Romanesque
Romanesque
Romanesque
LECTURE 7
Romanasque Architecture
Abhishek K. Venkitaraman
Assistant Professor
OUTLINE
• SETTING (HISTORY OF SOCIETY)
• RELIGION
• “ROMANESQUE”
• MATERIALS
• CHARACTERISTICS
• ARCHES, COLUMNS, PLANS
• BUILDING TYPES and EXAMPLES
• CRUSADES
SETTING
WHY “ROMANESQUE”?
• Romanesque = “Roman- like”
• This style grew in those countries of Western
Europe which had been under the rule of
Rome.
• With the church as the unifying force, this
period was devoted to the glorification of
Christianity and the church was the
predominant building type.
H I S T O RY
GEOGRAPHICAL INFUENCE
Romanesque Architecture is the combination of Roman and
Byzantine Architecture basically roman in style. They grew in
the countries under the roman rule.
GEOLOGICAL INFLUENCE
The most common material used for construction were stone,
brick marble or terra cotta, as well as ready-made columns
and features from the old Roman buildings.
CLIMACTIC INFLUENCE
Northern Portion -- Dull climate contributed to the use of:
a. Large windows to admit light.
b. high pitch roof to throw off rain and snow
Southern Portion:
a. Small windows to minimize sun shading.
d. Flat roof
RELIGIOUS INFLUENCE
Christianity resulted into erection of a church. Papacy
had great power and influence.
SOCIAL AND POLITICAL INFLUENCE
Establishment of “Feudal System”, Landlord built “castle”
to separate them and protect them from the peasants. This
castle was made with man-made canals.
HISTORICAL INFLUENCE
The style emerging in Western Europe based on Roman
and Byzantine elements last until the Advent of Gothic
Architecture in the Mid-12th Century.
Expansion
Monasteries Castles
Churches
Construction Techniques
The Romanesque style of the tenth to the twelfth centuries was remarkable for the tentative
use of a new construction principle; the deliberate articulation of structure in which each
construction part played a designed role in establishing equilibrium.
The general character of the Romanesque style is sober and dignified, while formal massing
depends on the grouping of towers and projection of transepts and choir.
The character depends on the employment of vaulting, based initially on Roman methods.
Roman cross-vaults were used throughout Europe till the beginning of the twelfth century, but
they were heavy and difficult to construct and were gradually superseded by rib and panel’
vaulting, in which a framework of ribs supported thin stone panels. The new method
considered in designing the profile of the transverse, longitudinal and diagonal ribs to which
the form of the panels was adapted.
Church
• Type of covers:
Barrel vault: it was
used mainly to cover
the central nave
http://list25.com/25-inspiring-works-romanesque-architecture/
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