Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word “Romanesque”, meaning ‘’descended from
Roman”, was first used in English to designate what are now called Romance language.
Architecturally, the term was first applied in French by the archaelogist Charles de Gerville or his
associate Arcisse de Caumont, in the early 19th century, to describe Western European
architecture from the 5th to the 13th centuries, at a time when the actual dates of many of the
buildings so described had not been ascertained.
The word was used to describe the style which 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
Romanesque is related to a style of European architecture containing both Roman and
Byzantine elements, prevalent especially in the 11th and 12th centuries and characterized by
massive walls, round arches, and relativelt simple ornamentations..
Romanesque architecture was the first distinctive style to spread across Europe since the
Roman Empire. Despite the impression of 19th century Art historians that Romanesque
South transept of Tournai Cathedral,
Belgium, 12th century architecture was .a continuation of the
Roman, in fact, Roman building techniques in
brick and stone were largely lost in most
parts of Europe, and in the more northern
countries had never been adopted except for
official buildings.
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 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 dresses stone.
First Romanesque is also called as Lombard Romanesque. It took place in the Lombardy (Northern
Italy), in the regions of Girona, Lleida and Huesca (the Spanish Mark), and in the south of France.
ARCHITECTURAL CHARACTERISTICS
Walls
The walls of Romanesque buildings are often of massive
thickness with few and comparatively small openings. Sant’ Ambrogio, Milan is constructed of
They are often double shells, filled with rublble. bricks
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 San Vittore alle Chiuse, Genga Italy of
extensive use of limestone, granite and flint. undressed stone, has a typically
The building stone was often used in comparatively small fortress-like appearance
and irregular pieces, bedded in thick mortar.
Piers
In architecture, a pier is an upright support for a
superstructure, such as an arch or bridge. Sections of wall
between openings function as 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
moulding representing a capital at the springing of the
arch.
Sometimes piers have vertical shafts attached to them,
and may also have horizontal mouldings at the level of
base.
Although basically rectangular, piers can often be highly
complex form, with half-segments of large hollow-core
columns on the inner surface supporting the arch.
Mainz Cathedral, Germany, has possibly
Piers that occur at the intersection of two large arches,
the earliest exmaple of an internal
such as those under the crossing of the nave and transept,
elevation of 3 stages.
are commonly cruciform in shape, each arch having its
own supporting rectangular pier at right angles to the
other.
Columns
Columns are very important structural feature of
Romanesque architecture. Colonnetteds and attached
shafts are also used structurally and for decoration.
Monolithic columns cut from a single piece of stone were Romanesque columns support the
frequently used in Italy, as they had been in Roman and figures of biblical kings and queens
Early Christian architecture. which flank the south side of the central
Arcades of columns cut from single pieces are also door of portal, Chartres Cathedral (1150
common in structure that do not bear massive weights of – 1175)
Romanesque Columns, Abbaye Le
masonry, such as cloisters, where they are sometimes Thoronet (2003)
paired.
ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE (500 – 1200 AD)
Savage 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. They may have retained their original Roman capitals,
generally of the Corinthian Or Roman Composite style.
Some buildings, like 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 thich 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.
Capital
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,
thoses in Italian churches such as Pisa Cathedral 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 cube 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.
This shaped 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 beastes 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 Cathedral.
Alternation
A common characteristics of Romanesque buildings, occuring both in churches and in the
arcades which 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 ar in multiples of two or three. At St. Michael’s Hildesheim, an ABBA
alternation occurs in the nave while an ABA alternation can be seen in the transepts.
There are many variations on this theme, most notably at Durham Cathedral where the
mouldings 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 that the intermediate ones and are thus very much
larger.
ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE (500 – 1200 AD)
ARCHES AND OPENINGS
Arches in Romanesque architecture are semicircular, with the exception of a very
small number of buildings such as Autun Cathedral in France and Monreale Cathedral
in Sicily in both of which pointed arches have been used extensively. It is believed that
in these cases there is a direct imitation of Islamic architecture.
While small windows might be surmounted by a solid stone lintel, larger windows are
nearly always arched. Doorways are also surmounted by a semi-circular arch, except
where the door is set into a large arched recess and surmounted by a semi-circular
“lunette” with decorative carving.
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. However, the barrel vault generally required the support of soild walls, or
walls in which the windows were very small.
Groin Vault
Groin vault occur in early Romanesque buildings, notably at Speyer Cathedral where
the high vault of about 1060 inches is the first emplyment in Romanesque architecture
of this type of vault for a wide nave. In later buildings employing ribbed vaultings, 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
The interior of St. Gertrude, Nivelles, Belgium, has a
intersecting at right angles. Unlike a ribbed vault, the entire arch is a structural
king post roof
member. Groin vaults are frequently separated by transverse arched ribs of low profile
as at Speyer and Santiago de Compostela. A La Madeleine, Vezelay, the ribs are
square in section, strongly projecting and polychrome.
Ribbed Vault
In ribbed vaults, not only are there ribs spanning the vaulted area transversely, but each vaulted bay has diagonal ribs. In a ribbed vault, the
ribs are the structural members, andthe 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.
Another solution was to stilt the transverse ribs, or depress the diagonal ribs so that the centreline of the vault was horizontal, like that of a
barrel vault. The llater solution was used on the sexpartite vaults at both the Saint-Etienne, the Abbaye-aux-Hommes
ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE (500 – 1200 AD)
Pointed arched vault
Late in the Romanesque period another solution came into use for regulating the height
of diagonal and transverse ribs. This was to use arches of the same diameter for both
horizontal and transverse ribs, causing the transverse ribs to meet at a point. This is seen
most notably 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 which were new to architectural design and were to
later to be hallmark features of the Gothic.
However, these are hidden beneath the roofs of the aisles. The earliest pointed vault in
France is that of the narthex La Madeleine, Vezelay, dating from 1130.
BUTTRESSES
Because of the massive nature of Romanesque walls, buttresses are not a highly
significantly 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-bbarrel 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.