Romanesque Architecture Samples
Romanesque Architecture Samples
The Church
Religion
The Monastery
The Fortified Town
Why Romanesque?
The Castle
Materials
Time and Place
Period: 1000-1200 AD
Place: Western Europe
The Decline of Rome and the
beginning of the Dark Ages
Rome was occupied by ‘barbarians’ in 476. The
Roman Empire in the West had already come to an
end in A.D. 475.
Franks – France
Burgundians-Burgundy
Lombards-Lombardy
Goths/Visigoths-Gothic
Vandals-”vandalism”
Medieval society:
Landowning lords and knights
Peasants and laborers
Monks and priests
HISTORY AND SOCIETY
Charlemagne
Feudalism
The Pilgrimage
The Crusades
The election of the first Frankish
King Charlemagne (A.D. 799)
as Holy Roman Emperor
marks the beginning of a new
era.
The Romanesque period saw the introduction of the system of feudal tenure,
or the holding of land on condition of military service
The pilgrim route to
Santiago de Compostela
Santiago de Compostela, 1078
Many pilgrims who were unable to take on the huge prospect of a visit to the Holy
Land would instead travel to Rome, home of the worldwide Roman Catholic
Church, or Santiago de Compostella in Spain, where the shrine of St James was
housed.
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.
On these much-restored
Dwarf Galleries encircle Speyer mouldings around the portal
Cathedral. of Lincoln Cathedral are formal
chevron ornament, tongue-
poking monsters, vines and
figures, and symmetrical
motifs in the Byzantine style.
Tympanum and Historiated Capitals
A Capital from Seu Vella,
Lleida, Spain, showing spiral
The tympanum of Vézelay and paired motifs.
Abbey, Burgundy, France,
1130s, has much decorative
spiral detail in the draperies
Doorways with a tympanum
Also called Romanesque Portal. They were later decorated and the space
between the doorhead and the inner arch was filled by a stone slab called a
TYMPANIUM which acted as the focal point of the ornament.
St. Trophime
Groin vaults and Underground Crypts
Segmented Arch
~a shallow arch; an arch that is less
than a semicircle
THE ROUND ARCH
Stilted Arch
~An arch whose curve begins above the
impost line.
Horseshoe Arch
~also called the Moorish arch and
the Keyhole arch
Romanesque Historiated or figured capital: A
capital which is decorated with
Capitals figures of animals, birds, or
humans, used either alone or
combined with foliage. The figures
need not have any meaning,
Block, cushion, or cubic capital: A although they may be symbolic or
simple cube-like capital with bottom part of a narrative sequence.
corners tapered. The block capital is Historiated capitals were most
particularly characteristic of commonly used in the Romanesque
Ottonian and Romanesque from the late eleventh to mid-
twelfth centuries.
architecture in Germany and
England.
ROMANESQUE BUILDING
TYPES
Churches
Monasteries
Castles
Fortified Towns
CHURCHES
San Antonino, Piacenza (A.D. 1104) San Ambrogio, Milan (A.D. 1140)
Romanesque, North Italy
La Martorana, Palermo
(A.D. 1129-1143)
Worms Cathedral
(A.D. 1110–1200)
Laach Abbey
(A.D. 1093-1156)
Worms Cathedral
(A.D. 1110–1200)
GERMAN ROMANESQUE
Lubeck Cathedral Treves Cathedral
(A.D. 1173) (A.D. 1016–47)
Plans
A defensive wall is
a fortification used to defend a city
or settlement from potential
aggressors.
Fortified Town
Monterriggioni, 13th C Sienna
In the heart of Tuscany, in the southwest corner of the Chianti region, Monteriggioni
castle was built in the second decade of the thirteenth century by the Republic of
Siena. Its original purpose was as a defensive outpost against Siena’s rival,
Florence.
The Carcassonne, France 1226AD