Romanesque architecture is an architectural style
of
Medieval Europe, characterised by
semi-circular arches, and evolving into the
Gothic style, characterised by pointed
arches, beginning in the 12th century. Although there is no
consensus for the beginning date of the style, with proposals
ranging from the 6th to the 10th centuries, examples can be found
across the continent, making Romanesque architecture the first
pan-European architectural style since
Imperial Roman Architecture. The
Romanesque style in England is more traditionally referred to as
Norman architecture.
Combining features of Western Roman and
Byzantine buildings, Romanesque architecture is
known by its massive quality, its thick walls, round arches, sturdy
piers, groin vaults, large towers and decorative arcading. Each
building has clearly defined forms and they are frequently of very
regular, symmetrical plan so that 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.
Definition
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
languages (first cited 1715). Architecturally, the term was
first applied in French by the archaeologist
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 term is now
used for the more restricted period from the late 10th to the 12th
century. 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.
The term
"Pre-romanesque"
is sometimes applied to architecture in Germany of the Carolingian and Ottonian periods and Visigothic,
Mozarab and Asturian constuctions 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 monastery of
Cluny
.
History
Origins
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 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, while in Scandinavia they were unknown. There was little
continuity, even in Rome, where several great
Constantinian basilicas continued to stand as an inspiration to
later builders.
It was not the buildings of ancient Rome, but
the 6th century octagonal Byzantine Basilica of San
Vitale
in Ravenna
which was to
inspire the greatest building of the Dark
Ages in Western Europe, the
Emperor Charlemagne’s Palatine Chapel in Aachen,
Germany
, built around the year AD 800.
Dating
shortly after Aachen
Cathedral
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 which is 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

The Cathedral of Saint-Front,
Perigueux, France, has five domes like Byzantine churches, but is
Romanesque in construction.
Charlemagne was crowned by the Pope in St. Peter's
Basilica
on Christmas Day in the year AD 800, with an aim to
re-establishing the old Western
Roman Empire. Charlemagne’s political successors
continued to rule much of Europe, with a gradual emergence of the
separate political states which 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 which 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
Western 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 which 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.
Religion
Across Europe, the late 11th and 12th centuries saw an
unprecedented growth in the number of churches. A great number of
these buildings, both large and small, remain.
They include many
very well-known churches such as Santa Maria in Cosmedin
in Rome, the Baptistery in Florence
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
. In England, of the 27 cathedrals of ancient
foundation, all were begun in this period with the exception of
Salisbury, where the monks relocated from 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 Romanesque Abbey of Sénanque,
France, is surrounded by monastic buildings of various dates.
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. In association with
the
Crusades, the military orders of the
Knights Hospitallers and the
Knights Templars were
founded.
The monasteries, which sometimes also functioned as cathedrals, and
the cathedrals which 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 1088–1130, 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 the western extremity of Galicia
(present day Spain) became the most important
pilgrimage destination 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.
Piers
In Romanesque architecture,
pier
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 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 mouldings 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 structure 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 colours. 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 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 ashlar masonry and the
hollow core was filled with rubble. These huge untapered
columns are sometimes ornamented with incised decorations.
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 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 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.
Alternation
A common characteristic of Romanesque buildings, occurring 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 are 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.
At
Jumieges
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 mouldings and shafts of the piers are of
exceptional richness and the huge masonry columns are each deeply
incised with a different geometric pattern.
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.
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.
.jpg/180px-Nivelles_JPG00_(13).jpg)
The interior of St Gertrude, Nivelles,
Belgium, has a king post roof.
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 which 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 which is 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.

Bayeux Cathedral, the crypt has groin
vaults and simplified Corinthian capitals.
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 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 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 La Madeleine, Vézelay
, 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, 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 infil 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 a that of a barrel vault.
The latter solution was used on the
sexpartite vaults at both the Saint-Etienne, the Abbaye-aux-Hommes
and Abbaye-aux-Dames
at Caen, France, in the late 11th and early 12th
centuries.
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. 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.
Church and cathedral plan and section

The abbey church of Fongombault
displays a cruciform plan, round chancel, apsidal chapels and high
nave with lower aisles.
Many parish churches, abbey churches and cathedrals are in the
Romanesque style, or were originally built in the Romanesque style
and have subsequently undergone changes.The simplest Romanesque
churches are aisless halls with a projecting apse at the chancel
end, or sometimes, particularly in England, a projecting
rectangular chancel with a chancel arch that might be decorated
with mouldings. More ambitious churches have aisles separated from
the nave by arcades.
Abbey and cathedral churches generally follow the
Latin Cross plan. In England, the extension
eastward may be long, while in Italy it is often short or
non-existent, the church being of T plan, sometimes with apses on
the transept ends as well as to the east. In France the church of
St Front, Perigueux, appears to have been modelled on
St. Mark's Basilica, Venice or
another Byzantine church and is of a
Greek
cross plan with five domes.
In the same region, Angoulême
Cathedral
is an aisless church of the Latin cross plan, more
usual in France, but is also roofed with domes.

The south transept of Winchester
Cathedral is in 3 stages.
In Germany, Romanesque churches are often of distinctive form,
having apses at both east and west ends, the main entrance being
central to one side. It is probable that this form came about to
accommodate a baptistery at the west end.
In section, the typical aisled church or cathedral has a nave with
a single aisle on either side. The nave and aisles are separated by
an arcade carried on piers or on columns. The roof of the aisle and
the outer walls help to buttress the upper walls and vault of the
nave, if present. Above the aisle roof are a row of windows known
as the clerestory, which give light to the nave. During the
Romanesque period there was a development from this two-stage
elevation to a three-stage elevation in which there is a gallery,
known as a
triforium, between the arcade and the
clerestory. This varies from a simple blind arcade decorating the
walls, to a narrow arcaded passage, to a fully-developed second
story with a row of windows lighting the gallery.
Church and cathedral east ends
The eastern end of a Romanesque church is almost always
semi-circular, with either a high chancel surrounded by an
ambulatory as in France, or a square end from which an apse
projects as in Germany and Italy. Where square ends exist in
English churches, they are probably influenced by
Anglo Saxon churches. Peterborough
and Norwich Cathedrals have retained round east ends in the French
style. However, in France, simple churches without apses and with
no decorative features were built by the
Cistercians who also founded many houses in
England, frequently in remote areas.
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.
Church and cathedral facades and external decoration
Romanesque church facades, generally to the west end of the
building, are usually symmetrical, have a large central portal made
significant by its mouldings or porch and an arrangement of
arched-topped windows. In Italy there is often a single central
ocular window. The common decorative feature is arcading.
Smaller churches often have a single tower which is usually placed
to the western end, in France or England, either centrally or to
one side, while larger churches and cathedrals often have
two.
In
France, Saint-Etienne, Caen
presents the model of a large French Romanesque
facade. It is a symmetrical arrangement of nave flanked by
two tall towers each with two buttress of low flat profile which
divide the facade into three vertical units. The three horizontal
stages are marked by a large door set within an arch in each of the
three vertical sections. The wider central section has two tiers of
three identical windows, while in the outer tiers there are two
tiers of single windows, giving emphasis to the mass of the towers.
The towers rise through three tiers, the lowest of tall blind
arcading, the next of arcading pierced by two narrow windows and
the third of two large windows, divided into two lights by a
colonette.
This facade can be seen as the foundation for many other buildings,
including both French and English Gothic churches. While the form
is typical of northern France, its various components were common
to many Romanesque churches of the period across Europe.
Similar
facades are found in Portugal
. In England, Southwell Cathedral
has maintained this form, despite the insertion of
a huge Gothic window between the towers. Lincoln
and Durham
must once have looked like this.
In
Germany, the Limburg
Cathedral
has a rich variety of openings and arcades in
horizontal storeys of varying heights.

San Miniato al Monte, Florence,
presents of polychrome marble facade favoured in Tuscany.
The
churches of San Zeno Maggiore,
Verona and San
Michele, Pavia
present two types of facade that are typical of
Italian Romanesque, that which reveals the architectural form of
the building, and that which screens it. At San Zeno, the
components of nave and aisles are made clear by the vertical shafts
which rise to the level of the central gable and by the varying
roof levels.
At San Miniato al Monte
the definition of the architectural parts is made
even clearer by the polychrome marble, a
feature of many Italian Medieval facades, particularly in
Tuscany.At San Michele the vertical definition is present as
at San Zeno, but the rooflines are screened behind a single large
gable decorated with stepped arcading.
At Santa Maria della
Pieve, Arezzo
, this
screening is carried even further, as the roofline is horizontal
and the arcading rises in many different levels while the
colonettes which support them have a great diversity of
decoration.
Towers
Towers were an important feature of Romanesque churches and a great
number of them are still standing. They take a variety of forms,
square, circular and octagonal, and are positioned differently in
relation to the church in different countries. In northern France,
two large towers, such as those at Caen, were to become an integral
part of the facade of any large abbey or cathedral. In central and
southern France this is more variable and large churches may have
one tower or a central tower. Large churches of Spain and Portugal
usually have two towers.
Many abbeys of France, such as that at Cluny, had many towers of
varied forms.
This is also common in Germany, where the
apses were sometimes framed with circular towers and the crossing
surmounted by an octagonal tower as at Worms Cathedral
. Large paired towers of square plan could
also occur on the transept ends, such as those at Tournai
Cathedral
in Belgium. In Germany, where four towers frequently
occur, they often have spires which may be four or eight sided, or
the distinctive Rhenish helm shape seen on the cathedrals
of Limburg
or Speyer
.
In England, for large abbeys and cathedral buildings, three towers
were favoured, with the central tower being the tallest. This was
often not achieved, through the slow process of the building
stages, and in many cases the upper parts of the tower were not
completed until centuries later as at Durham and Lincoln.
Large
Norman towers exist at the cathedrals of Durham, Exeter
, Southwell
and Norwich
.

At Sant Climent de Taüll, Vall de
Bohí, the tower has an increasing size in the windows at each
level, typical also of Italian and German towers.
pic Núria
Pueyo
In Italy towers are almost always free standing and the position is
often dictated by the landform of the site, rather than aesthetics.
This is the case in nearly all Italian churches both large and
small, except in Sicily where a number of churches were founded by
the Norman rulers and are more French in appearance.
As a general rule, large Romanesque towers are square with corner
buttresses of low profile, rising without diminishing through the
various stages. Towers are usually marked into clearly defined
stages by horizontal courses.
As the towers rise, the number and size of
openings increases as can be seen on the right tower of the
transept of Tournai
Cathedral
where two narrow slits in the fourth level from the
top becomes a single window, then two windows, then three windows
at the uppermost level. This sort of arrangement is
particularly noticeable on the towers of Italian churches, which
are usually built of brick and may have no other ornament.
Two fine
examples occur at Lucca
, at the
church of San Frediano
and at the Duomo
. It is also seen in Spain.
In Italy,
there are a number of large free-standing towers which are
circular, the most famous of these being the Leaning
Tower of Pisa
. In other countries where circular towers
occur, such as Germany, they are usually paired and often flank an
apse. Circular towers are uncommon in England, but occur throughout
the Early Medieval period in Ireland.
Octagonal
towers were often used on crossings and occur in France, Germany,
Spain and Italy where an example that is unusual for its height is
that on the crossing of Sant' Antonio, Piacenza
, 1140.
In Spain, in the 12th century, a feature is the polygonal towers at
the crossing. These have ribbed vaults and are elaborately
decorated, such as the "Torre del Gallo" at Salamanca Old
Cathedral.
Decoration
Architectural embellishment
Arcading is the single most significant decorative feature of
Romanesque architecture.
It occurs in a variety of forms, from the
Lombard band which is a row of small
arches that appear to support a roofline or course, to shallow
blind arcading often a feature of English architecture and seen in
great variety at Ely
Cathedral
, to the
open dwarf gallery, first used at Speyer Cathedral
and widely adopted in Italy as seen on both
Pisa Cathedral and its famous
Leaning Tower. Arcades could be
used to great effect, both externally and internally, as
exemplified by the church of Santa Maria della Pieve, in Arezzo.
Architectural sculpture
The Romanesque period produced a profusion of sculptural
ornamentation. This most frequently took a purely geometric form
and was particularly applied to mouldings, both straight courses
and the curved moldings of arches. In La Madeleine, Vezelay, for
example, the polychrome ribs of the vault are all edged with narrow
filets of pierced stone. Similar decoration occurs around the
arches of the nave and along the horizontal course separating
arcade and clerestory. Combined with the pierced carving of the
capitals, this gives a delicacy and refinement to the
interior.
In
England, such decoration could be discrete, as at Hereford
and Peterborough cathedrals, or have a sense of
massive energy as at Durham where the diagonal ribs of the vaults
are all outlined with chevron,
the mouldings of the nave arcade are carved with several layers of
the same and the huge columns are deeply incised with a variety of
geometric patterns creating an impression of directional
movement. These features combine to create one of the
richest and most dynamic interiors of the Romanesque period.
Although much sculptural ornament was sometimes applied to the
interiors of churches, the focus of such decoration was generally
the west front, and in particular, the portals. Chevrons and other
geometric ornaments, referred to by 19th century writers as
"barbaric ornament" are most frequently found on the mouldings of
the central door. Stylized foliage often appears, sometimes deeply
carved and curling outward after the manner of the acanthus leaves
on
Corinthian capitals, but also
carved in shallow relief and spiral patterns, imitating the
intricacies of manuscript illuminations.
In general, the style
of ornament was more classical in Italy, such as that seen around
the door of Sant Giusto in Lucca
, and more
"barbaric" in England, Germany and Scandinavia, such as that seen
at Speyer
Cathedral
. France produced a great range of ornament,
with particularly fine interwoven and spiralling vines in the
"manuscript" style occurring at Saint-Sernin
, Toulouse.
Figurative sculpture
With the fall of the Roman Empire, the tradition of carving large
works in stone and sculpting figures in bronze died out, as it
effectively did (for religious reasons) in the Byzantine world.
Some life-size sculpture was evidently done in
stucco or plaster, but surviving examples are
understandably rare. The best-known surviving large sculptural work
of Proto-Romanesque Europe is the life-size wooden Crucifix
commissioned by Archbishop Gero of Cologne in about 960–65. During
the 11th and 12th centuries, figurative sculpture flourished. It
was based on two other sources in particular, manuscript
illumination and small-scale sculpture in ivory and metal.
The
extensive friezes sculpted on Armenian
and Syriac churches are have been proposed as
another likely influence. These sources together produced a
distinct style which can be recognised across Europe, although the
most spectacular sculptural projects are concentrated in
South-Western France, Northern Spain and Italy.
Images that occurred in metalwork were frequently embossed. The
resultant surface had two main planes and details that were usually
incised. This treatment was adapted to stone carving and is seen
particularly in the
tympanum
above the portal, where the imagery of
Christ in Majesty with the symbols of the
Four Evangelists is drawn directly
from the gilt covers of medieval
Gospel
Books. This style of doorway occurs in many places and
continued into the Gothic period.
A rare survival in England is that of the
"Prior's Door" at Ely
Cathedral
.
In
South-Western France, many have survived, with impressive examples
at Saint-Pierre, Moissac
, Souillac
, and La Madaleine, Vézelay
– all daughter houses of Cluny, with extensive
other sculpture remaining in cloisters and other buildings.
Nearby,
Autun
Cathedral
has a
Last Judgement of great rarity in
that it has uniquely been signed by its creator,
Giselbertus.

A Capital from Seu Vella, Lleida,
Spain, showing spiral and paired motifs.
A feature of the figures in manuscript illumination is that they
often occupy confined spaces and are contorted to fit. The custom
of artists to make the figure fit the available space lent itself
to a facility in designing figures to ornament door posts and
lintels and other such architectural surfaces. The robes of painted
figures were commonly treated in a flat and decorative style that
bore little resemblance to the weight and fall of actual cloth.
This feature was also adapted for sculpture.
Among the many
examples that exist, one of the finest is the figure of the
Prophet Jeremiah from the pillar
of the portal of the Abbey of Saint-Pierre, Moissac
, France, from about 1130.
One of the most significant motifs of Romanesque design, occurring
in both figurative and non-figurative sculpture is the spiral. One
of the sources may be
Ionic capitals.
Scrolling
vines were a common motif of both Byzantine and Roman design, and
may be seen in mosaic on the vaults of the 4th century Church of
Santa
Costanza
,
Rome. Manuscripts and architectural carvings of the 12th
century have very similar scrolling vine motifs.
Another source of the spiral is clearly the
illuminated manuscripts of the 7th to
9th centuries, particularly
Irish
manuscripts such as the
St.
Gall Gospel Book, spread into Europe by the
Hiberno-Scottish mission. In these
illuminations the use of the spiral has nothing to do with vines or
other natural growth. The motif is abstract and mathematical. It is
in an adaptation of this form that the spiral occurs in the
draperies of both sculpture and
stained
glass windows.
Of all the many examples that occur on
Romanesque portals, one of the most outstanding is that of the
central figure of Christ at La Madaleine, Vezelay
. Another influence from
Insular art are engaged and entwined animals,
often used to superb effect in capitals (as at Silos) and sometimes
on a column itself (as at Moissac).

Schoengrabern Church, Austria, is
decorated with naif figures, here representing Adam being
approached by an angry angel.
Many of the smaller sculptural works, particularly capitals, are
Biblical in subject and include scenes of
Creation and the
Fall of Man, episodes from the life of Christ
and those
Old Testament scenes which
prefigure his
Death and
Resurrection, such as
Jonah
and the Whale and
Daniel in the Lions'
Den. Many
Nativity
scenes occur, the theme of the
Three
Kings being particularly popular.
The cloisters of
Santo
Domingo de Silos Abbey
in Northern Spain, and Moissac
are fine examples surviving complete.
A feature of some Romanesque churches is the extensive sculptural
scheme which covers the area surrounding the portal or, in some
case, much of the facade.
Angouleme Cathedral
in France has a highly elaborate scheme of
sculpture set within the broad niches created by the arcading of
the facade. In Spain, an elaborate pictorial scheme in low
relief surrounds the door of the church of Santa Maria at Ripoll.

Around the upper wall of the chancel
at the Abbaye d'Arthous, Landes, France, are small figures
depicting lust, intemperance and a Barbary ape, symbol of human
depravity.
pic P Charpiat
The purpose of the sculptural schemes was to convey a message that
the Christian believer should recognise their wrong-doings, repent
and be redeemed. The
Last Judgement
reminds the believer to repent. The carved or painted
Crucifix, displayed prominently within the church,
reminded the sinner of their redemption. The sculpture which
reminded the sinners of their sins often took alarming forms. These
sculptures, not being of Christ, were usually not large and are
rarely magnificent, but are often fearsome or simply entertaining
in nature.
These are the works that frequently decorate the smaller
architectural features. They are found on capitals, corbels and
bosses, or entwined in the foliage on door mouldings. They
represent the
Seven Deadly Sins
but often take forms that are not easily recognisable today. Lust,
gluttony and avarice are probably the most frequently represented.
The
appearance of many figures with oversized genitals can clearly be
equated with carnal sin, but so also can the numerous figures shown
with protruding tongues, which are a feature of the doorway of
Lincoln
Cathedral
. Pulling ones beard was a symbol of
masturbation, and pulling ones mouth wide open was also a sign of
lewdity. A common theme found on capitals of this period is a
tongue poker or beard stroker being beaten by his wife or seized by
demons. Demons fighting over the soul of a wrongdoer such as a
miser is another popular subject.

Pórtico da Gloria, Santiago.
The colouring once common to much Romanesque sculpture has
been preserved.
Gothic architecture is usually
considered to begin with the design of the choir at the Abbey of
Saint-Denis
, north of Paris, by the Abbot Suger, consecrated 1144.
The
beginning of Gothic sculpture is usually dated a little later, with
the carving of the figures around the Royal Portal at Chartres
Cathedral
, France, 1150–55. The style of sculpture
spread rapidly from Chartres, overtaking the new Gothic
architecture. In fact, many churches of the late Romanesque period
post-date the building at Saint-Denis. The sculptural style based
more upon observation and naturalism than on formalised design
developed rapidly. It is thought that one reason for the rapid
development of naturalistic form was a growing awareness of
Classical remains in places where they were most numerous and a
deliberate imitation of their style. The consequence is that there
are doorways which are Romanesque in form, and yet show a
naturalism associated with Early Gothic sculpture.
One of
these is the Pórtico da Gloria dating from 1180, at
Santiago de
Compostela
. This portal is internal and is particularly
well preserved, even retaining colour on the figures and indicating
the gaudy appearance of much architectural decoration which is now
perceived as monochrome. Around the doorway are figures who are
integrated with the colonnettes that make the mouldings of the
doors. They are three dimensional, but slightly flattened. They are
highly individualised, not only in appearance but also expression
and bear quite strong resemblance to those around the north porch
of the Abbey of St. Denis, dating from 1170. Beneath the tympanum
there is a realistically carved row of figures playing a range of
different and easily identifiable musical instruments.

Fresco from Church of St. Clement, now
in Museo de Arte de Cataluña.
Murals
The large wall surfaces and plain, curving vaults of the Romanesque
period lent themselves to mural decoration. Unfortunately, many of
these early wall paintings have been destroyed by damp or the walls
have been replastered and painted over. In England, France and the
Netherlands such pictures were systematically destroyed in bouts of
Reformation iconoclasm. In other countries they have suffered
from war, neglect and changing fashion.
A classic scheme for the full painted decoration of a church,
derived from earlier examples often in
mosaic, had, as its focal point in the
semi-dome of the apse,
Christ in Majesty or Christ the Redeemer
enthroned within a
mandorla and framed by
the four winged beasts, symbols of the
Four Evangelists, comparing directly with
examples from the gilt covers or the illuminations of
Gospel Books of the period. If the
Virgin Mary was the dedicatee of the church, she
might replace Christ here. On the apse walls below would be saints
and apostles, perhaps including narrative scenes, for example of
the saint to whom the church was dedicated. On the sanctuary arch
were figures of apostles, prophets or the twenty-four "
elders of the Apocalypse", looking in towards
a bust of Christ, or his symbol the Lamb, at the top of the arch.
The north wall of the nave would contain narrative scenes from the
Old Testament, and the south wall from the New Testament. On the
rear west wall would be a
Last
Judgement, with an enthroned and judging Christ at the top.
One of
the most intact schemes to exist is that at Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe
in France. The long barrel vault of the nave
provides an excellent surface for fresco, and is decorated with
scenes of the
Old Testament, showing
the
Creation, the
Fall of Man and other stories including
a lively depiction of
Noah's Ark complete
with a fearsome figurehead and numerous windows through with can be
seen the Noah and his family on the upper deck, birds on the middle
deck, while on the lower are the pairs of animals. Another scene
shows with great vigour the swamping of Pharaoh's army by the Red
Sea. The scheme extends to other parts of the church, with the
martyrdom of the local saints shown in the crypt, and
Apocalypse in the narthex and
Christ in Majesty. The range of colours
employed is limited to light blue-green, yellow ochre, reddish
brown and black. Similar paintings exist in Serbia, Spain, Germany,
Italy and elsewhere in France.

Stained glass, the Prophet Daniel from
Augsburg Cathedral, late 11th century.
Stained glass
The oldest-known fragments of medieval pictorial stained glass
appear to date from the 10th century. The earliest intact figures
are five prophet windows at Augsburg, dating from the late 11th
century. The figures, though stiff and formalised, demonstrate
considerable proficiency in design, both pictorially and in the
functional use of the glass, indicating that their maker was well
accustomed to the medium. At Canterbury and Chartres Cathedrals, a
number of panels of the 12th century have survived, including, at
Canterbury, a figure of Adam digging, and another of his son Seth
from a series of
Ancestors of
Christ. Adam represents a highly naturalistic and lively
portrayal, while in the figure of Seth, the robes have been used to
great decorative effect, similar to the best stone carving of the
period.
Most of the magnificent stained glass of France, including the
famous windows of Chartres, date from the 13th century. Far fewer
large windows remain intact from the 12th century. One such is the
Crucifixion of Poitiers, a remarkable composition which rises
through three stages, the lowest with a quatrefoil depicting the
Martyrdom of St Peter, the largest central stage dominated by the
crucifixion and the upper stage showing the
Ascension of Christ in a mandorla. The
figure of the crucified Chirst is already showing the Gothic curve.
The window is described by George Seddon as being of "unforgettable
beauty".
Transitional style
During the 12th century, features that were to become typical of
Gothic architecture began to
appear. It is not uncommon, for example, for a part of building
that has been constructed over a lengthy period extending into the
12th century, to have very similar arcading of both semi-circular
and pointed shape, or windows that are identical in height and
width, but in which the later ones are pointed.
This can be seen on
the towers of Tournai
Cathedral
and on the western towers and facade at Ely Cathedral
. Other variations that appear to hover
between Romanesque and Gothic occur, such as the facade designed by
Abbot Suger at the Abbey of Saint-Denis
which retains much that is Romanesque in its appearance, and the
Facade of Laon
Cathedral
which,
despite its Gothic form, has round arches.

The facade of Laon Cathedral, 1225,
maintains rounded arches and arcading in the Romanesque
manner.
Romanesque influence
Paris and
its surrounding area were quick to adopt the Gothic style of Abbot
Suger Abbey of
Saint-Denis
in the 12th century but other parts of France were
slower to take it up, and provincial churches continued to be built
in the heavy manner and rubble stone of the Romanesque, even when
the openings were treated with the fashionable pointed
arch.
In England, the Romanesque groundplan, which in that country
commonly had a very long nave, continued to affect the style of
building of cathedrals and those large abbey churches which were
also to become cathedrals in the 16th century. Despite the fact
that English cathedrals were rebuilt in many stages, substantial
areas of Norman building can be seen in many of them, particularly
in the nave arcades.
In the case of Winchester
Cathedral
, the Gothic arches were literally carved out of the
existent Norman piers.
In Italy,
although many churches such as Florence Cathedral
and Santa Maria Novella
were built in the Gothic style, sturdy columns with
capitals of a modified Corinthian form continued to be used.
The pointed vault was utilised where convenient, but it is commonly
interspersed with semicircular arches and vaults wherever they
conveniently fit. The facades of Gothic churches in Italy are not
always easily distinguishable from the Romanesque.
Germany
was not quick to adopt the Gothic style, and when it did so, often
the buildings were modelled very directly upon French cathedrals,
as Cologne
Cathedral
was modelled on Amiens. The smaller churches
and abbeys continued to be constructed in a more provincial
Romanesque manner, the date only being registered by the pointed
window openings.
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 which 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,
Richardson Romanesque.
Good examples of the
style are Marshall Fields 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 powerstations.
Notes and references
- Bannister Fletcher, A History of Architecture on the
Comparative Method’’.
- Jean Hubert, Romanesque Art.
- Helen Gardner, Art through the Ages’’.
- George Holmes, ed. The Oxford History of Medieval
Europe.
- "In the years that followed the year 1000, we witnessed the
rebuilding of churches all over the universe, but especially in
Italy and Gaul." Chronicle of Raoul Glaber, quoted by Jean Hubert,
Romanesque Art.
- famous for the ancient Roman "Mouth of Truth" set into the wall
of its narthex
- famous for the 15th century Ghiberti Doors
- traditionally the marriage place of Romeo and
Juliet
- John Harvey, English Cathedrals
- Alec Clifton-Taylor, The Cathedrals of England
- Rolf Toman, Romanesque.
- Rene Hyughe, Larousse Encyclopedia of Byzantine and
Medieval Art
- This technique was also used in the Classical world, notably at
the Parthenon.
- Nikolaus Pevsner, An Outline of European
Architecture
- F.H.Crossley, The English Abbey.
- Alec Clifton-Taylor says "With the Cathedral of Durham we reach
the incomparable masterpiece of Romanesque architecture not only in
England but anywhere."
- Some (probably) 9th century near life-size stucco figures were
discovered behind a wall in Santa Maria in Valle, Cividale del
Friuli in Northern Italy relatively recently. Atroshenko and
Collins p. 142
- See details at Cologne Cathedral.
- V.I. Atroshenko and Judith Collins, The Origins of the
Romanesque,p. 144–50, Lund Humphries, London, 1985, ISBN
085331487X
- James Hall, A History of Ideas and Images in Italian
Art, p154, 1983, John Murray, London, ISBN 0719539714
- George Seddon in Lee, Seddon and Stephens, Stained
Glass
- Wim Swaan, Gothic Cathedrals
Bibliography
- V.I. Atroshenko and Judith Collins, The Origins of the
Romanesque, Lund Humphries, London, 1985, ISBN 085331487X
- Rolf Toman, Romanesque, Könemann, (1997), ISBN
3-89508-447-6
- Banister Fletcher, A
History of Architecture on the Comparative method (2001).
Elsevier Science & Technology. ISBN 0-7506-2267-9.
- Helen Gardner;
Fred S. Kleiner, Christin J. Mamiya, Gardner's Art through the
Ages. Thomson Wadsworth, (2004) ISBN 0-15-505090-7.
- George Holmes, editor, The Oxford Illustrated History of
Medieval Europe, Oxford University Press, (1992) ISBN
0-19-820073-0
- René Huyghe, Larousse Encyclopedia of Byzantine and
Medieval Art, Paul Hamlyn, (1958)
- Francois Ischer, Building the Great Cathedrals. Harry
N. Abrams, (1998). ISBN 0-8109-4017-5.
- Nikolaus Pevsner, An
Outline of European Architecture. Pelican Books (1964)
- John Beckwith, Early Medieval Art, Thames and Hudson,
(1964)
- Peter Kidson, The Medieval World, Paul Hamlyn,
(1967)
- T. Francis Bumpus, , The Cathedrals and Churches of
Belgium, T. Werner Laurie. (1928)
- Alec Clifton-Taylor, The Cathedrals of England, Thames
and Hudson (1967)
- John Harvey, English
Cathedrals, Batsford (1961).
See also
External links