Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture
Churches
Plan: basilican plan
Façade:
• arcades all over façade
• wheel window
• central projecting porch, with columns on crouching beasts
Structural: rib and panel vaulting - framework of ribs support thin stone panels
Ornament:
• character was less refined due to use of stone and brick, instead of marble
• roughly-carved grotesque figures of men and beasts (shows northern European
influence)
ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE: North Italy
Remarkable for richly decorated church façade and graceful cloisters, and
for the use of old Roman architectural features which seems to have
acquired a fresh significance.
Cathedrals
Plans:
• cruciform plan
• semi-circular east end, as an ambulatory with radiating chapels
• nave and 2-storeyed aisles
Example:
St. Sernin, Toulouse
• cruciform, with nave double aisles and transepts
• round arch barrel vault on nave
ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE: Germany
Also known as Central Europe
Exhibits continuous combination of Carolingan tradition and Lombard influence
Cathedrals
Examples:
Aix-la-Chapelle (Aachen) Cathedral
• built by emperor Charlemagne as his tomb house
• polygon of sixteen sides, 32 m in diameter
• dome on top, 14.5 m in diameter
Church of the Apostles, Cologne
• trefoil apses
Worms Cathedral
• eastern and western apses and octagons
• 2 circular towers flank each
• octagon at crossing, with pointed roof
ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE
Spain, Portugal and Holy Land
Spain and Portugal The Holy Land
Features: 1. Religious
Buildings
• use of both basilican
and Greek-cross forms 2. Military
Buildings
• use of horseshoe arch
a. Pilgrim Forts
Structures:
b. Coastal
1. Religious Buildings Fortifications
2. Military Buildings c. Strategic
a. castles Inland Castles
b. city walls Santiago de Compostela