Romanesque Architecture: WESTERN EUROPE (800 - 1200 AD)
Romanesque Architecture: WESTERN EUROPE (800 - 1200 AD)
Romanesque Architecture: WESTERN EUROPE (800 - 1200 AD)
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EUROPE DURING FALL OF WESTERN ROMAN EMPIRE (476 AD)
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FALL OF WESTERN ROMAN EMPIRE & IT'S EFFECT ON WESTERN
EUROPE
• Beginning of Middle Ages or Medieval Period in Europe (5th to 15th Century Broadly)
• Disruption of trade- merchants faced frequent invasions, their businesses collapsed and Europe’s cities were
destroyed and abandoned as economic and political centers
• Population shifts - the population of Western Europe became more rural in nature as Roman
centers of trade collapsed. Nobles retreated to rural areas and the cities were left without
strong leadership. Other city dwellers moved to rural areas to grow their own food.
• Breakdown of infrastructure- roads, drainage systems etc. and loss of the knowledge of Art &
Architecture
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RISE OF FEUDALISM AS A PARALLEL SOCIO-POLITICAL SYSTEM
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RISE OF ABBEYS IN RURAL AREAS
Monastery / Abbey
[Originally for Monks who desired seclusion from [Later, with increasing power & popularity, they
world & their followers who desired to learn their became rural power centres]
way of life]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbey
EMPEROR OF REUNITED ROME : RISE OF CHARLEMAGNE (800 AD)
Vs
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbey
EUROPE UNDER CHARLEMAGNE & THE EXPANDING SARASENIC
EMPIRES
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CHARLEMAGNE, THE NEW EMPEROR & THE 1ST MEDIEVAL
RENAISSANCE
• The new Emperor wanted to restore as many Roman ruins as he could, and following the same
Architectural style was his way of validating himself as the Emperor.
• Initially, during 8th & 9th century A.D., majority of the structures commissioned was of religious
kind, like Abbey, Chapel or Baptistry. In areas which were directly experiencing feudal system,
Castles were built, to protect the wealthy at the time of peace, and everybody around during war
and violence.
• In 10th century, it was believed that the world will come to an end. So all Architectural undertakings
were aborted. Later, after 1000 AD, it re-emerged in full vigour.
• Apart from religious activities, Catholic Churches invested in'Knights', or professional soldiers
who were entrusted with the duty of Holy Crusade.
ABOVE : HIGH
DIAGONAL RIBS OF
FRANCE &
GERMANY & LEVEL
DIAGONAL RIBS OF
ENGLAND
“The Roman system of plain cross vaulting...began to be superseded by the "groin-rib" type
LEFT : INITIALLY,
of vaulting, in which a framework of ribs supported vaulting surfaces of thinner stone, GROIN STONES
known as "severies," or " in-filling." This method introduced a new principle in vaulting, viz., WERE USED TO
designing the profile of the groin ribs and leaving the form of the vaulting surfaces to adapt CONSTRUCT THE
themselves to them ; whereas in Roman architecture the vaulting surface was first settled, PROFILE OF GROIN
and the profile of the groins followed as a matter of course.” VAULTS WITHOUT
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ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : REGIONAL VARIATION
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_regional_characteristics_of_Romanesque_churches
ITALIAN ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : Pisa Cathedral Complex
“ Genoa, Pisa, and Amalfi sent merchant fleets to the ports of the Holy Land for the Eastern Fair at Jerusalem,
and thus were brought in contact with Eastern art. At the commencement of the eleventh century, Pisa, the rival
of Venice and Genoa, was the great commercial and naval power in the Mediterranean, and took the lead in- the
wars against 'the infidels', defeating the Saracens in A.D. 1025, 1030, and 1089 at Tunis.”
ITALIAN ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : Pisa Cathedral Complex
Pisa Cathedral (A.D. 1063-1092)
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ITALIAN ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : Pisa Cathedral Complex
Campanile or Leaning Tower, Pisa (A.D. 1072)
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ITALIAN ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : Pisa Cathedral Complex
Baptistery, Pisa (A.D. 1153-1278)
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suomo-taken-from-tower-of-pisa-italy.html
FRENCH ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : Angoulim Cathedral
FRENCH ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : Angoulim Cathedral
FRENCH ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : Cathedral of Saint-Pierre, Angoulim
• Constructed between 1120-1128 AD. Alterations were made between 1866-1885 AD, including addition
of two towers of conical top, while the highly ornamented facade remains mostly unchanged.
• It had a long aisleless nave with transepts with lateral chapels and an apsidal choir with four chapels,
forming a Latin cross on plan.
• The nave is covered with four stone domes. Over the crossing there is a larger dome over pendentives,
which has replaced the original one destroyed in 1568. The dome has a stone lantern on top.
• Both transepts were originally crowned with towers, but the southern one was destroyed in 1568.
https://structurae.net/structures/angouleme-cathedral
GERMAN ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : Worms Cathedral
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wormser_Dom
GERMAN ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : Worms Cathedral
• The Cathedral is 110 m long, and 27 m wide. The transepts, near the west end, extend to 36 m (inner
measurements). The height in the nave is 26 m and the interior height of the domes are 40 m.
• A central tower is located on the crossing, another over the western choir. Both choirs are flanked by two
round staircase towers. The nave is vaulted in various ways: the central aisle has rib vaulting, while the
side aisles have groin vaults.
• The apse of the west choir takes the form of an octagon and is decorated with various rosette windows.
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ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE : KEY FEATURES
• Small churches are generally aiseless, with a projecting apse, while Cathedrals are basilical with a
nave flanked by aisles and divided by an arcade.
• Bell-towers, both attached and detached, were often present in the churches, indicating the increasing
confidence and dominance of the Catholic religion.
• Massive walls & Piers were contructed to take the load from the Ribs of Vaulted Ceilings.
• Buttresses of shallow projection were introduced to take up the lateral thrusts from the walls.
(Developed as both structural and ornamental element in Gothic period)
• In later Romanesque, the decorative features in both interior and exterior of the buildings became
prevalent.