supporting rectangular pier at right angles to
the other.

Columns
Columns are an important structural feature of Romanesque architecture. Colonnettes and
attached shafts are also used structurally and for decoration. Monolithic columns cut from a single
piece of stone were frequently used in Italy, as they had been in Roman and Early Christian architecture. They were also used,
particularly in Germany, when they alternated between more massive piers. Arcades of columns cut from single pieces are also
common in structures that do not bear massive weights of masonry, such as cloisters, where they are sometimes paired.

Salvaged columns
In Italy, during this period, a great number of antique Roman columns were salvaged and reused in the interiors and on the
porticos of churches. The most durable of these columns are of marble and have the stone horizontally bedded. The majority are
vertically bedded and are sometimes of a variety of colors. They may have retained their original Roman capitals, generally of the
Corinthian or Roman Composite style. Some buildings, like Santa Maria in Cosmedin (illustrated above) and the atrium at San
Clemente in Rome, may have an odd assortment of columns in which large capitals are placed on short columns and small capitals are
placed on taller columns to even the height. Architectural compromises of this type are seen where materials have been salvaged from
a number of buildings. Salvaged columns were also used to a lesser extent in France.

Drum columns
In most parts of Europe, Romanesque columns were massive, as they supported thick upper walls with small windows, and
sometimes heavy vaults. The most common method of construction was to build them out of stone cylinders called drums, as in the
crypt at Speyer Cathedral.

Hollow core columns


Where really massive columns were called for, such as those at Durham Cathedral, they were constructed of ashlars masonry and
the hollow core was filled with rubble. These huge unhampered columns are sometimes ornamented with incised decorations.

Alternation
A common characteristic of Romanesque buildings, occurring both in churches and in the arcades that separate large interior spaces of
castles, is the alternation of piers and columns.
The most simple form that this takes is to have a column between each adjoining pier. Sometimes the columns are in multiples of
two or three. At St. Michael's, Hildesheim, an A B B A alternation occurs in the nave while an A B A alternation can be seen in the
transepts.
At Jumièges there are tall drum columns between piers each of which has a half-column supporting the arch. There are many
variations on this theme, most notably at Durham Cathedral where the moldings and shafts of the piers are of exceptional richness and
the huge masonry columns are deeply incised with geometric patterns.
Often the arrangement was made more complex by the complexity of the piers themselves, so that it was not piers and columns
that alternated, but rather, piers of entirely different form from each other, such as those of Sant' Ambrogio, Milan, where the nature of
the vault dictated that the alternate piers bore a great deal more weight than the intermediate ones and are thus very much larger.
Capitals
The foliate Corinthian style provided the inspiration for many Romanesque
capitals, and the accuracy with which they were carved depended very much on the
availability of original models, those in Italian churches such as Pisa Cathedral or church
of Sant'Alessandro in Lucca and southern France being much closer to the Classical than
those in England.
The Corinthian capital is essentially round at the bottom where it sits on a circular
column and square at the top, where it supports the wall or arch. This form of capital was
maintained in the general proportions and outline of the Romanesque capital. This was
achieved most simply by cutting a rectangular block and taking the four lower corners
off at an angle so that the block was square at the top, but octagonal at the bottom, as can
be seen at St. Michael's Hildesheim.bThis shape lent itself to a wide variety of
superficial treatments, sometimes foliate in imitation of the source, but often figurative. In Northern Europe the foliate capitals
generally bear far more resemblance to the intricacies of manuscript illumination than to Classical sources. In parts of France and Italy
there are strong links to the pierced capitals of Byzantine architecture. It is in the figurative capitals that the greatest originality is
shown. While some are dependent on manuscripts illustrations of Biblical scenes and depictions of beasts and monsters, others are
lively scenes of the legends of local saints.
The capitals, while retaining the form of a square top and a round bottom, were often compressed into little more than a bulging
cushion-shape. This is particularly the case on large masonry columns, or on large columns that alternate with piers as at Durham.
Vaults and roofs
The majority of buildings have wooden roofs, generally of a simple truss, tie beam or king post
form. In the case of trussed rafter roofs, they are sometimes lined with wooden ceilings in three
sections like those that survive at Ely and Peterborough cathedrals in England. In churches, typically
the aisles are vaulted, but the nave is roofed with timber, as is the case at both Peterborough and Ely.
In Italy where open wooden roofs are common, and tie beams frequently occur in conjunction with
vaults, the timbers have often been decorated as at San Miniato al Monte, Florence.
Vaults of stone or brick took on several different forms and showed marked development during
the period, evolving into the pointed ribbed arch characteristic of Gothic architecture.
Barrel vault
The simplest type of vaulted roof is the barrel vault in which a single arched surface extends from wall to wall, the length of the
space to be vaulted, for example, the nave of a church. An important example, which retains Medieval paintings, is the vault of Saint-
Savin-sur-Gartempe, France, of the early 12th century. However, the barrel vault generally required the support of solid walls, or walls
in which the windows were very small.
Groin vault
Groin vaults occur in early Romanesque buildings, notably at Speyer Cathedral where the high vault of about 1060 is the first
employment in Romanesque architecture of this type of vault for a wide nave. In later buildings employing ribbed vaulting, groin
vaults are most frequently used for the less visible and smaller vaults, particularly in crypts and aisles. A groin vault is almost always
square in plan and is constructed of two barrel vaults intersecting at right angles. Unlike a ribbed vault, the entire arch is a structural
member. Groin vaults are frequently separated by transverse arched ribs of low profile as at Speyer and Santiago de Compostela. At
Sainte Marie Madeleine, Vézelay, the ribs are square in section, strongly projecting and polychrome.
Ribbed vault
Ribbed vaults came into general use in the 12th century. In ribbed vaults, not only are there ribs spanning the vaulted area
transversely, but each vaulted bay has diagonal ribs, following the same course as the groins in a groin vault. However, whereas in a
groin vault, the vault itself is the structural member, in a ribbed vault, it is the ribs that are the structural members, and the spaces
between them can be filled with lighter, non-structural material.
Because Romanesque arches are nearly always semi-circular, the structural and design problem inherent in the ribbed vault is
that the diagonal span is larger and therefore higher than the transverse span. The Romanesque builders used a number of solutions to
this problem. One was to have the centre point where the diagonal ribs met as the highest point, with the infill of all the surfaces
sloping upwards towards it, in a domical manner. This solution was employed in Italy at San Michele, Pavia, and Sant' Ambrogio,
Milan.
The solution employed in England was to stilt the transverse ribs, maintaining a horizontal central line to the roof like that of a
barrel vault. The diagonal ribs could also be depressed, a solution used on the sexpartite vaults at both the Saint-Étienne, (Abbaye-aux-
Hommes) and Sainte-Trinité, (Abbaye-les-Dames) at Caen, France, in the late 11th and early 12th centuries.
Pointed arched vault
The problems encountered in the structure and appearance of vaults was solved late in the Romanesque period with the
introduction of pointed arched ribs which allowed the height of both diagonal and transverse ribs to be varied in proportion to each
other. Pointed ribs made their first appearance in the transverse ribs of the vaults at Durham Cathedral in northern England, dating
from 1128. Durham is a cathedral of massive Romanesque proportions and appearance, yet its builders introduced several structural
features that were new to architectural design and were later to be hallmark features of the Gothic. Another Gothic structural feature
employed at Durham is the flying buttress. However, these are hidden beneath the roofs of the aisles. The earliest pointed vault in
France is that of the narthex of La Madeleine, Vézelay, dating from 1130. They were subsequently employed with the development of
the Gothic style at the east end of the Basilica of St Denis in Paris in 1140. An early ribbed vault in the Romanesque architecture of
Sicily is that of the chancel at the Cathedral of Cefalù.
Domes
Domes in Romanesque architecture are generally found within crossing towers at the
intersection of a church's nave and transept, which conceal the domes externally. Called a
Tiburon, this tower-like structure often has a blind arcade near the roof. Romanesque
domes are typically octagonal in plan and use corner squinches to translate a square bay
into a suitable octagonal base. Octagonal cloister vaults appear "in connection with
basilicas almost throughout Europe" between 1050 and 1100. The precise form differs from
region to region.

Romanesque castles, houses and other buildings


The Romanesque period was a time of great development in the design and
construction of defensive architecture. After churches and the monastic buildings with
which they are often associated, castles are the most numerous type of building of the
period. While most are in ruins through the action of war and politics, others, like
William the Conqueror's White Tower within the Tower of London have remained
almost intact.
In some regions, particularly Germany, large palaces were built for rulers and
bishops. Local lords built great halls in the countryside, while rich merchants built
grand town houses. In Italy, city councils constructed town halls, while wealthy cities
of Northern Europe protected their trading interests with warehouses and commercial
premises. All over Europe, dwellers of the town and country built houses to live in, some of which, sturdily constructed in stone, have
remained to this day with sufficient of their form and details intact to give a picture of the style of domestic architecture that was in
fashion at the time.
Examples of all these types of buildings can be found scattered across Europe, sometimes as isolated survivals like the two
merchants' houses on opposite sides of Steep Hill in Lincoln, England, and sometimes giving form to a whole medieval city like San
Gimignano in Tuscany, Italy. These buildings are the subject of a separate article.

Romanesque Revival
During the 19th century, when Gothic Revival architecture was fashionable, buildings
were occasionally designed in the Romanesque style. There are a number of Romanesque
Revival churches, dating from as early as the 1830s and continuing into the 20th century
where the massive and "brutal" quality of the Romanesque style was appreciated and designed
in brick.
The Natural History Museum, London, designed by Alfred Waterhouse, 1879, on the
other hand, is a Romanesque revival building that makes full use of the decorative potential of
Romanesque arcading and architectural sculpture. The Romanesque appearance has been
achieved while freely adapting an overall style to suit the function of the building. The columns of the foyer, for example, give an
impression of incised geometric design similar to those of Durham Cathedral. However, the sources of the incised patterns are the
trunks of palms, cycads and tropical tree ferns. The animal motifs, of which there are many, include rare and exotic species.
The type of modern buildings for which the Romanesque style was most frequently adapted was the warehouse, where a lack of
large windows and an appearance of great strength and stability were desirable features. These buildings, generally of brick, frequently
have flattened buttresses rising to wide arches at the upper levels after the manner of some Italian Romanesque facades. This style was
adapted to suit commercial buildings by opening the spaces between the arches into large windows, the brick walls becoming a shell
to a building that was essentially of modern steel-frame construction, the architect Henry Hobson Richardson giving his name to the
style, Richardsonian Romanesque. Good examples of the style are Marshall Field's Wholesale Store, Chicago, by H.H. Richardson,
1885, and the Chadwick Lead Works in Boston, USA, by William Preston, 1887. The style also lent itself to the building of cloth
mills, steelworks and power stations.

ABRA VALLEY COLLEGES


COLLEGE OF ENGINEERNG AND ARCHITECTURE

RESEARCH TITLE:

ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE
&
ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTS

ARCH. DARIO BALLACILLO REYNOLD T. PACURZA


INSTRUCTOR STUDENT

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