Building across East and West: Byzantine & Romanesque architecture Flashcards
1
Q
SantʹApollinare Nuovo
Ravenna, Italy
490
A
- Codification of Early Christian architectural norms
- System of columns supporting arches
- Religious icognography - rich and decorative entablature of sorts
- Impost blocks - creates rhythmic transition between columsn and arches
- Flat ceiling
- Clerestory windows
- Bare apse
2
Q
San Vitale
Ravenna,
Italy, 526 ‐ 548
A
- Commissioned by Emperor Justinian
- Attempt to claim eternal life
- Amalgamation of political and religious iconography
- Arches, niches and dome
- Undulating effect, eye constantly moves around thr space
- Double shell octagon, surrounded by ambulatory and gallery
- Justinian depicted in the apse - only Priest allowed
- Offering bread, body of Christ
- Sacred figure
3
Q
Palatine Chapel
Aachen, Germany
c. 790‐805
A
- Series of niches and arches in the gallery similar to San Vitale
- Heavy masonry in comparison
- Solid, composite piers
- Roman-like arches, drag eye back to the ground
- More Germanic
- San Vitale is ‘lighter’
- Richer in decoration
- Galleries almost curve outwards from the wall
4
Q
Imperial Cathedral
(Dom St. Maria und St. Stephan),
Speyer, Germany
1030‐61
A
- Employment of height - conveys sense of reaching up to the heavens
- Through Roman arch, groin vaulted ceiling
- **Many ways transition between Romanesque and Gothic
- Use of engaged columns, span upwards
- Use of light
- Differing materials - heavier masonry
5
Q
Ste Foy
Conques, France
1050‐1130
A
- Barrel vaulted nave
- Arches arranged along the side aisles
- Important pilgrimage site
- Uses the chevet plan
- Pilgrims enter from Western portal, circumambulate to Eastern end
- Then circulate around the ambulatory + crossing
- Scene of the last judgement in the tympanum