Romanesque architecture was the first great architectural style developed in the Middle Ages in Europe after the decline of the Greco-Roman civilization. Its consolidation occurred around 1060, although the beginnings vary depending on the region: some authors place them between the century and century. Two phases are fundamentally distinguished: the first Romanesque (or Lombard/early Romanesque) and the second Romanesque (or high/mature Romanesque). Starting in the 19th century, Gothic architecture gradually replaced it.
The rise of monastic life, spiritual and moral aspirations, together with the importance of pilgrimage routes, favored the dissemination of Romanesque art in a Europe that had recovered a certain stability. Factors such as the ecclesiastical reform movement, the crusades, the reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula after the fall of the Caliphate of Córdoba, as well as the progressive disappearance of royal and princely patronage, contributed to making it a style common to much of medieval Christianity.
Romanesque architecture spread from northern Spain to Ireland, Scotland and the southern half of Scandinavia. It was also widely disseminated in Central and Eastern Europe (Poland, Bohemia, Moravia, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia), in Italy and its islands, and in regions under the influence of the Catholic Church. Among the first notable Romanesque centers (around the year 1000) are Catalonia, Lombardy, Burgundy, Normandy, the Lower Rhine Valley, Upper Rhineland and Lower Saxony. It was later consolidated in regions such as Westphalia, Tuscany, Apulia, Provence and Aquitaine. In England, the introduction of the style was due to King Edward the Confessor, and after the Norman Conquest (1066), the so-called Anglo-Norman Romanesque was developed.
Although castles and fortresses were also built in this period, the greatest architectural production corresponded to churches, abbeys and monasteries, which became centers of economic and cultural revitalization. Among them, Cluny Abbey stood out, whose influence spread throughout the continent.[2] The Romanesque style was succeeded by Gothic architecture, which in many cases transformed or reconstructed Romanesque buildings, especially in prosperous areas such as England, northern France or Portugal. However, in rural regions such as southern France, northern Spain and parts of Italy, important Romanesque ensembles remain. The unfortified civil architecture of this period is preserved to a lesser extent, although it used the same formal resources adapted to a domestic scale.
Romanesque Architecture
Introduction
Romanesque architecture was the first great architectural style developed in the Middle Ages in Europe after the decline of the Greco-Roman civilization. Its consolidation occurred around 1060, although the beginnings vary depending on the region: some authors place them between the century and century. Two phases are fundamentally distinguished: the first Romanesque (or Lombard/early Romanesque) and the second Romanesque (or high/mature Romanesque). Starting in the 19th century, Gothic architecture gradually replaced it.
The rise of monastic life, spiritual and moral aspirations, together with the importance of pilgrimage routes, favored the dissemination of Romanesque art in a Europe that had recovered a certain stability. Factors such as the ecclesiastical reform movement, the crusades, the reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula after the fall of the Caliphate of Córdoba, as well as the progressive disappearance of royal and princely patronage, contributed to making it a style common to much of medieval Christianity.
Romanesque architecture spread from northern Spain to Ireland, Scotland and the southern half of Scandinavia. It was also widely disseminated in Central and Eastern Europe (Poland, Bohemia, Moravia, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia), in Italy and its islands, and in regions under the influence of the Catholic Church. Among the first notable Romanesque centers (around the year 1000) are Catalonia, Lombardy, Burgundy, Normandy, the Lower Rhine Valley, Upper Rhineland and Lower Saxony. It was later consolidated in regions such as Westphalia, Tuscany, Apulia, Provence and Aquitaine. In England, the introduction of the style was due to King Edward the Confessor, and after the Norman Conquest (1066), the so-called Anglo-Norman Romanesque was developed.
Although castles and fortresses were also built in this period, the greatest architectural production corresponded to churches, abbeys and monasteries, which became centers of economic and cultural revitalization. Among them, Cluny Abbey stood out, whose influence spread throughout the continent.[2] The Romanesque style was succeeded by Gothic architecture, which in many cases transformed or reconstructed Romanesque buildings, especially in prosperous areas such as England, northern France or Portugal. However, in rural regions such as southern France, northern Spain and parts of Italy, important Romanesque ensembles remain. The unfortified civil architecture of this period is preserved to a lesser extent, although it used the same formal resources adapted to a domestic scale.
From a technical point of view, the Romanesque marked the transition from the use of unhewn stone to carved stone and the development of the composite pillar and the consolidation of elements such as the harmonic façade, the heads with ambulatory, the half-barrel and groin vaults, in addition to the first tests with a ribbed vault. Its characteristic appearance includes thick walls with few openings, semicircular arches, robust pillars, massive towers and the use of Lombard bands as a decorative element. The capitals, often sculpted with plant, animal or symbolic motifs, constitute one of the richest sculptural manifestations of the style. The plan usually presents regular and symmetrical shapes, with a general image of solidity and simplicity compared to the later Gothic architecture. Its interiors are dark, which achieved the contemplation of the faithful.
The term "Romanesque art" appeared in France in 1818. In German historiography, it is considered the immediate heir of Ottonian art and the expression "full Romanesque" is reserved for its most developed phase. In England, it is traditionally known as "Norman architecture."
• - Large Romanesque monuments declared World Heritage Site.
• - Basilica of Saint-Remi, Reims, France (centuries).
• - Basilica of Vézelay (1120-1150), Burgundian Romanesque masterpiece.
• - Duomo of Modena (1099-1319), by Lanfranco "Lanfranco (architect)") and Wiligelmus, example of early Italian Romanesque.
• - Piazza dei Miracoli, Pisa: baptistery (1152-1363), cathedral (1063-1118) and leaning tower.
• - Speyer Cathedral (1030-1061), the largest preserved Romanesque cathedral.
• - Durham Cathedral (1093-1104), representative of the Norman Romanesque.
• - Church of San Clemente de Tahull, example of Catalan Romanesque with Lombard influence.
Origin and diffusion of the term Romanesque
The discovery of Romanesque art is related to the architect Philibert de l'Orme in the century who would have carried out some surveys[4] and to the historians of the and centuries. After the French Revolution, some Norman emigrants to England discovered some research—such as Anglo-Norman Antiquities published in 1767 and The Architectural Antiquities of Normands[5] by John Sell Cotman—and observed that English "antiquaries" called "Saxon" the architectural style that dominated in their country before its conquest by the Normans in 1066, and "Norman" style from the conquest until the end of the century. In France, scholars apply, for architectural works of this period, the names "normand"), "lombard"), "byzantin" sometimes preceded by the appellation "gothique" (in the initial pejorative sense of 'art of the Goths'), or the name of "gothique ancien". with his colleagues from the "Society of Antiquaries of Normandy" (founded in 1824)—Charles de Gerville (1769-1853), Auguste Le Prévost") and Arcisse de Caumont (1801-1873)—a "moving school of architectural specialists"[6] who wanted to reappropriate that Norman heritage.
The archaeologist and scholar Gerville, driven by the desire for unification and universal classification typical of the scholars of the 19th century, was looking for a common name. According to historiographic tradition,[7] in a letter of December 18, 1818 that he sent to Le Prévost, he had the happy idea of using the term roman to designate[8] Western Christian architecture from the reign of Charlemagne until the end of the century or the beginning of the century. He justified the choice on the one hand by an analogy with the langues romanes (Romance languages, which at that time began to be used to designate those languages that had broken off from Latin) and on the other to underline its supposed[9] affiliation with Roman architecture, erroneously establishing a relationship between the area of diffusion of that architecture and that of the Romance languages.[10].
Caumont, father of medieval archaeology, resumed and promoted its use in 1824 since he saw that in that architecture of the first centuries of the Middle Ages all the characteristics of Roman architecture appeared in a state of advanced degeneration. or "Neo-Greek"[12] and Romanesque architecture quickly replaced the then common appellations of Lombard, Saxon or Anglo-Norman, and was considered a first attempt at the artistic unification of Europe. Authors such as Victor Hugo, Stendhal or Mérimée and other writers of the Romantic generation imposed it in common use after 1860 since they sought to rehabilitate the Middle Ages and saw in Romanesque art a "dégénération" of Roman art due to the degradation of traditions and the collapse of ancient civilization, and they differentiated secular Gothic art "Secular (Catholic Church)"), characterized by its vertical impulse, from monastic Romanesque art, in which horizontality prevailed, and whose buildings had affinities with ancient art that exalted the power of the Roman Emperors.[13]
The terminological journey of the term "roman" in various European countries allows us to "confirm that the great diversity of the monumental landscape of the medieval West creates considerable epistemological gaps in the different regions, often characterized by a geographically limited vision and sometimes tinged with ideology." The terms romanisch, in Germany, Romanesque art, in Great Britain, arte romanesque, in Spain, arte romanica, in Italy, have been, as in France, "the object of various controversies in its own linguistic culture, before being definitively established in historiography."[14]
The study of the new architectural period followed the evolution of archeology and its limits, and went from a romantic and intuitive history of art to an early establishment of typologies. At first, Caumont and his friends defined three phases in the Romanesque period from the Roman decadence: from the century century to the century; from the end of the to the end of the century; and the century, in which the pointed arch replaced the semicircular arch, a capital difference in the shape of the arcades, which, together with others, established the distinctive character between Romanesque and Gothic architecture. Jules Quicherat") rightly restricted its meaning to the buildings of the 15th centuries.
After having defined the limits in time, Caumont sought to define common characteristics in space and outlined, in French territory, seven monumental regions defined in particular by the nature of the soil but also by differences in taste and skill that could only come from the schools. Quicherat, Viollet-le-Duc, Anthyme Saint-Paul and Auguste Choisy took up and completed the idea. In 1925, François Deshoulières in the Bulletin Monumental[16] proposed nine schools: Île-de-France and Campagne, Normandy, Lombardy-Rhineland, Lower Loire, South-West and Poitou, Auvergne, Burgundy, Provence and Languedoc. After the studies of Caumont, who had dated Romanesque architecture from the century to the century, the concept of Late Antiquity was created, which would go from the century to the century, ascribing Carolingian architecture to the High Middle Ages and analyzing the "century of the year one thousand" in comparison with the preceding era and no longer as a harbinger of the future.
In 1935, a Catalan architect Puig i Cadafalch (1867-1956) defined a "first Romanesque art" carried out by different peoples that spread across a large part of Europe before private schools were developed.[17][18] Pierre Francastel in 1942 redefined regional schools, replacing the term "first Romanesque art" with the "first Romanesque age" that incorporated the ideas of Jean Hubert&action=edit&redlink=1 "Jean Hubert (archaeologist) (not yet written)") and Marcel Durliat"). For Louis Grodecki"), there is a block of architecture with wooden carpentry roof structures, a kind of "first Romanesque art" of the North distinct and symmetrical that would be opposed to the "first southern Romanesque art".[19][20][21].
In 1951, the Benedictines of the abbey of Sainte-Marie de La Pierre-qui-Vire) founded the éditions Zodiaque") and the collection La nuit des temps, specialized in Romanesque art, which published 88 works on the entire Romanesque world between 1954 and 1999.
Difficulty of a precise definition
Any definition of Romanesque architecture is necessarily reductionist insofar as this architecture comprises achievements of a wide variety and was built over a long period. The term Romanesque is sometimes attributed to buildings whose dating is very uncertain, simply because they contain techniques or an atmosphere that appear Romanesque to the modern observer: barrel vaults, semicircular arches or historiated capitals, for example. But there are Romanesque buildings with wooden roofs and without vaulting, and in others the barrel vault is rather the exception compared to the slightly pointed arch; and also, many of the Romanesque capitals were not historiated.
For this reason, Romanesque architecture is defined with more subjective criteria, more or less well supported according to what one thinks one knows about the religious interpretations of those times. It could be said - even if this presentation does not apply well to the ascending character of the great Auvergne churches - that Romanesque architecture, particularly in the small buildings, gave the visitor the feeling of a certain massiveness that evokes more the shadow, the penumbra or that "deep light" of which the essayist Yves Bonnefoy spoke, than the luminous flights of the Gothic stained glass windows.
Another interpretation is that this architecture would not show an ancestry with a glorious purpose, but rather a "downward transcendence", in a cryptic and initiatory way to achieve an atmosphere of original mystery. In fact, the experience of light in the Christian church had already been decided since the construction of the first basilicas, but the push due to the choice of heavy stone vaults (which replaced wooden carpentry in large buildings or to escape fires from wooden trusses) forced the walls to be strengthened and narrow openings to be drilled: this "deep light" was, therefore, more of a technical restriction than a liturgical choice. Thus, during the second Romanesque period, different vaults (groin and ribbed) were created and reinforced with different counter-thrusts (semi-vaults of the stands) or reinforcements (buttresses), which allowed light to enter by drilling larger holes in the wall surfaces.[22].
Art historians, however, have tried to characterize Romanesque architecture by its modes of coverage (barrel and cross vaults, domes), by the types of supports (thick walls provided or not with arcades and generally pierced by small windows with semicircular finials, walls reinforced with pilasters attached on the inside or buttresses on the outside) and by its decorative grammar (repertoire of ovas, pearls, fretwork, palm trees and foliage, roses and acanthus leaves, Ionic and Corinthian capitals).[23].
Historical context
Contenido
Después de un período de investigación y desarrollo a veces tortuoso, los grandes componentes clásicos mediterráneos y paleocristianos se unieron definitivamente con las aportaciones germánicas al arte románico. La arquitectura románica encuentra sus fuentes en el arte prerrománico y, en particular, en el arte carolingio y se desarrolla en paralelo con la arquitectura otoniana. Esta gestación está en el centro del intento de organización germánica de los siglos al por los carolingios y los otonianos.
The Carolingian and Ottonian Empires
The history of Carolingian Europe begins with the rise of a well-known aristocratic family at the beginning of the century. This dynasty of the Carolingians reigned in Europe from the 750s to the end of the century and achieved, with the support of the pope, the near unity of the Christian West under Charlemagne (r. 768-814), crowned emperor in 800. The reconstitution of Western unity developed in three directions: to the southeast, in Italy; to the southwest, towards Spain; and to the east, in Germany. The Germanic and especially Saxon horizon attracted Charlemagne to the east. Above all, he was concerned about reestablishing the ancient Roman empire of which he would be the leader. After his death he was succeeded by his son Ludovico Pio (r. 813-840) and, upon his death, his sons and grandchildren of Charlemagne agreed in 843, in the Treaty of Verdun, to divide the Carolingian Empire into three regions: to the west, the Francia occidentalis of Charles the Bald (r. 843-877), crowned king in 848 in Orleans; to the east, the Francia orientalis of Louis the Germanicus (r. 843-876) and between the two, the Media France of Lothair I who retained the title of emperor (r. 817-855), and transmitted it to his eldest son Louis III (r. 876-882), and divided the rest of his empire: Lotharingia corresponded to Lothair II (r. 855-869) and Provence to Charles of Provence (r. 855-863). After the death of Charles the Fat (r. 881-887) in 888, there was a rapid breakdown of Carolingian unity. In Western France, royalty, which had once again become elective, alternated between Carolingian kings and kings of the family of Eudes, Count of Paris, hero of the defense of Paris against the Normans in 885-886. In Germania, the Carolingian dynasty died out in 911 with Louis the Child (r. -899-911) and the royal crown fell by election into the hands of Duke Conrad of Franconia. He passed it on to Henry I (r. 919-936) and his son Otto I (r. 936-973) founded an imperial line resuming Carolingian politics and with the help of the pope established the Holy Roman Empire.
The Christian religion adapted to its environment and became "barbarized", then England entered Christianity and Irish monks created links with the continent that pilgrims and merchants followed. The Rhine, the Scheldt and the Meuse were routes of penetration and the first Atlantic trade marked the beginning of a new era. It was especially Gaul north of the Loire that benefited from these exchanges.
The rise of monasticism was the great event of the century for Gaul and the entire West. Kings, bishops and aristocrats installed monks in their lands and protected them. The Lateran Church perfected the liturgy that became a model for the entire West. Long before an alliance was formed between the Carolingians and the papacy, the pope appeared as the greatest moral power in the West.
Grimoald, palace steward of Austrasia, founded monasteries and installed family and friends in them. He set a policy that all Carolingians will follow: own abbeys, have monks who pray for the family and help them in their enterprises.[24][25][26].
The Holy Roman Empire of the Ottonians was one of the consequences of the Treaty of Verdun in 843 where Louis the German received Eastern France which corresponded to the territory of Germania. The imperial title escaped him and was transmitted, losing its meaning until the year 924. Otto I, king of Saxony from the year 936, was victorious over the Hungarians and the Slavs, two of the many peoples who invaded the West in the second half of the century. He reconquered Italy and reestablished the power that Charlemagne had previously established over Rome. In 962 he was crowned emperor in Rome and founded the Holy Roman Empire, which he placed in the inheritance of Charlemagne, who in turn had placed himself in that of the defunct Roman Empire. Otto I thus resurrected an empire that he inherited to his son Otto II in 973. The latter married Theophano Skleraina, daughter of the emperor of Byzantium, to ally himself with the Eastern Empire. When he died, he was succeeded by his son, Otto III. Still young, his mother assumed the regency and thereby reaffirmed the Byzantine influence on Ottonian art. Influenced by Gerbert of Aurillac—future Pope Sylvester II (p. 992-1003)—the king dreamed of a universal empire whose capital would be Rome.
At the same time, the Church knew a strong hierarchical organization: reformist ideas marked the episcopate and monasticism, and the meteoric expansion of the abbeys was the perfect example of this. The Church played an important role in the council of princes and the material and spiritual role of monasticism was undeniable. The monuments, some true architectural feats, were part of the heritage of the Carolingian dynasty while integrating Byzantine influences. The monastic workshops became the origin of all Ottonian art: sculptures, paintings, metalwork, illuminations. The cult of relics grew and the crypts were placed at the same level as the nave. The composition of the buildings was modified, as well as the development of the liturgy. Great pilgrimages began to be organized.[27].
In the 19th century, the Germanic Empire was the main artistic center of the West. The emperor and the great ecclesiastics gave a decisive boost to architecture. Ottonian architecture was inspired by both Carolingian architecture and Byzantine architecture. In fact, these two architectural styles claimed to belong to the Roman Empire and were the closest examples of art dedicated to the sovereign. But it was Carolingian art that most influenced Ottonian architecture.[28].
The new Europe
Around the year 1000, the most striking sign of the emergence of Christianity was the famous phrase of the monk Raoul Glaber"), who spoke of the "white cloak of churches" that covered especially Gaul and Italy. This important construction movement played a vital role through its function as an economic stimulus, the development of tools, the hiring of labor, the financing and organization of construction works. It was the center of the first and almost only medieval industry.
This constructive activity that marked the beginning of the West was linked to demography, the end of invasions, the advancement of institutions that regulated periods of military activities and placed non-combatant populations under the protection of warriors. This growth was also linked to land which, in the Middle Ages, was the basis of everything and it was at that time that the ruling class became ruralized, becoming a class of large landowners where vassalage was accompanied by a benefit, most frequently land given to peasants in exchange for royalties and services. To fulfill these obligations, they improved their farming methods, which caused an agricultural revolution throughout the centuries and which was also an intense period of land clearing.
This internal expansion of Christianity was joined by a movement of external conquest with the advance of its borders in Europe and the crusades in Muslim countries. Poland, Denmark, Norway and Sweden became Christian. The Normans settled in southern Italy, took Sicily from the Muslims and expelled the Byzantines from Italy. The Spanish Reconquista was led by Christian kings helped by mercenaries, knights and French Cluniac monks who supported the growth of the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela and played a prominent role.[24].
Since its foundation, Cluny Abbey benefited from an exemption from which it depended only on Rome and escaped political power and the ecclesiastical hierarchy. He dedicated himself fully to his spiritual function and his success was immediate. At the end of the century, , of which 815 were in France, were affiliated with the abbey of Burgundy and ten thousand monks were under the authority of the same father abbot. The monasteries that wanted to be independent united in the same family. Other Reformed abbeys became leaders and the movement was so powerful that it brought popes such as Gregory VII, father of the Gregorian reform, to the throne.
This radical transformation of society gave rise to new needs. In many fiefdoms, lords built feudal mottes, towers that would become strong castles and ensured divine protection through donations to monasteries or created colleges of canons.[29].
• - Evolution of the West from the Carolingian to the Gothic period.
• - Year 810: time of Carolingian architecture.
• - Year 900: era of Carolingian and Ottonian architecture.
• - Year 1180: period of Romanesque architecture.
Romanesque eras
The development of the Romanesque style is mainly between the and centuries, although its chronology is not strict. There are earlier examples that show incipient features of the style - already from the century -, as well as later constructions that, despite being built in the Gothic era, maintain Romanesque characteristics, especially in regions such as Asturias and Galicia, reaching in some cases until the beginning of the Renaissance.
The most common classification distinguishes between full Romanesque or simple and transitional Romanesque. The latter is often considered a variant of the first, characterized by the introduction of pointed or pointed arches, but without the use of Gothic ribbed vaults. Although its first manifestations are documented in the 19th century, it did not become widespread until the middle of that century, coexisting for a time with the full Romanesque.
Another frequent distinction is based on the degree of ornamentation, differentiating between simple Romanesque and floral Romanesque (also called rebellious). During the first stage of the style, until well into the 20th century, constructions with a solid appearance, sober decoration and a certain rough character predominated. As the century progressed, a greater elaboration of façades and windows was observed, as well as a progressive refinement in the execution.
This second phase, corresponding approximately from the middle of the century to much of the century, is characterized by ornamental exuberance and great finesse in details. The distinction between both stages is useful to establish the relative chronology of Romanesque buildings within the same region or locality, although regional variations and the influences of different artistic schools prevent establishing a universal rule.
religious architecture
Early Christian and pre-Romanesque antecedents
The structural components of Romanesque architecture—the chevets, the western facades and spaces, the articulations of the nave with its modes of coverage and its supports, the transepts, the straight sections of the choir and the treatment of the exterior walls—are in germ in early Christian and pre-Romanesque architecture.
The evolution of the Romanesque chevet over the centuries is linked to the multiplication of altars for increasingly numerous priests. They were of two main types: with aligned or stepped apses on each side of the apse, and with apses radiating from an ambulatory. An early experimental solution is preserved in its century state in the Euphrasian Basilica in Poreč, where the three Early Christian altars and mosaics suggest their location in three hemicycles. Still in Croatia, but in Dalmatia, some tripartite heads also appear in the and centuries.
In the centuries and , the headboards of this type are present: in Mistail"), in Switzerland, around 800; or in the church of San Miguel de Escalada, in Spain, with three original altars from 913. In the decades close to the year 1000 the headboards with apsidioles aligned on each side of the apse are present in Catalonia in the monastery of Ripoll and in San Miguel de Cuixá; in Burgundy, in the church of Saint-Vorles"); in Chatillon-sur-Seine; and in Italy, in the Aosta cathedral. There are stepped apse heads in the abbey of Cluny II and in the priory of Perrecy-les-Forges, in Burgundy; in the abbey of Notre-Dame de Déols"), in the Berry "Berry (France)"); and in Bernay"), in Normandy. From 817, the individualization of the straight section of the Poreč choir seems to have become widespread in Inden-Kornelimünster") and then in Carolingian architecture.
The transept was known, without its exact function being known, since the century in Rome, as in the ancient Basilica of Saint Peter, in Saint John Lateran or in Saint Paul Outside the Walls. This function was already perfectly established at the beginning of the century in the church of St. Michael in Hildesheim, where it welcomed more altars arranged in the apsidioles. Between these two dates, in the Saint-Gall plan (around 820) altars are seen in an eastern transept, and around the year 1000, there is also a transept with apsidioles that house altars in the abbey of San Miguel de Cuixá.
The chevets with ambulatory that extend the side naves and that allow circulation to the mausoleums or relics without disturbing the celebrations were present in ancient early Christian Rome, in the basilicas of Saints Peter and Marcellin), in San Sebastian de las Catacombs, in Saint Agnes Outside the Walls and in Saint Lawrence Outside the Walls. They announce the first medieval chevet of Saint Michael of Hildesheim, from the beginning of the century. In the Carolingian era, the abbey of Saint-Germain in Auxerre and the church of Saint-Genest in Flavigny-sur-Ozerain") had already developed circulation on two levels serving the apsidioles. In the abbey of Saint-Jean-du-Mont de Thérouanne"), three radiant chapels inserted in the ambulatory announce at the beginning of the century the solution of the abbey of Saint Phillibert of Tournus.
The two-tiered heads are found in early Christian Africa in Benian"), Tipasa and Djemila and in Gaul in the centuries and in Saint-Laurent de Grenoble") with its trefoiled plan. The evolution went from the quadrangular chapels to those arranged in semicircles around 1020 in the collegiate church Saint-Aignan d'Orléans")[30] and in the cathedral of Chartres.[31].
• - Evolution of the first headers.
• - Euphrasian Basilica in Poreč.
• - Inden-Kornelimünster").
• - Abbey of San Miguel de Cuixá.
• - St. Michael's Church in Hildesheim.
• - Saint-Aignan de Orléans").
The characteristic appearance of the elevations of the Romanesque chevets is present in the early Christian architecture of the basilica of Saint Vitale in Ravenna and in the Carolingian architecture in the abbey of Saint Germain in Auxerre and in the church of Saint-Genest in Flavigny-sur-Ozerain. This pyramidal shape is reinforced when there is a tower in the transept crossing, as in the church of St. Michael in Hildesheim at the beginning of the 19th century. Carolingian westwerks or Ottonian westwerks of the type of Corvey Abbey are found in the abbey of Jumièges, in Normandy, at the beginning of the century and in Alsace, at the heart of the century, in the collegiate church of Saint-Michel-et-Saint-Gandolphe in Lautenbach, in the abbey of Saint-Étienne in Marmoutier and in the church of Sainte-Foy in Sélestat").[31].
• - Corvey Abbey.
• - Jumièges Abbey.
• - Lautenbach.
• - Abbey of Saint-Étienne de Marmoutier.
• - Sainte-Foy Church of Sélestat").
The time of experiences
From a few decades before the year 1000 - a time of which there are only vestiges or reports of excavations - and until the first quarter of the century, it was the time of experimentation. The evolutions appear in particular in the heads and in the vaulting systems, in the notions of span and rhythm provided by the attached columns and composite pillars, in the rigging and carved stone, in the development of the crypt-rooms. At the beginning of the century, Burgundy, the Loire Valley, Poitou, Auvergne and Catalonia were the most innovative regions where research was reserved for great achievements: the cathedral of Clermont-Ferrand, the collegiate churches of Saint-Aignan in Orléans") and Saint-Vorles"), in Chatillon-sur-Seine, the abbey churches of Saint Philip of Tournus, of Saint-Bénigne in Dijon, of Cluny II, of Saint Michael of Cuixá and of Saint Martin du Canigó, the convent priory of Fleury Abbey in Perrecy-les-Forges and the church of Saint-Généroux").
The needs that made the eastern part of the churches evolve were related to the number of priests, which were increasingly numerous, and to the routing of the faithful towards the relics, which had to be done without disturbing the liturgy. The first response consisted of multiplying the chapels by juxtaposing, on both sides of the axial apse, aligned apsidioles. It was the organization adopted in the abbey of San Miguel de Cuixá, in Roussillon "Roussillon (region)"), a construction begun in 956 and whose altar was consecrated in 975, and in Chatillon-sur-Seine, where the Saint-Vorles church is located), between 980 and 1016, with a plan that did not solve the problem of circulations. The head of stepped chapels was another solution sophisticated that was found at the beginning of the century in Normandy, in Bernay"), and in the priory of Perrecy-les-Forges, which depended on the abbey of Fleury, near Orleans.
The response to the problem of independent circulation of the faithful to access the relics involved the creation of an ambulatory around the choir that isolated the celebrations at the main altar and that allowed the distribution of radiant apses in which to arrange secondary altars. If the example of the cathedral of Clermont-Ferrand, which served as a model for the collegiate church Saint-Aignan d'Orléans") (1017-1029), is known only through excavations, its crypt is a sketch of that of the church of Saint Phillibert of Tournus consecrated in 1019, whose chancel is still partially preserved. It was built on a crypt of the same floor where the choir and apse are surrounded by an ambulatory that serves some quadrangular chapels.
The ambulatory with radiating chapels defined in Saint Phillibert of Tournus was not questioned in Romanesque architecture. Only the number and shape of the chapels, the visual passages between the ambulatory, the choir and the chapels or the proportions of the volumes that make up the chancel varied.
The fundamental creations, 1020-1060
In the second quarter of the century, factories under construction multiplied due to the impulse of the lords who endowed the monasteries and monks who created new priories and rural churches. Interesting buildings were built in Provence and Languedoc. This strong activity allowed architects to acquire a certain mastery and create a vocabulary of forms that contributed to defining and disseminating Romanesque architecture.
The headers.
The evolution of the chevets involved an increase in the openings arranged between the choir, the ambulatory and the chapels, which provided a certain lightness to the walls. A better harmony of the exterior volumes was also sought through the modulated superimposition of the elements.
The sections.
The cell section, so important in Romanesque architecture, was already perfectly defined in the crypt of the Saint-Etienne cathedral of Auxerre, dated between 1023 and 1035. The composite pillar had also replaced the column. The square core receives the deliveries of the edges of the vaults and the columns support the large arcades and the transverse arches that receive a main arch in the central part of the room.[41].
The western facades.
After the chancels, the architects became interested in the western facades of the churches. In the abbey of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire, Abbot Gauzlin, half-brother of King Robert the Pious, built a portico-tower capable of serving as a model to all Gaule. Traditional but ambitious in construction, this porch tower is built on an almost square plan with sides of about , with an area of two floors. The ground floor has a height of .
The ground floor is open on three sides by triple arches - the middle one being wider than the other two - and remains closed to the east by the nave wall itself. These semicircular arches with double projections rest on rectangular pillars, in the north and south, and cruciform, in the west. They are reinforced with a half column on each side and by powerful buttresses on the pillars of the two corners. To the east, the columns are supported by large projections thick enough to accommodate spiral staircases. On each side of the central door, high semicircular arches were connected. The porch is divided into nine sections covered with groin vaults in blocks separated by wide semicircular transverse arches.
The ground floor reproduces the divisions of the ground floor. The pillars are joined by wide semicircular beams that support the groin vaults, except for the eastern ones, which touch the wall of the nave, which are dome-shaped. In that eastern wall three semicircular arch niches are covered in an oven vault. Probably, they housed altars, the middle one dedicated to the archangel Saint Michael in accordance with the custom of the dedications of the upper rooms or chapels.[42][43].
The expansion of the second half of the 11th century
In the second half of the century, new spaces were opened for Romanesque architecture. The Norman conquest of England in 1066 by William the Conqueror, the withdrawal of Islam in northern Spain and the development of pilgrimages, the relations of the almost isolated south-west of France with Poitou and the Spanish provinces, the financial contributions of the English possessions and the reform of the Catholic Church that provided more resources to the communities, led to an explosion of buildings and an evolution of the Romanesque architectural style.
Parallel to a first southern Romanesque art, which sought to vault buildings, it can be thought that there was a first northern Romanesque art[19] that remained very faithful for a certain time to the use of wooden carpentry on the roofs, especially for the naves, thus simplifying the elevation problems.
Built around 1049-1057, the small church Saint-Étienne de Vignory") has a nave built on a perfectly articulated elevation with fonts crowned by an impost and a wall surface with three levels of openings to lighten it without having the justification of a tribune.[32].
The dukes of Normandy were marked by a deep spiritual need and it was necessary to fill the void left by the Viking invasions in that region in which many pre-Romanesque settlements had not survived, and where new foundations were slow to flourish. William the Conqueror chose Caen as the second capital of his duchy. He committed to founding two monasteries with his wife that were to be decisive for Norman architecture. At his death he had built 17 convents for monks and 6 for nuns. He wanted the buildings to which his name was attached to surpass in magnificence those that rose everywhere.[50].
On December 25, 1066, William was crowned king of England and the extraordinary material success of the Normans was reflected in the church of Saint-Etienne in Caen. If the ambitious plan was probably conceived before the conquest of England, the overwhelming success of 1066 allowed its rapid execution because William did not hesitate to spoil, for the benefit of the abbeys of Caen, the main foundation of Harold II, the abbey church of Waltam" (in Essex), consecrated a few years before (1060).[51]
[52]
In England after 1066, the complete rebuilding of England's Saxon cathedrals by the Normans represented the most important program of ecclesiastical buildings in medieval Europe and the largest buildings erected in Christian Europe since the end of the Roman Empire. All of England's medieval cathedrals, except Salisbury, Lichfied and Wells, have traces of Norman architecture. Peterborough Cathedral, Durham Cathedral and Norwich Cathedral are almost completely Norman and in others there are still important parts: the naves of Ely Cathedral, Gloucester Cathedral and Southwell Minster, the transept of Winchester Cathedral.[53]
The time of maturity
The end of the century was marked by the height of the power of the Abbey of Cluny, which reached around the year 1000 a thousand priories scattered throughout Europe, with some ten thousand religious: nothing was too good to magnify the house of God. In reaction to this waste of means, monasticism undergoes a crisis with the creation of new orders that wish to renounce the goods of this world, which will manifest itself in constructions of great poverty. This new state of mind will have great importance in artistic creation and around 1130-1140, a new aesthetic ideal takes shape in these communities.
Cluny Abbey.
The abbey of Cluny III was on the scale and in the image of the power of the order. It had to accommodate two to three hundred resident monks, converts - who deal with manual labor and the secular affairs of a monastery, in order to allow the full contemplative life of the monks -, staff and visitors. If today only the south arm of the great transept, three sections of the side naves and two chapels remain, the plans and excavation campaigns show a church as long as the nave. The architectural celebration is of great ambition, with a chancel with an ambulatory and five radiating chapels, a double transept dominated by four towers, a nave and a choir with five naves, as in Saint Peter's in Rome. It was the largest building in the West, and its abbot, who reported solely to the pope, was one of the most important figures in Christendom.
Paray-le-Monial, a replica of Cluny.
The Basilica of Paray-le-Monial "Basilica of the Sacred Heart (Paray-le-Monial)") is a relatively faithful replica of the Cluny Abbey with reduced dimensions and a less ambitious architectural part. As in Cluny, its ambulatory is narrower than the corresponding side nave and there is a strong difference in level with the apse. The vaults of the choir and aisles have an identical height to that of the nave and transept. The hemicycle takes up Cluny's type of tall columns, the two levels of windows, the arcades and the attached columns. Paray-le-Monial, like Cluny, is characterized by its external austerity as opposed to an internal plastic investigation of great wealth.
An important difference appears with Cluny, where the architect wanted to reduce the scope of the central nave to a height unprecedented in Romanesque architecture. It creates a cantilever with strongly projecting chords at each level of the elevation and employs overlapping orders with fluted pilasters. This superimposition of orders found in Paray-le-Monial without the concern of the overhang is often taken up in Burgundy and beyond.
The churches of Auvergne.
In Auvergne, architects remained faithful to the barrel vault, with a particular interest in the inarticulate wall surfaces and the diaphragmatic arches that separated the nave from the transept, pierced with holes. The crypt, which in other places was already tending to disappear, is still present in some buildings in Auvergne. The diffusion of light is especially elaborate, as is the exterior decoration with the assembly of different stones and sets of rigging taken from the Early Middle Ages. The basilica of Notre-Dame-du-Port in Clermont-Ferrand has a crypt and a chancel with a decoration of polychrome stones.
From Romanesque to Gothic
In the century the decline of Romanesque art began in the regions where it had not truly developed. In the Île-de-France and the Loire Valley, no more were built in this style after the years 1140-1160. You see the emergence of a new style there. The master masons of Île-de-France gave the pointed vault its true role, drawing the logical consequences and bringing to perfection the vaults that launch over higher and higher naves, with more and more light, with more and more clarity of the great cathedrals.
The area of development of this new Gothic architecture roughly follows the royal domain passing through Reims, Provins, Sens, Etampes, Mantes, Gournay, Amiens and Saint-Quentin. The oldest pointed vaults are found around 1125 in the ambulatory of the abbey church of Notre-Dame de Morienval"), in the aisles of the church of Saint-Etienne de Beauvais"), in the porch of the priory church of Saint-Leu-d'Esserent"), in the right section of the choir of Saint-Pierre de Montmartre") in Paris, in the lower hall and in the chapel of the bishop of Meaux and in the choir of the church of Lucheux, on the Somme.[59].
Romanesque art resisted better in Normandy, Burgundy and Languedoc. But it was in the southern regions marked by lower economic capacity and by cultural reasons related to an ancient Romanization, where antiquity had strongly marked the landscape that Romanesque architecture was still used at the end of the century, and even in the middle of the century. The church of Saint Trophimus in Arles "Church of Saint Trophimus (Arles)" and the abbey church of Saint-Gilles du Gard") are notable examples of Romanesque sculpture of this period.
At the same time, the new monastic orders (Cistercians, Grandmontines and Chalaisians) defined an ideal architecture with refined forms, with special attention to the quality of the stone masonry. In their networks of abbeys, they spread these principles independently of local fashions and created a timeless Romanesque architecture that defies time for its quality of construction.[60]
But the simplicity desired at the origin of the creation of these orders was quickly adapted to the new realities. Only the Carthusians respected the original ideal and conceived a type plant for their life as cenobites and hermits. The monks' independent cells consisted of three rooms: the Ave Maria; the oratory with a seat, an office and a bed in an alcove; a workshop with a garden. These cells were distributed by the cloister of the maison haute. The second part of the monastery was reserved for the common life of the religious, with the church, a small cloister, the chapter house, the refectory and its kitchen. The converts' buildings and the operational annexes were quite far apart.[17].
Robert de Molesme decided in 1098 to found a new monastery which he called Citeaux. The success led to the creation of new abbeys that were governed by a charter that defined the objectives of the new order, the Cistercian order, which would become one of the branches of the Gregorian Reform. The Cistercians lived in desert areas, earned their living through work and rejected the superfluous. At first they were content to live in wooden buildings, then Saint Bernard of Clairvaux imagined an organization flexible enough to adapt to local limitations, but although the buildings had common characteristics, there was no standard floor plan.
The architecture and its decoration
The emergence of the decoration of Romanesque architecture begins at the end of the century when the image brutally invades the Clunician abbeys. The religious who participated in the adoption of the Gregorian reform gave it what had been rejected for a long time and recognized that an image could carry a message as relevant as a written speech for a better understanding of the mysteries of faith by the faithful.
This interest in the image evoked the time of the first Christians with one big difference, that the images left the place of worship to also establish themselves outside. Before this explosion, painted or sculpted decoration was reserved for the most sacred spaces of buildings, but its great diversity had imposed a certain caution in interpretation. The frescoes of Saint-Savin-Sur-Gartempe unify the interior space, the mosaics of the Cathedral of Cefalù or the Basilica of Saint Mark in Venice tried to reconnect with early Christian architecture and the Cathedral of Monreale is the most successful example.
At the end of the 11th century, the Gregorian reform with its liturgical modifications profoundly transformed the altar and its surroundings. The antependium became altarpieces with the new position of the officiant. The alliance of altarpieces and relics finds an extension in the altars-tombs. The receptacles of the holy remains are sometimes converted into statues-reliquaries in the image of the saint, often placed next to the altar. This new position of the priest imposed a reorganization of the choir with a displacement of the monks in the eastern sections of the nave and the creation of seats. This separation between the religious and the faithful led to the construction of ambos and gates.
If the interior decoration reconnected with the tradition of the first Christian places of worship, the Gregorian reform gave a triumphant scope to the image by inscribing it at the entrance to the buildings of worship. The portal becomes the "gate to heaven" and the link with the profane world. They are no longer systematically arranged on the west façade of the church, but can also be on the axis of a main street or a privileged access. For the religious inside the monasteries, the image was often limited to the historiated capitals and, sometimes, to capitals on pillars in cloisters and in the chapter houses.[29].
The main creators worked in privileged centers. The south-west of France and the north-west of Spain were marked by two generations of artists, the first of which was inspired by the minor arts, ivories and illuminations and by early Christian and even pagan patterns on sarcophagi. The artist was in search of gestures and an expressive attitude to define the Romanesque figure and the historic capitals. The second generation synthesized important artistic centers between Moissac and Santiago de Compostela, passing through Toulouse and León. They defined a type of portals that supported the desired iconography at that time and brought a new style to the sculptures in the cloisters. The master of the Moissac portal had an important influence in Quercy, Cahors, Souillac and in Limousin, in Beaulieu") and Ydes. The work of the master of the abbey of Silos in Spain was also notable.
Building types
The main buildings of architecture were: churches, monasteries, abbeys and cathedrals.
style components
Entre los elementos arquitectónicos que destacan en el estilo románico los más característicos del mismo son:.
• - El pilar compuesto y de núcleo prismático.
• - El arco de medio punto.
• - La cubierta de bóveda de medio cañón y de arista.
• - La cúpula poligonal sobre trompas.
• - Los ábsides semicirculares en planta de cruz latina en las iglesias.
• - La planta basilical es la típica latina.
A continuación otros de los elementos arquitectónicos propios del estilo:.
• - Contrafuertes muy desarrollados.
• - Arcos fajones y arquivoltas.
• - Capiteles decorados.
• - Impostas, frisos decorativos.
• - Escultura monumental aplicada a la arquitectura.
Plant
The typical plan of a Romanesque church is the Latin basilica with four, three or five naves "Nave (architecture)") and transept "Cruise (architecture)") with projecting arms. In the head or head, which always faces east, there are three or five semicircular apses facing or forming a crown, each of them having three windows in its wall. And at the foot or entrance of the temple stands a porch or narthex flanked by two square towers. But just as rural or minor churches only consist of a simple nave and an apse without a projecting transept and without towers next to the door, so the largest ones above all, those of large monasteries or the sanctuaries visited by numerous pilgrimages usually offer a very large transept and transept "Cruise (architecture)"), as well as having extended side naves around the main chapel constituting the ambulatory or semicircular nave that gives way to different apsidal chapels, open around of it as a crown. Some churches have the arms of the transept converted into separate apses that, with the central one, form a kind of large trefoil. The churches of the Templars and other related knightly orders are, in general, on a polygonal or circular plan and are small in size. Likewise, there are small oratories with a circular plan that were funerary chapels or that were attached to fortifications as military oratories and there are no shortage of others that, following the Byzantine style or inspiration, are arranged in the form of a Greek cross and a quatrefoil.
Buttresses
The characteristic supports of a Romanesque building are the composite pillar and the abutment or buttress attached externally to the wall. The buttresses are intended to reinforce the walls and simultaneously serve as abutment or counterbalance to the arches and vaults (a service also provided by the composite pillars): they are visible from the outside, smooth and prismatic in shape. But when they are attached to the apses they frequently appear as columns that support the eaves "Cover (construction)"). The walls are made of ashlar or uneven ashlars with little regularity in the courses.
Pillars and arches
The aforementioned pillar ordinarily mounts on a cylindrical or low-height plinth "Plinth (construction)") and is composed of a simple or compound pilaster that has one or two semi-cylindrical columns attached to each front or to one of them (or instead of these, other narrower pilasters) in order to give rise to the former arches and the transversal ones or transverse arches. These columns have a base and capital also attached to the prismatic central core. There are also free-standing and paired columns, two by two, or four by four, but they are not ordinarily found in these forms but in cloisters, porticos, galleries "Gallery (room)") and mullioned windows.
The Romanesque capitals offer special interest due to the variety of their shapes and the very curious work with which they are usually decorated. Some of them preserve classic reminiscences of a degenerate Corinthian flavor but the vast majority are formed from a thick prism or a pyramidal trunk or an inverted cone whose fronts have sculpted interlaced geometric work or plant motifs that surround it in the form of leaves or symbolic and historical matters. The capital is crowned by a thick abacus "Abaco (architecture)"), called cymatium, which is almost always decorated with moldings or other ornaments typical of the style and frequently has a series of square modillions that look like battlements on its lower part. In twin or juxtaposed columns, the abacus usually covers the entire group of them, thus uniting their capitals.
The bases of the columns have the Tuscan or Attic shape but with the lower torus wide and flattened and they usually have in the spandrels or angles of the plinth a whimsical figurine or a claw that appears to hold with the plinth the curved molding or torus that rests on it. In the century the bases were frequently decorated with different works typical of the style, which was already used at some point in Visigothic architecture (and much more so in Roman architecture) as seen in the church of San Pedro de la Nave.
The construction arches rest immediately on the aforementioned abacus and are semicircular or banked and almost always double or triple, that is, each one of them consists of two or three semi-rings attached one below the other, with the one above being wider. When it is decorated with moldings themselves, the second period of the style is denounced and they are presented in the form of a thick baton, bordering the corner of the arch. Also typical of the second period (century) is the pointed arch, also called pointed arch, which is sometimes found in Romanesque buildings as a constructive means to reduce lateral thrust (without this being an indication of Gothic style if the ribbed vault is missing) and never as an ornament. However, in some Romanesque buildings, influenced by Muslim architecture, lobed and interlocking arches, either ornamental or constructive, are found. But the latter only in cloister arcades or in equivalent works.
inner cover
The interior cover of the naves and different rooms generally consists of the half-barrel vault—sometimes pointed like the arches—for the central nave; edge or quarter-barrel for the sides and shell or quarter-sphere for the apses, rising above the transept a polygonal dome supported by squinches (in Persian style) that are placed in the angles or corners resulting from the meeting of the main arches. These squinches are made up of a semi-conical vault or a series of degrading arches that do the same job. Sometimes, depending on the school to which the building belongs, the central nave has a wooden roof or lacks a dome or, on the contrary, has it truly spherical and raised on Byzantine-style pendentives. The difficulty and the greatest difference found in these buildings lie in the problem of combining the vaulting of all the naves with sufficient lighting in the central one and, furthermore, in giving the transept or the meeting of the naves a very stable balance and a proportionate roof: the various solutions given to this double problem constitute the main differences of the architectural schools of the Romanesque style.
Outer cover
The exterior cover or roof insists on the vaults by means of a simple wooden framework that rests on them, but in the century this framework becomes independent and is supported only by the walls so as not to load the vaults and domes with weight. Above the polygonal dome of the transept rises a prismatic lantern, either forming a body with it or being independent as a dome. This lantern ends with a pyramidal roof, the whole resembling a tower with a wide base and low height that, at times, also functions as a bell tower.
Doors and windows
The doors are formed by a series of round concentric arches in degradation, the archivolts, supported by separate columns so that the entire complex forms a kind of flared and molded arch, contributing to the greatest visual effect the same thickness of the wall that usually forms a projecting body there. Some doorways lack a lintel and a tympanum, but they are generally provided with both, and then symbolic or iconistic reliefs are sculpted on the last one, and on the sides of the doorway or on the jambs, and even in the flared arch itself, various series of ornamental work in relief are arranged, sometimes flanking the entrance to the most sumptuous churches with statues.
The windows almost always open on the façade and in the apse and sometimes in the side walls. They are much taller than they are wide and end at the top in a double arch, generally flat or sharp-edged, supported on small columns like those on the façade and when these arches are surrounded by fine moldings or batons or the windows have left their original narrowness, they belong to the second period of the style. There are also mullioned windows, oculi and small rose windows, the latter corresponding to the last period.
The windows are closed with colorless or colored stained glass in some sumptuous churches or with translucent sheets of alabaster or crystalline plaster or with simple lattices "Lattice (architecture)") of perforated stone and in poor churches with simple white cloths waxed or impregnated with turpentine. Hence, the windows of this period must have been small (the same as in the previous one) until the use of large stained glass windows was tested and generalized.
Cornices
The cornices form a continuous fascia on pilasters and walls and after the abacuses of the capitals and adorn the frontispiece "Fronton (architecture)") placed above the doorway or below the windows. They have ornaments and moldings and are often (like the pediment and the eaves or roof tiles, which are also cornices) supported by corbels or by series of small blind arches.
Ornamentation
The typical ornamentation of the Romanesque style is manifested mainly in the cornices, archivolts, capitals, doors and windows and consists of a set of broken geometric lines or armholes, banknotes, checkered patterns, saw teeth, diamond points, lacework, arches or blind arches, small rosettes, serpentine foliage and other plant motifs always stylized or with little imitation of nature. Iconistic reliefs and statues, masks or corbels, bestiaries (monstrous animal figures) and symbolic reliefs are also used.
The interior walls were decorated with various paintings of these motifs and religious or biblical scenes, and the floors were sometimes decorated with mosaics. As a general rule, the sculptural decoration of Romanesque buildings is closely linked to the structure, so that it serves to accentuate the most prominent members of the structure and is not a false covering for the building. However, in some buildings several figures of monsters can be observed sculpted as if crushed by the bases of the columns or in relief on the plinth of the facades with an evidently symbolic or moral idea since they do not have an architectural one.
Structure
The general structure of a Romanesque church can be inferred from what has been said about the plan, supports and vaults. It only remains to be noted that the entire interior composition is exposed externally by the buttresses that mark the sections of the floor plan. Likewise, due to the continuous fascias that indicate the divisions of the elevation. Through the windows and arches, which respond to the interior triforiums or their equivalents and to the differences in height in the naves, etc.
On the well-arranged façades there is a large cornice supported by corbels on the doorway, one or three windows or a small rose window at the top, two or three series of blind arches at different levels and a pediment or pinion bordered by a cornice at the upper end of the wall.
Romanesque architecture in Europe
Hungary
In Hungary, Romanesque art properly emerged after the Christianization of the Hungarians in 1000, under King Saint Stephen I of Hungary. This art evolved with deep Germanic influences and in enormous, mainly ecclesiastical constructions, which were found in cities such as Esztergom, Székesfehérvár and Veszprém, where their enormous cathedrals (now already destroyed after the invasions of the Tatars of 1241 and Turks after 1526) served as centers of Christianity in the kingdom. All these cathedrals were founded mainly by Saint Stephen I and his successors Peter Orseolo of Hungary, Andrew I, Géza I among others, who reigned during the centuries , and .
In this way, by the middle and end of the century it was a common sight to see in Hungary both small constructions such as the church of Egregy, and others of enormous dimensions, all with closed apses, portals with three semicircular arches supported by pillars, as well as the construction of churches with three naves. Among the works that have survived to the present day is the church of Lébény, built at the end of the century and the beginning of the century, as well as the church of Ják, which finds its origins at the beginning of the century, the church of Velemér") in the century and the church of Felsőörs") in the century.
Scandinavia
In Scandinavia the Norman influence is also noticeable. The floor plans are a Latin cross, with a tower in the transept that acts as a lantern.
The cathedrals of Lund, Uppsala and Trondheim stand out.
Belgium
In Belgium, the Cathedral of Tournai anticipates the Gothic.
• - Romanesque buildings.
• - Cistercian architecture.
• - Gothic architecture.
• - This work contains a partial translation of the sections «Contexte historique» and «L'architecture et son décor» derived from «Architecture romane» of Wikipedia in French, specifically from this version, published by its editors under the GNU Free Documentation License and the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
• - Wikimedia Commons hosts a multimedia gallery on Romanesque Architecture.
• - Romanesque Circle Study Center: Visigothic, Mozarabic and Romanesque art in Europe.
• - Friends of the Romanesque: Romanesque Inventory.
[2] ↑ Bannister Fletcher, A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method.
[3] ↑ Estas placas oscurecen los vestigios de la policromía y los murales en color.
[4] ↑ Vista del Priorato de Saint-Gilles en Languedoc, en el Primer volumen de L'architecture de Philibert de l'Orme, página 123, digitalizado en Gallica.
[5] ↑ Digitalizado en Gallica.
[6] ↑ Matthias Noell, Classement und classification: Ordnungssysteme der Denkmalpflege in Frankreich und Deutschland Archivado el 27 de septiembre de 2007 en Wayback Machine., Berlin, 2 de abril de 2005.: http://www.kunsttexte.de/download/denk/sym4-noell.pdf
[7] ↑ El profesor de historia del arte Jean Nayrolles cuestiona esta historiografía al mencionar la existencia de un manuscrito de Gerville que contiene dos notas que probablemente datan del verano de 1818 y en el que ya propone el término «roman» para la arquitectura. Cf. Jean Nayrolles (2005). L'invention de l'art roman à l'époque moderne (XVIIIe-XIXe siècles). Presses universitaires de Rennes. pp. 85-86.
[8] ↑ Ferdinand Gidon (1934). «L'invention de l'expression architecture romane par Gerville (1818) d'après quelques lettres de Gerville à Le Prévost». Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de Normandie XLII: 268-288. .: https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5732066w/f284
[9] ↑ El arte romano, y más precisamente el de la antigüedad tardía, es sólo una de las fuentes de inspiración y referencia de los artistas románicos. A esta influencia, transmitida por el arte carolingio, se suman influencias ornamentales provenientes de los pueblos germánicos (arte visigodo), influencias bizantinas. Cf Jannic Durand, Jean-René Gaborit, Danielle Gaborit-Chopin, (2005). L'art roman au Louvre. Fayard. p. 8. .
[10] ↑ Françoise Leriche-Andrieu (1984). Initiation à l'art roman. Zodiaque. p. 6. .
[11] ↑ Arcisse de Caumont (1824). «Essai sur l'architecture religieuse du Moyen Âge, particulièrement en Normandie». Mémoires de la Société des Antiquaires de la Normandie 1: 535-677. .
[12] ↑ Historia de los Estilos Artísticos, de Ursula Hatje, pag. 221.
[13] ↑ Jean-Michel Leniaud (2007). La Révolution des signes. L'art à l'église, 1830-1930. 2007. p. 101. .
[14] ↑ Robert Carvais, Valérie Nègre, Jean-Sébastien Cluzel et Juliette Hernu-Bélaud (dir.); Lei Huang (2015). «L'invention de l'expression "architecture romane" et ses traductions: réception d'un terme architectural et stylistique dans l'historiographie du XIXe siècle». Traduire l'architecture. Picard. pp. 102-103.
[15] ↑ Jean Nayrolles (2005). L'invention de l'art roman à l'époque moderne (XVIIIe-XIXe siècles). Presses universitaires de Rennes. p. 109. .
[16] ↑ Hay versión digitalizada en Gallica.
[17] ↑ a b c Alain Erlande-Brandenburg (2005). L'art roman - Un défi européen. Gallimard. p. 159. ISBN 978-2-07-030068-6.
[26] ↑ Pierre Riché (2010). Les carolingiens — une famille qui fit l'Europe (en francés). Paris: Librairie Arthème Fayard/Pluriel. p. 490. ISBN 978-2-01-279544-0.
[27] ↑ Henri Focillon (1984). L'an mil. Denoël, Paris. p. 187. ISBN 978-2-282-30246-1.
[28] ↑ Gabrielle Demians D'Archimbaud, Histoire artistique de l'occident médiéval, Paris, Armand Colin, 1992, ISBN 2200313047.
[29] ↑ a b Erlande-Brandenburg, 2005.
[30] ↑ Ver páginas 49 a 79: Pierre Martin, Les premiers chevets à déambulatoire et chapelles rayonnantes de la Loire moyenne Xe-XIe siècles).Saint-Aignan d’Orléans, Saint-Martin de Tours, Notre-Dame de Mehun-sur-Yèvre, La Madeleine de Châteaudun, Sciences de l’Homme et Société. Université de Poitiers, 2010 (lire en ligne).: https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00581583/document
[32] ↑ a b c d Quitterie Cazes (2007). «L'architecture romane - Le temps des expériences». Cité de l'architecture et du patrimoine. Consultado el 20 de enero de 2018.: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/xmmk74
[33] ↑ Éliane Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | Préfiguration 980-1020. Flammarion. pp. 49-75. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[41] ↑ a b c d Eliane Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | Création. Flammarion. pp. 77-109. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[42] ↑ Marcel Aubert (1931). «L'abbaye de Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire». Congrès archéologique de France - Orléans - 1930: 588.
[43] ↑ Georges Chenesseau (1931). L'abbaye de Fleury à Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire. | Son histoire. Ses institutions. Ses édifices. Paris: Van Oest.
[44] ↑ a b Maylis Baylé (2001). L'architecture normande | Structure murales et voûtements dans l'architecture romane de Normandie 1. Charles Corlet - Presses universitaires de Caen. p. 50. ISBN 2-85480-949-1. .
[45] ↑ a b J. Bony (1939). «La technique normande du mur épais à l'époque romane». Bulletin Monumental XCVIII: 153-188. .
[46] ↑ a b Pierre Heliot (1959). «Les antécédents et les débuts des coursives anglo-normandes et rhénanes». Cahiers de civilisation médiévale 2 (8). .
[48] ↑ Ottonian architecture and its influence. in: Walkin, David. A history of Western architecture, page: 116. Laurence King Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1856694593.
[49] ↑ Louis Grodecki; Florantine Müther (1973). Le siècle de l'an mil (collection: Univers des formes). Gallimard, Paris.
[50] ↑ Gionanni Coppola, « L'essor de la construction monastique en Normandie au s. XIe : mécénat, matériaux et moines-architectes », Annales de Normandie, 1992, Vol. 42, Número 4.
[51] ↑ Lucien Musset. Normandie romane 1. Zodiaque - La nuit des temps. p. 51.
[55] ↑ a b Eliane Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | L'explosion 1060-1090. Flammarion. pp. 143-191. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[56] ↑ Mayli Baylé (2001). L'architecture Normande | Structures murales et voûtements dans l'architecture romane en Normandie 1. Charles Corlet, Presses universitaires de Caen. p. 56. ISBN 2-85480-949-1. .
[57] ↑ a b c d Quitterie Cazes. «L'architecture romane. Le temps de la maturité». Cité de l'architecture et du patrimoine / dailymotion. Consultado el 27 de enero de 2018. .: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/xmmka4
[58] ↑ Elian Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | Maturité 1090-1140. Flammarion. p. 193-233. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[59] ↑ Marcel Aubert (1934). «Les plus anciennes croisées d'ogives, leur rôle dans la construction». Bulletin monumental: 69.
[60] ↑ a b Eliane Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | Ruptures et mutations. Flammarion. pp. 285-351. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[84] ↑ Véase en la entrada «Caminos de Santiago de Compostela: Camino francés y Caminos del Norte de España» del sitio oficial de la Unesco. Protege una «(...) red de cuatro itinerarios de peregrinación cristiana –el Camino costero, el Camino interior del País Vasco y La Rioja, el Camino de Liébana y el Camino primitivo– que suman unos 1.500 kilómetros y atraviesan el norte de la península ibérica. El bien cultural ampliado posee un rico patrimonio arquitectónico de gran importancia histórica, compuesto por edificios destinados a satisfacer las necesidades materiales y espirituales de los peregrinos: puentes, albergues, hospitales, iglesias y catedrales...», disponible en: [1].: http://whc.unesco.org/es/list/669
[85] ↑ Véase en la entrada «Iglesias románicas catalanas de Vall del Boí» del sitio oficial de la Unesco. Protege un valle en el que «Todas las aldeas de este valle, rodeadas de campos cercados, poseen una iglesia románica». Disponible en: [2].: http://whc.unesco.org/es/list/988
[86] ↑ Los 20 edificios preseleccionados fueron los siguientes: Santo Domingo de Silos, Catedral vieja de Salamanca, San Juan de Duero, Santa María de Eunate, San Miguel de Estella, San Salvador de Leyre, Sant Cugat del Vallés, San Pedro de Roda, Santa María de Ripoll, San Clemente de Tahull, San Vicente de Cardona, Catedral de Jaca, Castillo de Loarre, San Juan de la Peña, Catedral de Santo Domingo de la Calzada, Cámara Santa de Oviedo, Colegiata de Santillana del Mar, Catedral de Santiago de Compostela, San Isidoro de León, San Martín de Frómista. Véase en el sitio «Medievalum - La Historia Medieval en Internet», disponible en: [3].: https://www.medievalum.com/elige-las-7-maravillas-del-romanico-espanol/
[89] ↑ «Primeiras Impressões sobre a Arquitectura Românica Portuguesa». Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto. Carlos Alberto Ferreira de Almeida. 2001.: http://ler.letras.up.pt/uploads/ficheiros/3105.pdf
[95] ↑ Service, Alastair (1982). «4». Anglo-Saxon and Norman : A guide and Gazetteer. The Buildings of Britain. ISBN 0-09-150130-X.
[96] ↑ Lise Godfredsen (2002). «Den romanske kunst og vikingekunstens efterliv» [El arte románico y el más allá del arte vikingo]. En Lise Gjedssø Bertelsen, ed. Vikingetidens kunst; en udstilling om kunsten i vikingernes verden og efterverden ca. 800 – 1250 (Kongernes Jelling): 35. ISBN 87-989042-0-5.
From a technical point of view, the Romanesque marked the transition from the use of unhewn stone to carved stone and the development of the composite pillar and the consolidation of elements such as the harmonic façade, the heads with ambulatory, the half-barrel and groin vaults, in addition to the first tests with a ribbed vault. Its characteristic appearance includes thick walls with few openings, semicircular arches, robust pillars, massive towers and the use of Lombard bands as a decorative element. The capitals, often sculpted with plant, animal or symbolic motifs, constitute one of the richest sculptural manifestations of the style. The plan usually presents regular and symmetrical shapes, with a general image of solidity and simplicity compared to the later Gothic architecture. Its interiors are dark, which achieved the contemplation of the faithful.
The term "Romanesque art" appeared in France in 1818. In German historiography, it is considered the immediate heir of Ottonian art and the expression "full Romanesque" is reserved for its most developed phase. In England, it is traditionally known as "Norman architecture."
• - Large Romanesque monuments declared World Heritage Site.
• - Basilica of Saint-Remi, Reims, France (centuries).
• - Basilica of Vézelay (1120-1150), Burgundian Romanesque masterpiece.
• - Duomo of Modena (1099-1319), by Lanfranco "Lanfranco (architect)") and Wiligelmus, example of early Italian Romanesque.
• - Piazza dei Miracoli, Pisa: baptistery (1152-1363), cathedral (1063-1118) and leaning tower.
• - Speyer Cathedral (1030-1061), the largest preserved Romanesque cathedral.
• - Durham Cathedral (1093-1104), representative of the Norman Romanesque.
• - Church of San Clemente de Tahull, example of Catalan Romanesque with Lombard influence.
Origin and diffusion of the term Romanesque
The discovery of Romanesque art is related to the architect Philibert de l'Orme in the century who would have carried out some surveys[4] and to the historians of the and centuries. After the French Revolution, some Norman emigrants to England discovered some research—such as Anglo-Norman Antiquities published in 1767 and The Architectural Antiquities of Normands[5] by John Sell Cotman—and observed that English "antiquaries" called "Saxon" the architectural style that dominated in their country before its conquest by the Normans in 1066, and "Norman" style from the conquest until the end of the century. In France, scholars apply, for architectural works of this period, the names "normand"), "lombard"), "byzantin" sometimes preceded by the appellation "gothique" (in the initial pejorative sense of 'art of the Goths'), or the name of "gothique ancien". with his colleagues from the "Society of Antiquaries of Normandy" (founded in 1824)—Charles de Gerville (1769-1853), Auguste Le Prévost") and Arcisse de Caumont (1801-1873)—a "moving school of architectural specialists"[6] who wanted to reappropriate that Norman heritage.
The archaeologist and scholar Gerville, driven by the desire for unification and universal classification typical of the scholars of the 19th century, was looking for a common name. According to historiographic tradition,[7] in a letter of December 18, 1818 that he sent to Le Prévost, he had the happy idea of using the term roman to designate[8] Western Christian architecture from the reign of Charlemagne until the end of the century or the beginning of the century. He justified the choice on the one hand by an analogy with the langues romanes (Romance languages, which at that time began to be used to designate those languages that had broken off from Latin) and on the other to underline its supposed[9] affiliation with Roman architecture, erroneously establishing a relationship between the area of diffusion of that architecture and that of the Romance languages.[10].
Caumont, father of medieval archaeology, resumed and promoted its use in 1824 since he saw that in that architecture of the first centuries of the Middle Ages all the characteristics of Roman architecture appeared in a state of advanced degeneration. or "Neo-Greek"[12] and Romanesque architecture quickly replaced the then common appellations of Lombard, Saxon or Anglo-Norman, and was considered a first attempt at the artistic unification of Europe. Authors such as Victor Hugo, Stendhal or Mérimée and other writers of the Romantic generation imposed it in common use after 1860 since they sought to rehabilitate the Middle Ages and saw in Romanesque art a "dégénération" of Roman art due to the degradation of traditions and the collapse of ancient civilization, and they differentiated secular Gothic art "Secular (Catholic Church)"), characterized by its vertical impulse, from monastic Romanesque art, in which horizontality prevailed, and whose buildings had affinities with ancient art that exalted the power of the Roman Emperors.[13]
The terminological journey of the term "roman" in various European countries allows us to "confirm that the great diversity of the monumental landscape of the medieval West creates considerable epistemological gaps in the different regions, often characterized by a geographically limited vision and sometimes tinged with ideology." The terms romanisch, in Germany, Romanesque art, in Great Britain, arte romanesque, in Spain, arte romanica, in Italy, have been, as in France, "the object of various controversies in its own linguistic culture, before being definitively established in historiography."[14]
The study of the new architectural period followed the evolution of archeology and its limits, and went from a romantic and intuitive history of art to an early establishment of typologies. At first, Caumont and his friends defined three phases in the Romanesque period from the Roman decadence: from the century century to the century; from the end of the to the end of the century; and the century, in which the pointed arch replaced the semicircular arch, a capital difference in the shape of the arcades, which, together with others, established the distinctive character between Romanesque and Gothic architecture. Jules Quicherat") rightly restricted its meaning to the buildings of the 15th centuries.
After having defined the limits in time, Caumont sought to define common characteristics in space and outlined, in French territory, seven monumental regions defined in particular by the nature of the soil but also by differences in taste and skill that could only come from the schools. Quicherat, Viollet-le-Duc, Anthyme Saint-Paul and Auguste Choisy took up and completed the idea. In 1925, François Deshoulières in the Bulletin Monumental[16] proposed nine schools: Île-de-France and Campagne, Normandy, Lombardy-Rhineland, Lower Loire, South-West and Poitou, Auvergne, Burgundy, Provence and Languedoc. After the studies of Caumont, who had dated Romanesque architecture from the century to the century, the concept of Late Antiquity was created, which would go from the century to the century, ascribing Carolingian architecture to the High Middle Ages and analyzing the "century of the year one thousand" in comparison with the preceding era and no longer as a harbinger of the future.
In 1935, a Catalan architect Puig i Cadafalch (1867-1956) defined a "first Romanesque art" carried out by different peoples that spread across a large part of Europe before private schools were developed.[17][18] Pierre Francastel in 1942 redefined regional schools, replacing the term "first Romanesque art" with the "first Romanesque age" that incorporated the ideas of Jean Hubert&action=edit&redlink=1 "Jean Hubert (archaeologist) (not yet written)") and Marcel Durliat"). For Louis Grodecki"), there is a block of architecture with wooden carpentry roof structures, a kind of "first Romanesque art" of the North distinct and symmetrical that would be opposed to the "first southern Romanesque art".[19][20][21].
In 1951, the Benedictines of the abbey of Sainte-Marie de La Pierre-qui-Vire) founded the éditions Zodiaque") and the collection La nuit des temps, specialized in Romanesque art, which published 88 works on the entire Romanesque world between 1954 and 1999.
Difficulty of a precise definition
Any definition of Romanesque architecture is necessarily reductionist insofar as this architecture comprises achievements of a wide variety and was built over a long period. The term Romanesque is sometimes attributed to buildings whose dating is very uncertain, simply because they contain techniques or an atmosphere that appear Romanesque to the modern observer: barrel vaults, semicircular arches or historiated capitals, for example. But there are Romanesque buildings with wooden roofs and without vaulting, and in others the barrel vault is rather the exception compared to the slightly pointed arch; and also, many of the Romanesque capitals were not historiated.
For this reason, Romanesque architecture is defined with more subjective criteria, more or less well supported according to what one thinks one knows about the religious interpretations of those times. It could be said - even if this presentation does not apply well to the ascending character of the great Auvergne churches - that Romanesque architecture, particularly in the small buildings, gave the visitor the feeling of a certain massiveness that evokes more the shadow, the penumbra or that "deep light" of which the essayist Yves Bonnefoy spoke, than the luminous flights of the Gothic stained glass windows.
Another interpretation is that this architecture would not show an ancestry with a glorious purpose, but rather a "downward transcendence", in a cryptic and initiatory way to achieve an atmosphere of original mystery. In fact, the experience of light in the Christian church had already been decided since the construction of the first basilicas, but the push due to the choice of heavy stone vaults (which replaced wooden carpentry in large buildings or to escape fires from wooden trusses) forced the walls to be strengthened and narrow openings to be drilled: this "deep light" was, therefore, more of a technical restriction than a liturgical choice. Thus, during the second Romanesque period, different vaults (groin and ribbed) were created and reinforced with different counter-thrusts (semi-vaults of the stands) or reinforcements (buttresses), which allowed light to enter by drilling larger holes in the wall surfaces.[22].
Art historians, however, have tried to characterize Romanesque architecture by its modes of coverage (barrel and cross vaults, domes), by the types of supports (thick walls provided or not with arcades and generally pierced by small windows with semicircular finials, walls reinforced with pilasters attached on the inside or buttresses on the outside) and by its decorative grammar (repertoire of ovas, pearls, fretwork, palm trees and foliage, roses and acanthus leaves, Ionic and Corinthian capitals).[23].
Historical context
Contenido
Después de un período de investigación y desarrollo a veces tortuoso, los grandes componentes clásicos mediterráneos y paleocristianos se unieron definitivamente con las aportaciones germánicas al arte románico. La arquitectura románica encuentra sus fuentes en el arte prerrománico y, en particular, en el arte carolingio y se desarrolla en paralelo con la arquitectura otoniana. Esta gestación está en el centro del intento de organización germánica de los siglos al por los carolingios y los otonianos.
The Carolingian and Ottonian Empires
The history of Carolingian Europe begins with the rise of a well-known aristocratic family at the beginning of the century. This dynasty of the Carolingians reigned in Europe from the 750s to the end of the century and achieved, with the support of the pope, the near unity of the Christian West under Charlemagne (r. 768-814), crowned emperor in 800. The reconstitution of Western unity developed in three directions: to the southeast, in Italy; to the southwest, towards Spain; and to the east, in Germany. The Germanic and especially Saxon horizon attracted Charlemagne to the east. Above all, he was concerned about reestablishing the ancient Roman empire of which he would be the leader. After his death he was succeeded by his son Ludovico Pio (r. 813-840) and, upon his death, his sons and grandchildren of Charlemagne agreed in 843, in the Treaty of Verdun, to divide the Carolingian Empire into three regions: to the west, the Francia occidentalis of Charles the Bald (r. 843-877), crowned king in 848 in Orleans; to the east, the Francia orientalis of Louis the Germanicus (r. 843-876) and between the two, the Media France of Lothair I who retained the title of emperor (r. 817-855), and transmitted it to his eldest son Louis III (r. 876-882), and divided the rest of his empire: Lotharingia corresponded to Lothair II (r. 855-869) and Provence to Charles of Provence (r. 855-863). After the death of Charles the Fat (r. 881-887) in 888, there was a rapid breakdown of Carolingian unity. In Western France, royalty, which had once again become elective, alternated between Carolingian kings and kings of the family of Eudes, Count of Paris, hero of the defense of Paris against the Normans in 885-886. In Germania, the Carolingian dynasty died out in 911 with Louis the Child (r. -899-911) and the royal crown fell by election into the hands of Duke Conrad of Franconia. He passed it on to Henry I (r. 919-936) and his son Otto I (r. 936-973) founded an imperial line resuming Carolingian politics and with the help of the pope established the Holy Roman Empire.
The Christian religion adapted to its environment and became "barbarized", then England entered Christianity and Irish monks created links with the continent that pilgrims and merchants followed. The Rhine, the Scheldt and the Meuse were routes of penetration and the first Atlantic trade marked the beginning of a new era. It was especially Gaul north of the Loire that benefited from these exchanges.
The rise of monasticism was the great event of the century for Gaul and the entire West. Kings, bishops and aristocrats installed monks in their lands and protected them. The Lateran Church perfected the liturgy that became a model for the entire West. Long before an alliance was formed between the Carolingians and the papacy, the pope appeared as the greatest moral power in the West.
Grimoald, palace steward of Austrasia, founded monasteries and installed family and friends in them. He set a policy that all Carolingians will follow: own abbeys, have monks who pray for the family and help them in their enterprises.[24][25][26].
The Holy Roman Empire of the Ottonians was one of the consequences of the Treaty of Verdun in 843 where Louis the German received Eastern France which corresponded to the territory of Germania. The imperial title escaped him and was transmitted, losing its meaning until the year 924. Otto I, king of Saxony from the year 936, was victorious over the Hungarians and the Slavs, two of the many peoples who invaded the West in the second half of the century. He reconquered Italy and reestablished the power that Charlemagne had previously established over Rome. In 962 he was crowned emperor in Rome and founded the Holy Roman Empire, which he placed in the inheritance of Charlemagne, who in turn had placed himself in that of the defunct Roman Empire. Otto I thus resurrected an empire that he inherited to his son Otto II in 973. The latter married Theophano Skleraina, daughter of the emperor of Byzantium, to ally himself with the Eastern Empire. When he died, he was succeeded by his son, Otto III. Still young, his mother assumed the regency and thereby reaffirmed the Byzantine influence on Ottonian art. Influenced by Gerbert of Aurillac—future Pope Sylvester II (p. 992-1003)—the king dreamed of a universal empire whose capital would be Rome.
At the same time, the Church knew a strong hierarchical organization: reformist ideas marked the episcopate and monasticism, and the meteoric expansion of the abbeys was the perfect example of this. The Church played an important role in the council of princes and the material and spiritual role of monasticism was undeniable. The monuments, some true architectural feats, were part of the heritage of the Carolingian dynasty while integrating Byzantine influences. The monastic workshops became the origin of all Ottonian art: sculptures, paintings, metalwork, illuminations. The cult of relics grew and the crypts were placed at the same level as the nave. The composition of the buildings was modified, as well as the development of the liturgy. Great pilgrimages began to be organized.[27].
In the 19th century, the Germanic Empire was the main artistic center of the West. The emperor and the great ecclesiastics gave a decisive boost to architecture. Ottonian architecture was inspired by both Carolingian architecture and Byzantine architecture. In fact, these two architectural styles claimed to belong to the Roman Empire and were the closest examples of art dedicated to the sovereign. But it was Carolingian art that most influenced Ottonian architecture.[28].
The new Europe
Around the year 1000, the most striking sign of the emergence of Christianity was the famous phrase of the monk Raoul Glaber"), who spoke of the "white cloak of churches" that covered especially Gaul and Italy. This important construction movement played a vital role through its function as an economic stimulus, the development of tools, the hiring of labor, the financing and organization of construction works. It was the center of the first and almost only medieval industry.
This constructive activity that marked the beginning of the West was linked to demography, the end of invasions, the advancement of institutions that regulated periods of military activities and placed non-combatant populations under the protection of warriors. This growth was also linked to land which, in the Middle Ages, was the basis of everything and it was at that time that the ruling class became ruralized, becoming a class of large landowners where vassalage was accompanied by a benefit, most frequently land given to peasants in exchange for royalties and services. To fulfill these obligations, they improved their farming methods, which caused an agricultural revolution throughout the centuries and which was also an intense period of land clearing.
This internal expansion of Christianity was joined by a movement of external conquest with the advance of its borders in Europe and the crusades in Muslim countries. Poland, Denmark, Norway and Sweden became Christian. The Normans settled in southern Italy, took Sicily from the Muslims and expelled the Byzantines from Italy. The Spanish Reconquista was led by Christian kings helped by mercenaries, knights and French Cluniac monks who supported the growth of the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela and played a prominent role.[24].
Since its foundation, Cluny Abbey benefited from an exemption from which it depended only on Rome and escaped political power and the ecclesiastical hierarchy. He dedicated himself fully to his spiritual function and his success was immediate. At the end of the century, , of which 815 were in France, were affiliated with the abbey of Burgundy and ten thousand monks were under the authority of the same father abbot. The monasteries that wanted to be independent united in the same family. Other Reformed abbeys became leaders and the movement was so powerful that it brought popes such as Gregory VII, father of the Gregorian reform, to the throne.
This radical transformation of society gave rise to new needs. In many fiefdoms, lords built feudal mottes, towers that would become strong castles and ensured divine protection through donations to monasteries or created colleges of canons.[29].
• - Evolution of the West from the Carolingian to the Gothic period.
• - Year 810: time of Carolingian architecture.
• - Year 900: era of Carolingian and Ottonian architecture.
• - Year 1180: period of Romanesque architecture.
Romanesque eras
The development of the Romanesque style is mainly between the and centuries, although its chronology is not strict. There are earlier examples that show incipient features of the style - already from the century -, as well as later constructions that, despite being built in the Gothic era, maintain Romanesque characteristics, especially in regions such as Asturias and Galicia, reaching in some cases until the beginning of the Renaissance.
The most common classification distinguishes between full Romanesque or simple and transitional Romanesque. The latter is often considered a variant of the first, characterized by the introduction of pointed or pointed arches, but without the use of Gothic ribbed vaults. Although its first manifestations are documented in the 19th century, it did not become widespread until the middle of that century, coexisting for a time with the full Romanesque.
Another frequent distinction is based on the degree of ornamentation, differentiating between simple Romanesque and floral Romanesque (also called rebellious). During the first stage of the style, until well into the 20th century, constructions with a solid appearance, sober decoration and a certain rough character predominated. As the century progressed, a greater elaboration of façades and windows was observed, as well as a progressive refinement in the execution.
This second phase, corresponding approximately from the middle of the century to much of the century, is characterized by ornamental exuberance and great finesse in details. The distinction between both stages is useful to establish the relative chronology of Romanesque buildings within the same region or locality, although regional variations and the influences of different artistic schools prevent establishing a universal rule.
religious architecture
Early Christian and pre-Romanesque antecedents
The structural components of Romanesque architecture—the chevets, the western facades and spaces, the articulations of the nave with its modes of coverage and its supports, the transepts, the straight sections of the choir and the treatment of the exterior walls—are in germ in early Christian and pre-Romanesque architecture.
The evolution of the Romanesque chevet over the centuries is linked to the multiplication of altars for increasingly numerous priests. They were of two main types: with aligned or stepped apses on each side of the apse, and with apses radiating from an ambulatory. An early experimental solution is preserved in its century state in the Euphrasian Basilica in Poreč, where the three Early Christian altars and mosaics suggest their location in three hemicycles. Still in Croatia, but in Dalmatia, some tripartite heads also appear in the and centuries.
In the centuries and , the headboards of this type are present: in Mistail"), in Switzerland, around 800; or in the church of San Miguel de Escalada, in Spain, with three original altars from 913. In the decades close to the year 1000 the headboards with apsidioles aligned on each side of the apse are present in Catalonia in the monastery of Ripoll and in San Miguel de Cuixá; in Burgundy, in the church of Saint-Vorles"); in Chatillon-sur-Seine; and in Italy, in the Aosta cathedral. There are stepped apse heads in the abbey of Cluny II and in the priory of Perrecy-les-Forges, in Burgundy; in the abbey of Notre-Dame de Déols"), in the Berry "Berry (France)"); and in Bernay"), in Normandy. From 817, the individualization of the straight section of the Poreč choir seems to have become widespread in Inden-Kornelimünster") and then in Carolingian architecture.
The transept was known, without its exact function being known, since the century in Rome, as in the ancient Basilica of Saint Peter, in Saint John Lateran or in Saint Paul Outside the Walls. This function was already perfectly established at the beginning of the century in the church of St. Michael in Hildesheim, where it welcomed more altars arranged in the apsidioles. Between these two dates, in the Saint-Gall plan (around 820) altars are seen in an eastern transept, and around the year 1000, there is also a transept with apsidioles that house altars in the abbey of San Miguel de Cuixá.
The chevets with ambulatory that extend the side naves and that allow circulation to the mausoleums or relics without disturbing the celebrations were present in ancient early Christian Rome, in the basilicas of Saints Peter and Marcellin), in San Sebastian de las Catacombs, in Saint Agnes Outside the Walls and in Saint Lawrence Outside the Walls. They announce the first medieval chevet of Saint Michael of Hildesheim, from the beginning of the century. In the Carolingian era, the abbey of Saint-Germain in Auxerre and the church of Saint-Genest in Flavigny-sur-Ozerain") had already developed circulation on two levels serving the apsidioles. In the abbey of Saint-Jean-du-Mont de Thérouanne"), three radiant chapels inserted in the ambulatory announce at the beginning of the century the solution of the abbey of Saint Phillibert of Tournus.
The two-tiered heads are found in early Christian Africa in Benian"), Tipasa and Djemila and in Gaul in the centuries and in Saint-Laurent de Grenoble") with its trefoiled plan. The evolution went from the quadrangular chapels to those arranged in semicircles around 1020 in the collegiate church Saint-Aignan d'Orléans")[30] and in the cathedral of Chartres.[31].
• - Evolution of the first headers.
• - Euphrasian Basilica in Poreč.
• - Inden-Kornelimünster").
• - Abbey of San Miguel de Cuixá.
• - St. Michael's Church in Hildesheim.
• - Saint-Aignan de Orléans").
The characteristic appearance of the elevations of the Romanesque chevets is present in the early Christian architecture of the basilica of Saint Vitale in Ravenna and in the Carolingian architecture in the abbey of Saint Germain in Auxerre and in the church of Saint-Genest in Flavigny-sur-Ozerain. This pyramidal shape is reinforced when there is a tower in the transept crossing, as in the church of St. Michael in Hildesheim at the beginning of the 19th century. Carolingian westwerks or Ottonian westwerks of the type of Corvey Abbey are found in the abbey of Jumièges, in Normandy, at the beginning of the century and in Alsace, at the heart of the century, in the collegiate church of Saint-Michel-et-Saint-Gandolphe in Lautenbach, in the abbey of Saint-Étienne in Marmoutier and in the church of Sainte-Foy in Sélestat").[31].
• - Corvey Abbey.
• - Jumièges Abbey.
• - Lautenbach.
• - Abbey of Saint-Étienne de Marmoutier.
• - Sainte-Foy Church of Sélestat").
The time of experiences
From a few decades before the year 1000 - a time of which there are only vestiges or reports of excavations - and until the first quarter of the century, it was the time of experimentation. The evolutions appear in particular in the heads and in the vaulting systems, in the notions of span and rhythm provided by the attached columns and composite pillars, in the rigging and carved stone, in the development of the crypt-rooms. At the beginning of the century, Burgundy, the Loire Valley, Poitou, Auvergne and Catalonia were the most innovative regions where research was reserved for great achievements: the cathedral of Clermont-Ferrand, the collegiate churches of Saint-Aignan in Orléans") and Saint-Vorles"), in Chatillon-sur-Seine, the abbey churches of Saint Philip of Tournus, of Saint-Bénigne in Dijon, of Cluny II, of Saint Michael of Cuixá and of Saint Martin du Canigó, the convent priory of Fleury Abbey in Perrecy-les-Forges and the church of Saint-Généroux").
The needs that made the eastern part of the churches evolve were related to the number of priests, which were increasingly numerous, and to the routing of the faithful towards the relics, which had to be done without disturbing the liturgy. The first response consisted of multiplying the chapels by juxtaposing, on both sides of the axial apse, aligned apsidioles. It was the organization adopted in the abbey of San Miguel de Cuixá, in Roussillon "Roussillon (region)"), a construction begun in 956 and whose altar was consecrated in 975, and in Chatillon-sur-Seine, where the Saint-Vorles church is located), between 980 and 1016, with a plan that did not solve the problem of circulations. The head of stepped chapels was another solution sophisticated that was found at the beginning of the century in Normandy, in Bernay"), and in the priory of Perrecy-les-Forges, which depended on the abbey of Fleury, near Orleans.
The response to the problem of independent circulation of the faithful to access the relics involved the creation of an ambulatory around the choir that isolated the celebrations at the main altar and that allowed the distribution of radiant apses in which to arrange secondary altars. If the example of the cathedral of Clermont-Ferrand, which served as a model for the collegiate church Saint-Aignan d'Orléans") (1017-1029), is known only through excavations, its crypt is a sketch of that of the church of Saint Phillibert of Tournus consecrated in 1019, whose chancel is still partially preserved. It was built on a crypt of the same floor where the choir and apse are surrounded by an ambulatory that serves some quadrangular chapels.
The ambulatory with radiating chapels defined in Saint Phillibert of Tournus was not questioned in Romanesque architecture. Only the number and shape of the chapels, the visual passages between the ambulatory, the choir and the chapels or the proportions of the volumes that make up the chancel varied.
The fundamental creations, 1020-1060
In the second quarter of the century, factories under construction multiplied due to the impulse of the lords who endowed the monasteries and monks who created new priories and rural churches. Interesting buildings were built in Provence and Languedoc. This strong activity allowed architects to acquire a certain mastery and create a vocabulary of forms that contributed to defining and disseminating Romanesque architecture.
The headers.
The evolution of the chevets involved an increase in the openings arranged between the choir, the ambulatory and the chapels, which provided a certain lightness to the walls. A better harmony of the exterior volumes was also sought through the modulated superimposition of the elements.
The sections.
The cell section, so important in Romanesque architecture, was already perfectly defined in the crypt of the Saint-Etienne cathedral of Auxerre, dated between 1023 and 1035. The composite pillar had also replaced the column. The square core receives the deliveries of the edges of the vaults and the columns support the large arcades and the transverse arches that receive a main arch in the central part of the room.[41].
The western facades.
After the chancels, the architects became interested in the western facades of the churches. In the abbey of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire, Abbot Gauzlin, half-brother of King Robert the Pious, built a portico-tower capable of serving as a model to all Gaule. Traditional but ambitious in construction, this porch tower is built on an almost square plan with sides of about , with an area of two floors. The ground floor has a height of .
The ground floor is open on three sides by triple arches - the middle one being wider than the other two - and remains closed to the east by the nave wall itself. These semicircular arches with double projections rest on rectangular pillars, in the north and south, and cruciform, in the west. They are reinforced with a half column on each side and by powerful buttresses on the pillars of the two corners. To the east, the columns are supported by large projections thick enough to accommodate spiral staircases. On each side of the central door, high semicircular arches were connected. The porch is divided into nine sections covered with groin vaults in blocks separated by wide semicircular transverse arches.
The ground floor reproduces the divisions of the ground floor. The pillars are joined by wide semicircular beams that support the groin vaults, except for the eastern ones, which touch the wall of the nave, which are dome-shaped. In that eastern wall three semicircular arch niches are covered in an oven vault. Probably, they housed altars, the middle one dedicated to the archangel Saint Michael in accordance with the custom of the dedications of the upper rooms or chapels.[42][43].
The expansion of the second half of the 11th century
In the second half of the century, new spaces were opened for Romanesque architecture. The Norman conquest of England in 1066 by William the Conqueror, the withdrawal of Islam in northern Spain and the development of pilgrimages, the relations of the almost isolated south-west of France with Poitou and the Spanish provinces, the financial contributions of the English possessions and the reform of the Catholic Church that provided more resources to the communities, led to an explosion of buildings and an evolution of the Romanesque architectural style.
Parallel to a first southern Romanesque art, which sought to vault buildings, it can be thought that there was a first northern Romanesque art[19] that remained very faithful for a certain time to the use of wooden carpentry on the roofs, especially for the naves, thus simplifying the elevation problems.
Built around 1049-1057, the small church Saint-Étienne de Vignory") has a nave built on a perfectly articulated elevation with fonts crowned by an impost and a wall surface with three levels of openings to lighten it without having the justification of a tribune.[32].
The dukes of Normandy were marked by a deep spiritual need and it was necessary to fill the void left by the Viking invasions in that region in which many pre-Romanesque settlements had not survived, and where new foundations were slow to flourish. William the Conqueror chose Caen as the second capital of his duchy. He committed to founding two monasteries with his wife that were to be decisive for Norman architecture. At his death he had built 17 convents for monks and 6 for nuns. He wanted the buildings to which his name was attached to surpass in magnificence those that rose everywhere.[50].
On December 25, 1066, William was crowned king of England and the extraordinary material success of the Normans was reflected in the church of Saint-Etienne in Caen. If the ambitious plan was probably conceived before the conquest of England, the overwhelming success of 1066 allowed its rapid execution because William did not hesitate to spoil, for the benefit of the abbeys of Caen, the main foundation of Harold II, the abbey church of Waltam" (in Essex), consecrated a few years before (1060).[51]
[52]
In England after 1066, the complete rebuilding of England's Saxon cathedrals by the Normans represented the most important program of ecclesiastical buildings in medieval Europe and the largest buildings erected in Christian Europe since the end of the Roman Empire. All of England's medieval cathedrals, except Salisbury, Lichfied and Wells, have traces of Norman architecture. Peterborough Cathedral, Durham Cathedral and Norwich Cathedral are almost completely Norman and in others there are still important parts: the naves of Ely Cathedral, Gloucester Cathedral and Southwell Minster, the transept of Winchester Cathedral.[53]
The time of maturity
The end of the century was marked by the height of the power of the Abbey of Cluny, which reached around the year 1000 a thousand priories scattered throughout Europe, with some ten thousand religious: nothing was too good to magnify the house of God. In reaction to this waste of means, monasticism undergoes a crisis with the creation of new orders that wish to renounce the goods of this world, which will manifest itself in constructions of great poverty. This new state of mind will have great importance in artistic creation and around 1130-1140, a new aesthetic ideal takes shape in these communities.
Cluny Abbey.
The abbey of Cluny III was on the scale and in the image of the power of the order. It had to accommodate two to three hundred resident monks, converts - who deal with manual labor and the secular affairs of a monastery, in order to allow the full contemplative life of the monks -, staff and visitors. If today only the south arm of the great transept, three sections of the side naves and two chapels remain, the plans and excavation campaigns show a church as long as the nave. The architectural celebration is of great ambition, with a chancel with an ambulatory and five radiating chapels, a double transept dominated by four towers, a nave and a choir with five naves, as in Saint Peter's in Rome. It was the largest building in the West, and its abbot, who reported solely to the pope, was one of the most important figures in Christendom.
Paray-le-Monial, a replica of Cluny.
The Basilica of Paray-le-Monial "Basilica of the Sacred Heart (Paray-le-Monial)") is a relatively faithful replica of the Cluny Abbey with reduced dimensions and a less ambitious architectural part. As in Cluny, its ambulatory is narrower than the corresponding side nave and there is a strong difference in level with the apse. The vaults of the choir and aisles have an identical height to that of the nave and transept. The hemicycle takes up Cluny's type of tall columns, the two levels of windows, the arcades and the attached columns. Paray-le-Monial, like Cluny, is characterized by its external austerity as opposed to an internal plastic investigation of great wealth.
An important difference appears with Cluny, where the architect wanted to reduce the scope of the central nave to a height unprecedented in Romanesque architecture. It creates a cantilever with strongly projecting chords at each level of the elevation and employs overlapping orders with fluted pilasters. This superimposition of orders found in Paray-le-Monial without the concern of the overhang is often taken up in Burgundy and beyond.
The churches of Auvergne.
In Auvergne, architects remained faithful to the barrel vault, with a particular interest in the inarticulate wall surfaces and the diaphragmatic arches that separated the nave from the transept, pierced with holes. The crypt, which in other places was already tending to disappear, is still present in some buildings in Auvergne. The diffusion of light is especially elaborate, as is the exterior decoration with the assembly of different stones and sets of rigging taken from the Early Middle Ages. The basilica of Notre-Dame-du-Port in Clermont-Ferrand has a crypt and a chancel with a decoration of polychrome stones.
From Romanesque to Gothic
In the century the decline of Romanesque art began in the regions where it had not truly developed. In the Île-de-France and the Loire Valley, no more were built in this style after the years 1140-1160. You see the emergence of a new style there. The master masons of Île-de-France gave the pointed vault its true role, drawing the logical consequences and bringing to perfection the vaults that launch over higher and higher naves, with more and more light, with more and more clarity of the great cathedrals.
The area of development of this new Gothic architecture roughly follows the royal domain passing through Reims, Provins, Sens, Etampes, Mantes, Gournay, Amiens and Saint-Quentin. The oldest pointed vaults are found around 1125 in the ambulatory of the abbey church of Notre-Dame de Morienval"), in the aisles of the church of Saint-Etienne de Beauvais"), in the porch of the priory church of Saint-Leu-d'Esserent"), in the right section of the choir of Saint-Pierre de Montmartre") in Paris, in the lower hall and in the chapel of the bishop of Meaux and in the choir of the church of Lucheux, on the Somme.[59].
Romanesque art resisted better in Normandy, Burgundy and Languedoc. But it was in the southern regions marked by lower economic capacity and by cultural reasons related to an ancient Romanization, where antiquity had strongly marked the landscape that Romanesque architecture was still used at the end of the century, and even in the middle of the century. The church of Saint Trophimus in Arles "Church of Saint Trophimus (Arles)" and the abbey church of Saint-Gilles du Gard") are notable examples of Romanesque sculpture of this period.
At the same time, the new monastic orders (Cistercians, Grandmontines and Chalaisians) defined an ideal architecture with refined forms, with special attention to the quality of the stone masonry. In their networks of abbeys, they spread these principles independently of local fashions and created a timeless Romanesque architecture that defies time for its quality of construction.[60]
But the simplicity desired at the origin of the creation of these orders was quickly adapted to the new realities. Only the Carthusians respected the original ideal and conceived a type plant for their life as cenobites and hermits. The monks' independent cells consisted of three rooms: the Ave Maria; the oratory with a seat, an office and a bed in an alcove; a workshop with a garden. These cells were distributed by the cloister of the maison haute. The second part of the monastery was reserved for the common life of the religious, with the church, a small cloister, the chapter house, the refectory and its kitchen. The converts' buildings and the operational annexes were quite far apart.[17].
Robert de Molesme decided in 1098 to found a new monastery which he called Citeaux. The success led to the creation of new abbeys that were governed by a charter that defined the objectives of the new order, the Cistercian order, which would become one of the branches of the Gregorian Reform. The Cistercians lived in desert areas, earned their living through work and rejected the superfluous. At first they were content to live in wooden buildings, then Saint Bernard of Clairvaux imagined an organization flexible enough to adapt to local limitations, but although the buildings had common characteristics, there was no standard floor plan.
The architecture and its decoration
The emergence of the decoration of Romanesque architecture begins at the end of the century when the image brutally invades the Clunician abbeys. The religious who participated in the adoption of the Gregorian reform gave it what had been rejected for a long time and recognized that an image could carry a message as relevant as a written speech for a better understanding of the mysteries of faith by the faithful.
This interest in the image evoked the time of the first Christians with one big difference, that the images left the place of worship to also establish themselves outside. Before this explosion, painted or sculpted decoration was reserved for the most sacred spaces of buildings, but its great diversity had imposed a certain caution in interpretation. The frescoes of Saint-Savin-Sur-Gartempe unify the interior space, the mosaics of the Cathedral of Cefalù or the Basilica of Saint Mark in Venice tried to reconnect with early Christian architecture and the Cathedral of Monreale is the most successful example.
At the end of the 11th century, the Gregorian reform with its liturgical modifications profoundly transformed the altar and its surroundings. The antependium became altarpieces with the new position of the officiant. The alliance of altarpieces and relics finds an extension in the altars-tombs. The receptacles of the holy remains are sometimes converted into statues-reliquaries in the image of the saint, often placed next to the altar. This new position of the priest imposed a reorganization of the choir with a displacement of the monks in the eastern sections of the nave and the creation of seats. This separation between the religious and the faithful led to the construction of ambos and gates.
If the interior decoration reconnected with the tradition of the first Christian places of worship, the Gregorian reform gave a triumphant scope to the image by inscribing it at the entrance to the buildings of worship. The portal becomes the "gate to heaven" and the link with the profane world. They are no longer systematically arranged on the west façade of the church, but can also be on the axis of a main street or a privileged access. For the religious inside the monasteries, the image was often limited to the historiated capitals and, sometimes, to capitals on pillars in cloisters and in the chapter houses.[29].
The main creators worked in privileged centers. The south-west of France and the north-west of Spain were marked by two generations of artists, the first of which was inspired by the minor arts, ivories and illuminations and by early Christian and even pagan patterns on sarcophagi. The artist was in search of gestures and an expressive attitude to define the Romanesque figure and the historic capitals. The second generation synthesized important artistic centers between Moissac and Santiago de Compostela, passing through Toulouse and León. They defined a type of portals that supported the desired iconography at that time and brought a new style to the sculptures in the cloisters. The master of the Moissac portal had an important influence in Quercy, Cahors, Souillac and in Limousin, in Beaulieu") and Ydes. The work of the master of the abbey of Silos in Spain was also notable.
Building types
The main buildings of architecture were: churches, monasteries, abbeys and cathedrals.
style components
Entre los elementos arquitectónicos que destacan en el estilo románico los más característicos del mismo son:.
• - El pilar compuesto y de núcleo prismático.
• - El arco de medio punto.
• - La cubierta de bóveda de medio cañón y de arista.
• - La cúpula poligonal sobre trompas.
• - Los ábsides semicirculares en planta de cruz latina en las iglesias.
• - La planta basilical es la típica latina.
A continuación otros de los elementos arquitectónicos propios del estilo:.
• - Contrafuertes muy desarrollados.
• - Arcos fajones y arquivoltas.
• - Capiteles decorados.
• - Impostas, frisos decorativos.
• - Escultura monumental aplicada a la arquitectura.
Plant
The typical plan of a Romanesque church is the Latin basilica with four, three or five naves "Nave (architecture)") and transept "Cruise (architecture)") with projecting arms. In the head or head, which always faces east, there are three or five semicircular apses facing or forming a crown, each of them having three windows in its wall. And at the foot or entrance of the temple stands a porch or narthex flanked by two square towers. But just as rural or minor churches only consist of a simple nave and an apse without a projecting transept and without towers next to the door, so the largest ones above all, those of large monasteries or the sanctuaries visited by numerous pilgrimages usually offer a very large transept and transept "Cruise (architecture)"), as well as having extended side naves around the main chapel constituting the ambulatory or semicircular nave that gives way to different apsidal chapels, open around of it as a crown. Some churches have the arms of the transept converted into separate apses that, with the central one, form a kind of large trefoil. The churches of the Templars and other related knightly orders are, in general, on a polygonal or circular plan and are small in size. Likewise, there are small oratories with a circular plan that were funerary chapels or that were attached to fortifications as military oratories and there are no shortage of others that, following the Byzantine style or inspiration, are arranged in the form of a Greek cross and a quatrefoil.
Buttresses
The characteristic supports of a Romanesque building are the composite pillar and the abutment or buttress attached externally to the wall. The buttresses are intended to reinforce the walls and simultaneously serve as abutment or counterbalance to the arches and vaults (a service also provided by the composite pillars): they are visible from the outside, smooth and prismatic in shape. But when they are attached to the apses they frequently appear as columns that support the eaves "Cover (construction)"). The walls are made of ashlar or uneven ashlars with little regularity in the courses.
Pillars and arches
The aforementioned pillar ordinarily mounts on a cylindrical or low-height plinth "Plinth (construction)") and is composed of a simple or compound pilaster that has one or two semi-cylindrical columns attached to each front or to one of them (or instead of these, other narrower pilasters) in order to give rise to the former arches and the transversal ones or transverse arches. These columns have a base and capital also attached to the prismatic central core. There are also free-standing and paired columns, two by two, or four by four, but they are not ordinarily found in these forms but in cloisters, porticos, galleries "Gallery (room)") and mullioned windows.
The Romanesque capitals offer special interest due to the variety of their shapes and the very curious work with which they are usually decorated. Some of them preserve classic reminiscences of a degenerate Corinthian flavor but the vast majority are formed from a thick prism or a pyramidal trunk or an inverted cone whose fronts have sculpted interlaced geometric work or plant motifs that surround it in the form of leaves or symbolic and historical matters. The capital is crowned by a thick abacus "Abaco (architecture)"), called cymatium, which is almost always decorated with moldings or other ornaments typical of the style and frequently has a series of square modillions that look like battlements on its lower part. In twin or juxtaposed columns, the abacus usually covers the entire group of them, thus uniting their capitals.
The bases of the columns have the Tuscan or Attic shape but with the lower torus wide and flattened and they usually have in the spandrels or angles of the plinth a whimsical figurine or a claw that appears to hold with the plinth the curved molding or torus that rests on it. In the century the bases were frequently decorated with different works typical of the style, which was already used at some point in Visigothic architecture (and much more so in Roman architecture) as seen in the church of San Pedro de la Nave.
The construction arches rest immediately on the aforementioned abacus and are semicircular or banked and almost always double or triple, that is, each one of them consists of two or three semi-rings attached one below the other, with the one above being wider. When it is decorated with moldings themselves, the second period of the style is denounced and they are presented in the form of a thick baton, bordering the corner of the arch. Also typical of the second period (century) is the pointed arch, also called pointed arch, which is sometimes found in Romanesque buildings as a constructive means to reduce lateral thrust (without this being an indication of Gothic style if the ribbed vault is missing) and never as an ornament. However, in some Romanesque buildings, influenced by Muslim architecture, lobed and interlocking arches, either ornamental or constructive, are found. But the latter only in cloister arcades or in equivalent works.
inner cover
The interior cover of the naves and different rooms generally consists of the half-barrel vault—sometimes pointed like the arches—for the central nave; edge or quarter-barrel for the sides and shell or quarter-sphere for the apses, rising above the transept a polygonal dome supported by squinches (in Persian style) that are placed in the angles or corners resulting from the meeting of the main arches. These squinches are made up of a semi-conical vault or a series of degrading arches that do the same job. Sometimes, depending on the school to which the building belongs, the central nave has a wooden roof or lacks a dome or, on the contrary, has it truly spherical and raised on Byzantine-style pendentives. The difficulty and the greatest difference found in these buildings lie in the problem of combining the vaulting of all the naves with sufficient lighting in the central one and, furthermore, in giving the transept or the meeting of the naves a very stable balance and a proportionate roof: the various solutions given to this double problem constitute the main differences of the architectural schools of the Romanesque style.
Outer cover
The exterior cover or roof insists on the vaults by means of a simple wooden framework that rests on them, but in the century this framework becomes independent and is supported only by the walls so as not to load the vaults and domes with weight. Above the polygonal dome of the transept rises a prismatic lantern, either forming a body with it or being independent as a dome. This lantern ends with a pyramidal roof, the whole resembling a tower with a wide base and low height that, at times, also functions as a bell tower.
Doors and windows
The doors are formed by a series of round concentric arches in degradation, the archivolts, supported by separate columns so that the entire complex forms a kind of flared and molded arch, contributing to the greatest visual effect the same thickness of the wall that usually forms a projecting body there. Some doorways lack a lintel and a tympanum, but they are generally provided with both, and then symbolic or iconistic reliefs are sculpted on the last one, and on the sides of the doorway or on the jambs, and even in the flared arch itself, various series of ornamental work in relief are arranged, sometimes flanking the entrance to the most sumptuous churches with statues.
The windows almost always open on the façade and in the apse and sometimes in the side walls. They are much taller than they are wide and end at the top in a double arch, generally flat or sharp-edged, supported on small columns like those on the façade and when these arches are surrounded by fine moldings or batons or the windows have left their original narrowness, they belong to the second period of the style. There are also mullioned windows, oculi and small rose windows, the latter corresponding to the last period.
The windows are closed with colorless or colored stained glass in some sumptuous churches or with translucent sheets of alabaster or crystalline plaster or with simple lattices "Lattice (architecture)") of perforated stone and in poor churches with simple white cloths waxed or impregnated with turpentine. Hence, the windows of this period must have been small (the same as in the previous one) until the use of large stained glass windows was tested and generalized.
Cornices
The cornices form a continuous fascia on pilasters and walls and after the abacuses of the capitals and adorn the frontispiece "Fronton (architecture)") placed above the doorway or below the windows. They have ornaments and moldings and are often (like the pediment and the eaves or roof tiles, which are also cornices) supported by corbels or by series of small blind arches.
Ornamentation
The typical ornamentation of the Romanesque style is manifested mainly in the cornices, archivolts, capitals, doors and windows and consists of a set of broken geometric lines or armholes, banknotes, checkered patterns, saw teeth, diamond points, lacework, arches or blind arches, small rosettes, serpentine foliage and other plant motifs always stylized or with little imitation of nature. Iconistic reliefs and statues, masks or corbels, bestiaries (monstrous animal figures) and symbolic reliefs are also used.
The interior walls were decorated with various paintings of these motifs and religious or biblical scenes, and the floors were sometimes decorated with mosaics. As a general rule, the sculptural decoration of Romanesque buildings is closely linked to the structure, so that it serves to accentuate the most prominent members of the structure and is not a false covering for the building. However, in some buildings several figures of monsters can be observed sculpted as if crushed by the bases of the columns or in relief on the plinth of the facades with an evidently symbolic or moral idea since they do not have an architectural one.
Structure
The general structure of a Romanesque church can be inferred from what has been said about the plan, supports and vaults. It only remains to be noted that the entire interior composition is exposed externally by the buttresses that mark the sections of the floor plan. Likewise, due to the continuous fascias that indicate the divisions of the elevation. Through the windows and arches, which respond to the interior triforiums or their equivalents and to the differences in height in the naves, etc.
On the well-arranged façades there is a large cornice supported by corbels on the doorway, one or three windows or a small rose window at the top, two or three series of blind arches at different levels and a pediment or pinion bordered by a cornice at the upper end of the wall.
Romanesque architecture in Europe
Hungary
In Hungary, Romanesque art properly emerged after the Christianization of the Hungarians in 1000, under King Saint Stephen I of Hungary. This art evolved with deep Germanic influences and in enormous, mainly ecclesiastical constructions, which were found in cities such as Esztergom, Székesfehérvár and Veszprém, where their enormous cathedrals (now already destroyed after the invasions of the Tatars of 1241 and Turks after 1526) served as centers of Christianity in the kingdom. All these cathedrals were founded mainly by Saint Stephen I and his successors Peter Orseolo of Hungary, Andrew I, Géza I among others, who reigned during the centuries , and .
In this way, by the middle and end of the century it was a common sight to see in Hungary both small constructions such as the church of Egregy, and others of enormous dimensions, all with closed apses, portals with three semicircular arches supported by pillars, as well as the construction of churches with three naves. Among the works that have survived to the present day is the church of Lébény, built at the end of the century and the beginning of the century, as well as the church of Ják, which finds its origins at the beginning of the century, the church of Velemér") in the century and the church of Felsőörs") in the century.
Scandinavia
In Scandinavia the Norman influence is also noticeable. The floor plans are a Latin cross, with a tower in the transept that acts as a lantern.
The cathedrals of Lund, Uppsala and Trondheim stand out.
Belgium
In Belgium, the Cathedral of Tournai anticipates the Gothic.
• - Romanesque buildings.
• - Cistercian architecture.
• - Gothic architecture.
• - This work contains a partial translation of the sections «Contexte historique» and «L'architecture et son décor» derived from «Architecture romane» of Wikipedia in French, specifically from this version, published by its editors under the GNU Free Documentation License and the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
• - Wikimedia Commons hosts a multimedia gallery on Romanesque Architecture.
• - Romanesque Circle Study Center: Visigothic, Mozarabic and Romanesque art in Europe.
• - Friends of the Romanesque: Romanesque Inventory.
[2] ↑ Bannister Fletcher, A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method.
[3] ↑ Estas placas oscurecen los vestigios de la policromía y los murales en color.
[4] ↑ Vista del Priorato de Saint-Gilles en Languedoc, en el Primer volumen de L'architecture de Philibert de l'Orme, página 123, digitalizado en Gallica.
[5] ↑ Digitalizado en Gallica.
[6] ↑ Matthias Noell, Classement und classification: Ordnungssysteme der Denkmalpflege in Frankreich und Deutschland Archivado el 27 de septiembre de 2007 en Wayback Machine., Berlin, 2 de abril de 2005.: http://www.kunsttexte.de/download/denk/sym4-noell.pdf
[7] ↑ El profesor de historia del arte Jean Nayrolles cuestiona esta historiografía al mencionar la existencia de un manuscrito de Gerville que contiene dos notas que probablemente datan del verano de 1818 y en el que ya propone el término «roman» para la arquitectura. Cf. Jean Nayrolles (2005). L'invention de l'art roman à l'époque moderne (XVIIIe-XIXe siècles). Presses universitaires de Rennes. pp. 85-86.
[8] ↑ Ferdinand Gidon (1934). «L'invention de l'expression architecture romane par Gerville (1818) d'après quelques lettres de Gerville à Le Prévost». Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de Normandie XLII: 268-288. .: https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5732066w/f284
[9] ↑ El arte romano, y más precisamente el de la antigüedad tardía, es sólo una de las fuentes de inspiración y referencia de los artistas románicos. A esta influencia, transmitida por el arte carolingio, se suman influencias ornamentales provenientes de los pueblos germánicos (arte visigodo), influencias bizantinas. Cf Jannic Durand, Jean-René Gaborit, Danielle Gaborit-Chopin, (2005). L'art roman au Louvre. Fayard. p. 8. .
[10] ↑ Françoise Leriche-Andrieu (1984). Initiation à l'art roman. Zodiaque. p. 6. .
[11] ↑ Arcisse de Caumont (1824). «Essai sur l'architecture religieuse du Moyen Âge, particulièrement en Normandie». Mémoires de la Société des Antiquaires de la Normandie 1: 535-677. .
[12] ↑ Historia de los Estilos Artísticos, de Ursula Hatje, pag. 221.
[13] ↑ Jean-Michel Leniaud (2007). La Révolution des signes. L'art à l'église, 1830-1930. 2007. p. 101. .
[14] ↑ Robert Carvais, Valérie Nègre, Jean-Sébastien Cluzel et Juliette Hernu-Bélaud (dir.); Lei Huang (2015). «L'invention de l'expression "architecture romane" et ses traductions: réception d'un terme architectural et stylistique dans l'historiographie du XIXe siècle». Traduire l'architecture. Picard. pp. 102-103.
[15] ↑ Jean Nayrolles (2005). L'invention de l'art roman à l'époque moderne (XVIIIe-XIXe siècles). Presses universitaires de Rennes. p. 109. .
[16] ↑ Hay versión digitalizada en Gallica.
[17] ↑ a b c Alain Erlande-Brandenburg (2005). L'art roman - Un défi européen. Gallimard. p. 159. ISBN 978-2-07-030068-6.
[26] ↑ Pierre Riché (2010). Les carolingiens — une famille qui fit l'Europe (en francés). Paris: Librairie Arthème Fayard/Pluriel. p. 490. ISBN 978-2-01-279544-0.
[27] ↑ Henri Focillon (1984). L'an mil. Denoël, Paris. p. 187. ISBN 978-2-282-30246-1.
[28] ↑ Gabrielle Demians D'Archimbaud, Histoire artistique de l'occident médiéval, Paris, Armand Colin, 1992, ISBN 2200313047.
[29] ↑ a b Erlande-Brandenburg, 2005.
[30] ↑ Ver páginas 49 a 79: Pierre Martin, Les premiers chevets à déambulatoire et chapelles rayonnantes de la Loire moyenne Xe-XIe siècles).Saint-Aignan d’Orléans, Saint-Martin de Tours, Notre-Dame de Mehun-sur-Yèvre, La Madeleine de Châteaudun, Sciences de l’Homme et Société. Université de Poitiers, 2010 (lire en ligne).: https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00581583/document
[32] ↑ a b c d Quitterie Cazes (2007). «L'architecture romane - Le temps des expériences». Cité de l'architecture et du patrimoine. Consultado el 20 de enero de 2018.: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/xmmk74
[33] ↑ Éliane Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | Préfiguration 980-1020. Flammarion. pp. 49-75. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[41] ↑ a b c d Eliane Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | Création. Flammarion. pp. 77-109. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[42] ↑ Marcel Aubert (1931). «L'abbaye de Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire». Congrès archéologique de France - Orléans - 1930: 588.
[43] ↑ Georges Chenesseau (1931). L'abbaye de Fleury à Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire. | Son histoire. Ses institutions. Ses édifices. Paris: Van Oest.
[44] ↑ a b Maylis Baylé (2001). L'architecture normande | Structure murales et voûtements dans l'architecture romane de Normandie 1. Charles Corlet - Presses universitaires de Caen. p. 50. ISBN 2-85480-949-1. .
[45] ↑ a b J. Bony (1939). «La technique normande du mur épais à l'époque romane». Bulletin Monumental XCVIII: 153-188. .
[46] ↑ a b Pierre Heliot (1959). «Les antécédents et les débuts des coursives anglo-normandes et rhénanes». Cahiers de civilisation médiévale 2 (8). .
[48] ↑ Ottonian architecture and its influence. in: Walkin, David. A history of Western architecture, page: 116. Laurence King Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1856694593.
[49] ↑ Louis Grodecki; Florantine Müther (1973). Le siècle de l'an mil (collection: Univers des formes). Gallimard, Paris.
[50] ↑ Gionanni Coppola, « L'essor de la construction monastique en Normandie au s. XIe : mécénat, matériaux et moines-architectes », Annales de Normandie, 1992, Vol. 42, Número 4.
[51] ↑ Lucien Musset. Normandie romane 1. Zodiaque - La nuit des temps. p. 51.
[55] ↑ a b Eliane Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | L'explosion 1060-1090. Flammarion. pp. 143-191. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[56] ↑ Mayli Baylé (2001). L'architecture Normande | Structures murales et voûtements dans l'architecture romane en Normandie 1. Charles Corlet, Presses universitaires de Caen. p. 56. ISBN 2-85480-949-1. .
[57] ↑ a b c d Quitterie Cazes. «L'architecture romane. Le temps de la maturité». Cité de l'architecture et du patrimoine / dailymotion. Consultado el 27 de enero de 2018. .: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/xmmka4
[58] ↑ Elian Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | Maturité 1090-1140. Flammarion. p. 193-233. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[59] ↑ Marcel Aubert (1934). «Les plus anciennes croisées d'ogives, leur rôle dans la construction». Bulletin monumental: 69.
[60] ↑ a b Eliane Vergnolle (1994). L'art roman en France | Ruptures et mutations. Flammarion. pp. 285-351. ISBN 2-08-010763-1.
[84] ↑ Véase en la entrada «Caminos de Santiago de Compostela: Camino francés y Caminos del Norte de España» del sitio oficial de la Unesco. Protege una «(...) red de cuatro itinerarios de peregrinación cristiana –el Camino costero, el Camino interior del País Vasco y La Rioja, el Camino de Liébana y el Camino primitivo– que suman unos 1.500 kilómetros y atraviesan el norte de la península ibérica. El bien cultural ampliado posee un rico patrimonio arquitectónico de gran importancia histórica, compuesto por edificios destinados a satisfacer las necesidades materiales y espirituales de los peregrinos: puentes, albergues, hospitales, iglesias y catedrales...», disponible en: [1].: http://whc.unesco.org/es/list/669
[85] ↑ Véase en la entrada «Iglesias románicas catalanas de Vall del Boí» del sitio oficial de la Unesco. Protege un valle en el que «Todas las aldeas de este valle, rodeadas de campos cercados, poseen una iglesia románica». Disponible en: [2].: http://whc.unesco.org/es/list/988
[86] ↑ Los 20 edificios preseleccionados fueron los siguientes: Santo Domingo de Silos, Catedral vieja de Salamanca, San Juan de Duero, Santa María de Eunate, San Miguel de Estella, San Salvador de Leyre, Sant Cugat del Vallés, San Pedro de Roda, Santa María de Ripoll, San Clemente de Tahull, San Vicente de Cardona, Catedral de Jaca, Castillo de Loarre, San Juan de la Peña, Catedral de Santo Domingo de la Calzada, Cámara Santa de Oviedo, Colegiata de Santillana del Mar, Catedral de Santiago de Compostela, San Isidoro de León, San Martín de Frómista. Véase en el sitio «Medievalum - La Historia Medieval en Internet», disponible en: [3].: https://www.medievalum.com/elige-las-7-maravillas-del-romanico-espanol/
[89] ↑ «Primeiras Impressões sobre a Arquitectura Românica Portuguesa». Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto. Carlos Alberto Ferreira de Almeida. 2001.: http://ler.letras.up.pt/uploads/ficheiros/3105.pdf
[95] ↑ Service, Alastair (1982). «4». Anglo-Saxon and Norman : A guide and Gazetteer. The Buildings of Britain. ISBN 0-09-150130-X.
[96] ↑ Lise Godfredsen (2002). «Den romanske kunst og vikingekunstens efterliv» [El arte románico y el más allá del arte vikingo]. En Lise Gjedssø Bertelsen, ed. Vikingetidens kunst; en udstilling om kunsten i vikingernes verden og efterverden ca. 800 – 1250 (Kongernes Jelling): 35. ISBN 87-989042-0-5.
• - Abbey of Saint Phillibert of Tournus (1008-1028).
• - Church of Saint-Généroux") (2nd quarter of the 20th century).
In the abbey of San Martín del Canigó where the smallness of the site imposed the construction of two superimposed churches, the lower church, consecrated in 1009, maintains in the western part vaults of transverse arches that define the sections. Esta iglesia parcialmente subterránea no supera los tres metros de altura con un luz central de de anchura y unas naves laterales de . Its construction was the subject of a first rapid campaign in the East, between 997 and 1009, with a structure of columns supporting the groin vaults, a technique used in the crypts, and with three small apses. The columns received masonry reinforcement to solve stability problems, since the lower columns would support the upper church, whose main nave was barrel-vaulted. The second construction campaign towards the West shows the progress of Romanesque architecture at the beginning of the 11th century, with the transition from the column to the composite pillar. The six equal and juxtaposed sections were covered in a barrel with transverse arches on cruciform pillars. This modular space, which is repeated as many times as there are sections in the building, was the basic thought of the architects of the centuries and .[32].
• - Head of Tournus.
• - Head of the Saint-Vorles church").
• - Head of the abbey of San Martín del Canigó.
• - Perrecy-les-Forges.
• - Church of Saint-Généroux").
The cathedral of San Benigno in Dijon is exceptional for its large crypt-hall built between 1001 and 1009 that will be found again in northern Italy and in the Holy Roman Empire in the middle of the century. This eastern rotunda, reminiscent of early Christian mausoleums, has three vaulted levels connected by stairs arranged in side turrets. A central light well illuminates the different levels and is surrounded by two rows of columns arranged in hemicycles.[32][33][34][35].
The first southern Romanesque art was born in northern Italy and in the eastern half of the Pyrenees at the end of the century and beginning of the 19th century. It developed rapidly after the year 1000, probably thanks to the Lombard masters. From Italy, he gained the Rhône Valley and Burgundy. The northern limit seems to be the church of Saint-Vorles") of Chatillon-sur-Seine, where it favored the transition from Ottonian to Romanesque architecture, but had to compete with the strong Carolingian traditions.
In the last third of the century, in southern Europe, an early southern Romanesque building could be recognized by its exterior appearance, made of small stones broken with a hammer and carefully arranged. This style would come from Italy and it is likely that it wanted to imitate brick buildings. The master masons who imposed their construction technique in Catalonia eliminated the presence of carved stones from local architecture.
This art was marked by its decoration of Lombard bands, formed by festoons of small arches that highlighted the height of the walls, and framed with lesenas or pilasters. Between two lesenas, the number of arches was variable and could even form continuous friezes. This decoration went from the apses to the grooved walls of the naves, to the walls of the bell towers and to the facades to organize the composition. These Lombard bands originated in early Christian architecture and pre-Romanesque art, in Ravenna and in the Po plain. Romanesque architecture adopted this architectural motif of the century, giving it a decorative role. Less frequent than the Lombard bands, small niches were arranged, present in Italy at the beginning of the century, related or not to the decoration of Lombard bands. This early southern Romanesque art in the Mediterranean tradition was the beneficiary of ancient and Byzantine contributions, including those from a more distant East.
The plan of the churches is very traditional and takes up those of the basilicas of Ravenna. To meet the new demands of the liturgy, architects minimize the length and height of the transepts, but apply themselves to covering all parts of the buildings with vaults to protect them from fire and, thanks to the reverberation of the vaults, create a miraculous atmosphere.
The construction of vaults throughout the building entailed a profound aesthetic mutation because the support of the vaults organized in juxtaposed bays generated an articulated architecture. The first southern art developed an original type of crypt, a room with columns, low and vaulted with groins, on the same plane as the chevet. The first crypts articulated with the choir appear in Lombardy around the year 1000, in the basilica of San Vicente de Galliano"), in San Vincenzo in Prato in Milan, in San Pietro de Agriate, and later developed in Piedmont, in Savoy in the Saint-Martin d'Aime"), as well as in Switzerland in Amsoldingen and in Spiez, in Catalonia and in Roussillon, and in the valley of Rhône, in the abbey of Sainte-Marie de Cruas").[36][37].
Although the octagonal tower on a raised dome in the transept transept allowed a harmonious staggering of the volumes of the apse, as in Santa María de Ripoll or San Vicente de Cardona (1029-1040),[38] what best characterized this architecture was the bell tower. On the liturgical level, they received chapels often dedicated to the archangel Saint Michael that allowed prayer to be raised, and the bells to be arranged for the call to the divine office, but they also constituted a decoration space where the entire repertoire of the first southern Romanesque was used. In San Miguel de Cuixá and in the abbey of Fruttuaria"), a central lesena crosses the panels to accentuate the verticality. The circular plan of Ravenna spread in central Italy, but the square plan used in Milan and its region was widely preferred for its massive appearance. The triumph of the first southern Romanesque art passes through truly original and promising works, such as the monastery of San Pedro de Roda (878-1022).[39][40].
• - Early southern Romanesque.
• - Basilica of Saint Martin of Aime").
• - Head with octagonal tower of the Ripoll monastery (880-888, expanded in consecrated campaigns in 935, 977 and 1032).
• - Nave of the monastery of San Pedro de Roda (878-1022).
• - Crypt of the collegiate church of Cardona (1029-1040).
In the abbey of Saint Phillibert of Tournus, the Galilee "Galilee (architecture)") built around 1035-1040 is the first testimony of its kind. It is part of the suite of Carolingian façade massifs with a sanctuary often dedicated to Saint Michael above a low hall. The basilica plan is long by wide, on two levels, with a central nave with three sections and side naves. On the ground floor, the central nave is vaulted with groins and the lateral ones with transverse barrel vaults; and on the upper floor, the central nave has a height of and is barrel-vaulted and stabilized on each side by half-barrel vaults.[41].
• - Crypt of the cathedral of Saint-Etienne of Auxerre (1023).
• - Abbey of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire.
• - Abbey of San Filiberto de Tournus.
• - Galilée plant, Tournus.
Norman innovations at Jumièges.
The now-ruined Jumièges Abbey in Normandy is part of the group of timber-roofed architecture found in Ottonian architecture of the Holy Roman Empire. The Duchy of Normandy was, with the Holy Empire, the only stable State of the time with well-defined borders. The dukes began to rebuild the monasteries destroyed by their Norman ancestors and later it was the great lords who endowed many other abbeys.
In the abbey church, the western massif is preceded by an antebody that evokes the Carolingian westwerk of Corvey Abbey. It has three levels, the first gives access to the nave, then a gallery opens widely over the church and the third stabilizes the two tall towers.
For the nave, built around 1050-1060, the traditional two-level elevation was extended into a third level with a total height of . The widely open galleries above the central nave are inserted between the arcades on the ground floor and the high windows on the top floor. The stability of the central nave is ensured by the groin-vaulted side naves and its extension to the galleries was a novelty. The beginning of the section was affirmed by the alternation of strong and weak pillars, and in one section in two, an attached column rises to the level of the roof carpentry. These piers are composed of a square core and four attached columns, and are perfectly coordinated with the deliveries, as in fully vaulted buildings. Thus, at the beginning of Romanesque art, for the section, the essential articulation of medieval architecture, vaulted architecture and wooden roof architecture contributed to the definition of a new mural art.
The Norman technique of the thick wall was used in the transept of the abbey of Jumièges, near the abbey of Bernay"), which seems to bear the prototype and in which the influence of the cathedral of Saint Benigno of Dijon was probably the origin of this first Norman application of the principle of the circulation service which is found later in the transept of the church of Saint-Étienne of Caen and which was later used systematically in the constructions of the Anglo-Norman world.
This association of a visual lightening of the wall with a de facto reinforcement of the structure is one of the greatest successes of the Norman builders. It favored the launching of even heavier vaults, even than in Bernay and Jumièges. The very conception of the walls is perfectly adapted to a later vaulting.[41][44][45][46].
• - Jumièges Abbey.
• - Jumièges Abbey.
• - Ship.
• - Aerial view.
• - Wall passages.
A pilgrimage church, Conques.
In the 19th century, in the Rouergue, the modest and almost inaccessible monastery of Conques subsisted, but at the end of the century the monks organized the kidnapping of the relics in another monastery, those of Santa Fe in Agen. After a century without miracles, they multiplied and Bernard of Angers wrote Le livre des miracles de Sainte-Foy [The Book of Miracles of Sainte-Foy] which ensured his notoriety. Given the influx of pilgrims, a new abbey church had to be built around 1030-1050. Its plan, which served as a prototype for pilgrimage churches, was conceived from the beginning as a whole. It has a nave with three naves, a very projecting transept and a chancel with an ambulatory with three radiating chapels associated with the stepped chapels of the transept transepts. The galleries, designed to counteract the horizontal thrusts of the nave, were also planned and will be built a little later, although the access staircase was built in the same work campaign as the transept. They provide indirect light to the central nave.
With the new abbey of Conques we enter a new era of sculpture. The capitals of the transept are of a Carolingian type, with interlaces to evoke the antiquity of the place and to inscribe in the antiquity of the Christian religion. In the ambulatory and at the entrances to the chapels, capitals of a new, still crude type are used, sometimes set with interlacing, with concave palmettes, with clumsily treated foliage, where human figures are introduced, a centaur in the axial chapel and quadrupeds facing each other in the south chapel of the ambulatory. From the chancel to the portal one can follow the progression of the art of sculpture from 1050 to around 1130 and its entry into the era of historiated capitals.[32][47].
• - The abbey church of Santa Fe, in Conques.
• - The header.
• - The ship.
• - The stands.
• - Capital, with heads and tracery.
Ottonian architecture formed alone, almost in a vacuum, evolving Carolingian models and resisting the contributions of early Mediterranean Romanesque art. The contact areas in Juran Burgundy and in the Alps show that the fusion between these two worlds of forms was difficult. The progression of southern architecture stopped in the area of Ottonian influence that borrowed only decorative elements to transform them and that was only after 1050, in an already decaying Empire, when southern decorative elements and sculptures infiltrated Germanic buildings.
The influence of Ottonian architecture in northern Europe can be felt in the monuments of the northwest and west of France, and the question arises as to whether the different regional types could be regrouped into a single formal ensemble that ran from the Ocean to the Elbe, and from the North Sea to the Loire. The lower transepts of Morienval") and of the churches of the Aisne probably come from the Meuse, the harmonic heads of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, of Melun") and of Morienval, undoubtedly, derive from Lorraine; in Normandy, the façade of Jumièges, with its western massif and its tribune, and the missing façade of Fécamp show a composition similar to that of the Carolingian and Ottonian westwerks, the porch of Saint-Nicolas-de-Caen") is of the Rhineland type; in Campagne, between royal France and the Empire, a different architecture developed around the year 1000 with some typically French characteristics, but similar in its structure and origins Carolingians.[19][48][49].
Since the time of early Christian architecture, the large wall surfaces received paintings and mosaics. At the beginning of the century, the aesthetic vision of Romanesque architecture is manifested not only in the composite font, but also in the sculptural decoration.
To enliven the walls, one finds especially in Italy and Catalonia lesenas or small arches on slightly projecting pilasters, what are called Lombard bands. In the Loire Valley, carved plaques and friezes decorate the exterior walls. Rare works are present in the church of Saint Radegunda in Poitiers "Church of Saint Radegunda (Poitiers)"), with a blessing Christ, and on the lintels of the portals of Roussillon, and in particular, in that of the abbey of Saint-Génis-des-Fontaines.
Technical progress led to a proliferation of available locations for capitals. At the beginning of the century, the vegetal motifs derived from the Corinthian capitals used in Carolingian architecture were questioned. Some preferred a more massive and naked appearance, which they obtained by simply dividing the baskets by lowering the angles, or cubic capitals, composed by the penetration of a sphere into a cube. Others rediscovered ancient Corinthian and Gallo-Roman models.
At the beginning of the century, Romanesque sculptors became interested in figurative and historic capitals. They began to incorporate human figures in them and then gladly associated human beings with fantastic or wild animals and found motifs in illuminations and precious arts. Historiated capitals were still rare, as the style would not be well defined until the end of the century. In the first half of the century, attempts to represent complex scenes within the restrictions related to the block form were hesitant. These difficulties stimulated invention and imposed pragmatic responses regarding the proportions of the characters and the juxtaposition of the scenes.[41].
• - The flight into Egypt, in the same abbey of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire.
The harmonious facade.
The façade of the church of the Saint-Etienne abbey in Caen, which surprised by its purity and rigor, was the first example of a formula destined to dominate the construction of the largest churches in the West: the Norman harmonic façade. It consisted of two western towers of identical elevation arranged in the first section of the side naves, aligned with the main door of the nave "Nave (architecture)"), to create a rectilinear façade.
The three lower levels of the façade form a square block, which contributes to the massive appearance of the complex. Except for some geometric ornaments on the crests of the three portals and the pinion "Piñon (architecture)") of the nave, the nakedness of this block is surprising: the overall impression is subject to the architectural lines, to the four massive buttresses at the beginning, which accompany the gaze from the ground towards the towers; to the ten large windows, whose base is extended with projecting cords.
The thick wall technique.
The Norman technique of the thick wall, initiated in the abbey of Bernay"),[54] was developed in the abbey Saint-Etienne of Caen") in the years 1070-1080. It interrupted all traditional experiences and consisted of creating passages within the walls at the level of the windows of the nave, the transept, the western façade and even the chancel. These passages, which facilitated circulation, allowed effects of transparency unknown in Romanesque architecture thanks to the unfolding of the walls and the multiplication of supports, columns and small columns attached to the composite pillars. At the same time, Norman architects abandoned two-level elevations for three-level elevations that integrated a level of tribunes, with wooden or vaulted roofs. Before the arrival of Gothic architecture, Norman searches focused more on the elements of the structure than on the walls.[44][45][46][55].
It was in the Anglo-Norman world, in which the naves were traditionally covered with wooden carpentry and the alternation of strong and weak pillars occurred after the church of the abbey of Notre-Dame de Jumièges, where the first pointed vaults appeared, perfectly formed, with a diagonal arrangement of ribs that crossed to rest at the corners of the bays.
The cross vaults of the abbey of Sainte Trinité de Lessay"), in Normandy (today department of Manche), which can be dated with certainty before 1098 by the burial in the choir of the abbey of Eudes in Capel, son of the founder and seneschal of William the Conqueror, present clumsiness that attests to somewhat empirical searches because it was in the course of construction that the desire to vault the transept was taken by very clumsily inserting the nerve deliveries.
Durham Cathedral, in England, built around 1093 by Bishop Guillaume de Saint-Calais")—former abbot of the Abbey of St. Vincent du Mans") and advisor to the dukes of Normandy and kings of England, William the Conqueror and William the Red—still offered the rather clumsily designed supports to receive the ribs, but the complexity of the moldings and the perfection of the forms already show that it would have been benefited from previous trials. These two factories under construction must have been inspired by previous and probably very different achievements.[56].
• - Church of San Esteban de Caen.
• - Rochester Cathedral.
• - Winchester Cathedral.
• - Norwich Cathedral.
• - The passage in the wall, abbey of Cerisy-la-Forêt.
• - Lessay Abbey"), pointed vaulted transept.
• - Ogive-vaulted Durham Cathedral.
The desire of architects to construct more substantial vaulted buildings was limited by the horizontal thrusts generated by the vaults. The solution involved the use of new counterthrust techniques, with the help of vaulted side naves and a level of stands. To guarantee the stability of the central nave covered with a barrel vault, vaulted side naves with groins or semi-barrels were used, but these solutions eliminated the high windows and direct lighting of the nave.
By adding one more level to the elevation of the central nave and superimposing a half-barrel vaulted gallery on a perfectly stable groin-vaulted side nave, the stability of the central vault was guaranteed. It also allowed circulation to be improved and could have a liturgical function. The tall side naves allowed the height of the central naves to be considerably increased and also allowed the side aisles to be doubled as in the Saint-Sernin basilica in Toulouse. In Saint-Philibert de Tournus, there is an original variant in which the central nave is covered with transverse barrel vaults with groin-vaulted side naves.
The architects' constructions were increasingly varied and particularly the headers, both in plan and elevation, the internal spaces, the visual passages and the light. The head of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire offered an original interpretation of the ambulatory plan with a significant elongation of the sanctuary. It was probably justified by the desire to build a sanctuary-reliquary around the sanctuary of Saint Benedict, the founder of Western monasticism. The columns of the hemicycle and the sections of the ambulatory have intervals regulated by the openings and, in particular, by the axial window.[55][57].
• - Eastern head of the Basilica of Saint-Sernin in Toulouse.
• - Tournus abbey head.
• - Abbey head of St-Benoît-sur-Loire.
• - Basilica of Saint-Sernin in Toulouse.
• - Nave of the abbey of Tournus.
• - Nave of the abbey of St-Benoît-sur-Loire.
At the beginning of the 19th century, architects used pointed barrel vaults to cover the transepts, and then the naves, in several buildings in Burgundy, Berry, the southwest (in Saint-Pierre de Chauvigny) and Auvergne. Consisting of two circular arches that meet on a keystone, they reduced horizontal forces and were easier to counteract, thus allowing larger openings to be created in the walls. They quickly replaced the semicircular barrel vault. The pointed arch also prevailed in the arcades and transverse arches. This new technique marked an important turning point in medieval architecture. It led to the abandonment of the counter-thrust galleries and the success of the three-nave churches of almost identical heights, with the vaulted side naves that took up the horizontal efforts of the central nave and took them to the foot of the vaults. pointed cannon, as at Notre-Dame de Cunault") in Anjou.
Gross vaults with large spans, Vézelay.
To cover the nave of the Basilica Sainte-Marie-Madeleine in Vézelay with a height and width of 100 cm without the layering of raised side aisles and to obtain high lighting directly on the nave, the architect made an ingenious choice. In the central nave he built a series of groined vaults made of light materials, molded false stones, made up of a mixture of lime, pulverized limestone rubble and heather. The central part of the groin vaults is made with concentric elements and the deliveries were reinforced with deep indentations. The transverse arches were bent and attached to the walls. The solution proved to have problems and soon the walls began to collapse, being first stabilized by braces that absorbed the horizontal forces, which were later removed after the construction of external flying buttresses.
From 1100-1110, buildings covered with rows of domes were being developed in Aquitaine. They allowed large areas to be closed to gather and visualize a crowd in a region crossed by heretical movements. This type of roof generates few horizontal forces, can be juxtaposed and, apart from the important corner masses, the exterior walls do not participate in the supporting structure. The characteristics of the first Romanesque building covered with domes, the Saint-Etienne de Périgueux church), were taken up in the cathedral of Cahors with a larger dome with a diameter of and height. In the cathedral of Saint-Pierre, in Angoulême, the domes are organized according to a Latin cross plan. four radiating apsidioles. Saint-Front de Périgueux, built from 1120 with its Byzantine character, was modeled on the Basilica of Saint Mark in Venice.[57][58].
• - Superimposed orders in the basilica of Paray-le-Monial "Basilica of the Sacred Heart (Paray-le-Monial)").
• - Groin vaults in the Vézelay basilica.
• - Pointed barrel vault, Chauvigny").
• - Cunault ship").
• - Domes in Saint-Front, Périgueux.
In the Cistercian monastery two human communities coexisted in simplicity and consolation, the choir monks, who did not leave the abbey, and the converts. They met in the church separated into three parts: the sanctuary, the choir of the monks and the western sections of the converts. The abbey was organized around a cloister, with the converts' buildings located somewhat away, to the west. The Cistercian abbey had no relics and did not welcome laypeople.
From 1130-1140, the first Cistercians built stone buildings with a sobriety taken to the extreme, rejecting curves, seeking the purity of the line on which thought slid but with an extraordinary quality of the stone. Apart from a painted wooden crucifix, there were to be no paintings or sculptures in the church and stained glass windows were to be colorless and non-figurative. Stone bell towers were prohibited.
In the abbeys of Fontenay (1139-1147) and Thoronet" (1160-1175) Romanesque forms and the pointed barrel vault on transverse arches were used. Between the two abbeys there was a change from a church with a flat apse with an apse and aligned quadrangular chapels to one with hemispherical chapels aligned in a flat apse with a semicircular apse.
After the death of Saint Bernard in 1153, changes were made to the initial scheme: the semicircular or rectangular sanctuary was replaced by a chancel with an ambulatory and chapels, as at Claivaux and at Pontigny. The Cistercian abbeys in Europe are considered daughter abbeys of Cîteaux (1098-1193), La Ferté (1113), Pontigny (1114), Clairvaux (1115-1135) and Morimond (1115).[17][57]**·[60]·**[61][62].
• - Cistercian abbeys in France.
• - Cloister of Fontenay Abbey.
• - Thoronet Abbey Church").
• - Thoronet Cloister.
• - Fountains Abbey.
During a century and a half of Romanesque architecture, each generation of architects and patrons invented without any barrier or limit in a world where there was great freedom to imagine, innovate and create. Everything was put at the service of the idea, the techniques, the forms and the means. Romanesque architecture expressed its time and was only the visible part of the entire society.
He remained faithful to the wall like Roman architecture, but worked on the rhythms, articulations, spaces, visual and luminous passages, and stone rigging. These developments led to Gothic architecture and the disappearance of the wall. They reflected a profound change in society and a new way of understanding construction.[57].
Prisoners of their prohibitions, the monks left the bishops and cathedral chapters with responsibility for innovations in the architectural field in a world very different from that of the monasteries: the world of cities. The rationalism of scholasticism, which sought to apprehend the divine mysteries by the mere resources of the intellect, will constitute the system of thought in which the Gothic style was formed, called to replace the Romanesque style.[63].
Burgundy was marked by the author of the Cluny capitals. He borrowed from Antiquity the nude and the acanthus, he rejected the limitations of the architectural framework and his style was characterized by fabrics that rolled and flew. This agitation is one of the characteristics of Burgundian sculpture. The iconography took up the symbolism of Clunician monastic culture.
Until the last quarter of the century, northern Italy was the third important center of creation before facing the challenges of Gothic sculpture. Two great artists, perhaps the master and the student seem to have guided the sculpted production. Around 1110-1120, the first Wiligelmo offered the Cathedral of Modena a façade program with a portal preceded by a kind of baldachin with a very light appearance that opposed the massive porches of the churches of Languedoc. His disciple Nicoló, who was able to follow him in Sacra di San Michel de Plaisance and from Ferrara to Verona, respected his teacher's teaching but loaded the portals and porches with sculptures. For the first time in Italy, he decorated the tympanum "Tympano (architecture)").
In addition to the style of these artists, Italian Romanesque sculpture offered another orientation that extended the Lombard tradition of the 19th century. The craft continued to be artisanal with a repetition of motifs and a difficulty in representing the human figure. It was regenerated with eastern contributions through Venice and developed in Pavia, which became, at the end of the century and the beginning of the 12th, one of the largest centers of creation in the West. The dominant patterns were intertwining, fantastic animals and some religious themes. This style of sculpture spread in Germany in the Rhine Valley, Bavaria and Hesse, in Poland, in England, to Denmark in Lund Cathedral.[64]
The beginning of the century saw the first sculpture programs appear in the portals. Sculptors fascinated by the human figure gathered in a homogeneous and relatively stable environment in workshops working for local sites. The emergence of these programs was dazzling and barely more than a generation separates the first portals, such as that of the abbey of Charlieu"), from the great achievements of the years 1120-1130, the basilica of Vézelay, the cathedral of Saint-Lazare of Autun, the abbey of Sainte-Foy de Conques abbey, the abbey of Moissac, the abbey of Saint-Pierre of Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne"), the church Saint-Pierre de Carennac...
The portal marked the passage between the profane and the sacred and carried the symbolism of the "gate to heaven." To express this, sculptors of the 1100s explored the possibilities offered by the tympanum sculpted over its entire surface. One of the oldest testimonies of this work in France is the tympanum of the western portal of the church of Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne).
Starting in 1120, to alleviate the limits imposed by the light of the lintels, a mullion was installed in the center of the portal opening that made it possible to double the width of the tympanum and reach as far as Vézelay. To maintain the correct proportions, this change in scale entailed a greater height of the mullions and pedestals and a larger field usable by the sculptors. The iconographic programs were enriched with new themes, the new characters completely occupied the available surfaces.
In southern France, it was at Saint-Sernin in Toulouse that the first tympanum was carved with an iconographic program, illustrating the Ascension of Christ (around 1115). The beginning was then developed in the tympanum of the abbey of Saint-Pierre de Moissac (the Apocalypse of John, the return of Christ, 1130-1135) then that of Sainte-Foy de Conques (Last Judgment, probably after 1165). These three Romanesque churches of the southwest were included in 1998 on the UNESCO World Heritage List as part of the serial property «Chemins de Saint-Jacques-de-Compostelle in France "Paths to Santiago de Compostela in France (World Heritage)")».[65].
In the abbey of Moissac, Christ is in the middle of the Scriptures, in Beaulieu") is the Parousia of Christ at the end of time and Mâcon "Cathedral of Saint Vincent (Mâcon)"), the abbey of Conques and Autun propose three interpretations of the final judgment. In Vézelay, the iconographic program that extends to the three portals is of great coherence, it may be in the image of the abbey of Cluny, of which only a few vestiges.[66] The chosen theme of Pentecost is provided by the central tympanum. The south portal represents scenes preceding the birth of Christ, the Annunciation, the Visitation, the Nativity, the Adoration of the Magi and in the north, the scenes preceding his Ascension, the pilgrims to Emmaus on the lintel and the appearance to the Apostles on the tympanum.
The sculpted scenes were not limited to the tympanums, but also extended to the archivolts and in the west to the facades as in the cathedral of Angoulême and in the church of Notre-Dame la Grande de Poitiers.[67]
• - West tympanum of Charlieu Abbey").
• - Tympanum of the Miègeville door") in Saint-Sernin in Toulouse.
• - Tympanum of the Saint-Pierre de Moissac abbey.
• - The tympanum of Sainte-Foy de Conques.
• - Detail of the tympanum of Conques.
• - Tympanum of Saint-Pierre de Carennac").
• - The tympanum of the Autun cathedral.
• - Tympanum of the Abbaye de Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne").
• - The tympanum of the central portal of the Basilica of Vézelay.
• - Detail of the Vézelay tympanum.
At the heart of the monastic confinement, the cloister was the place of prayer, meditation and relaxation. It was also a connecting space between the chapter house that had to open onto the cloister so that no one would ignore a meeting, the refectory with the washbasin, the bedrooms next to the church for night services, the heater, the library and the study places.
Of the cloisters from the beginning of the 11th century, there are remains of the abbey of San Martin de Canigou that shows simple arcades on pillars; at Saint-Philibert de Tournus around 1050, the pillars are doubled with columnlets; and in the cathedral of Besançon and Saint-Guilhem-le-Désert, the arcades rest alternately on pillars and columns. At that time, a certain richness in materials was sought with sometimes some capitals carved with plants.
The historic cloister of Moissac Abbey dated 1100 is the oldest example of a completely preserved cloister. The galleries are supported, at the corners and in the middle of each side, by quadrangular pillars that are connected by arcades that alternately rest on single and double columns. The pillars are covered with marble plaques carved with large figures with the effigy of the apostles and an abbot of the monastery, which constitutes one of the great achievements of sculpture at the beginning of the century. The historiated capitals are associated with ornamental and figurative capitals.
The abbey's sculptors also made capitals for one of its priories, the Daurade in Toulouse. In the years 1130-1135, work was resumed by a very innovative workshop with accents reminiscent of precious arts. In the first decades of the century, there are few historic cloisters. We can mention those of the abbey of Conques, Eschau"), the chapter house of Marcilhac-sur-Célé"), where the capitals evoke the final judgment. At the abbey of Saint-Sernin in Toulouse and Saint-Michel-de-Cuxa, biblical themes are neglected in favor of animals entwined in plants with monsters and grotesque heads.
In churches, historiated capitals were increasingly numerous at the beginning of the century, but it was difficult to develop themes in them, except in buildings provided with an ambulatory such as Notre-Dame-du-Port de Clermont-Ferrand", the church of Saint-Nectaire or Saint-Pierre de Chauvigny"). If historiated capitals were multiplying, some sculptors were inspired by models from Antiquity for figurative capitals. There is also a revival of the Corinthian capital used in the Abbey of Cluny III accompanied by fluted pilasters that make reference to Roman art.[67].
• - Church of Eschau").
• - Cuixá Abbey.
• - Silos Abbey.
• - Saint-Pierre de Moissac Abbey.
• - Monreale Cathedral.
In Romanesque architecture, painting was made to educate and respond to a certain search for beauty, but it also tended to be for some an insult to the destitution of the poor and a source of entertainment. In the Romanesque era, the irresistible aesthetic attraction of color was justified by its symbolic value and played the role that light will play in Gothic architecture.
The Romanesque buildings offered vast surfaces for painting that was often present in the most sacred places, the choirs and the apses, with the theme of the resurrected Christ. The compositions in honor of the saints were developed near their relics, the Old and New Testaments decorated the nave, the final judgment was often close to the façade, as opposed to the apses.
Artists moved and a painter can be followed by his works on both sides of the Pyrenees or by texts, for example, an artist from Tours produced two cycles on the Apocalypse and the Last Judgment in the abbey of Saint-Benoît-Sur-loire around 1030. The regions of the Berry "Berry (France"), the Poitou and the Loir Valley "Loir (river)") collected the common heritage of a certain art Carolingian ending and Poitiers around the year 1100 and became a true artistic center with an influence on the abbey of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe and perhaps even Upper Aragon and Catalonia. In Burgundy, the Cluniac spirit and the refinement of its culture were reflected in the pictorial creations that integrate diverse artistic contributions, particularly Byzantine, which were also present in the painting of southeastern France.
In northern Italy, the decoration of the apse of the basilica Saint-Vincent of Galliano") is dated to 1007 with ancient, Byzantine and Ottonian influences. Around 1100, San Pietro al Monte of the Abbey of Civate presents very modern Byzantine elements and this influence is even more visible in Santo Angelo in Formis near Capua, where a set of frescoes is the most complete and best preserved in the Southern Italy.
In Rome, around 1100, the popes wanted to convey their reforming message and exercised important patronage of high-level artists. A rich iconography, a clear and lively palette, a certain typology of faces and a minimal taste for ornamentation characterized this school that still existed in 1255, but already with an alteration linked to Gothic.
Romanesque painting is also visible on non-vaulted buildings and a single figured ceiling remains in the small church of Zillis in Graubünden. This iconography from the middle or third quarter of the century is dedicated to Christ and Saint Martin with borders of fantastic sea animals.[68]
The stained glass windows.
Romanesque stained glass has religious and spiritual functions linked to the glass that allowed light to pass through, which could not be more than a divine manifestation. In Romanesque architecture, openings were rare and small and transparent or uncolored glass treated with grisaille was used. The preciousness of the execution is reminiscent of the goldsmith's works, the portable altars and the enameled altarpieces.
The stained glass windows of the Germanic countries were different in style from those of France and in particular from those of the north of the country. There are only three important groups coming from Strasbourg Cathedral, from the Collegiate Church Saint-Patrocle") in Soest "Soest (Germany)") and the series of panels from the Arnstein Monastery, deposited in the Westphalian Museum of Art and History, in Münster. The French stained glass windows of the west group are closely linked to the monumental art and Romanesque painting of southwestern France. The Ascension of Le Mans Cathedral is in the same register as the life of Noah from [Abbey of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe|Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe]]. In the cathedral of Poitiers, in a building begun around 1160, the stained glass windows of the flat head are fully Romanesque and close to the Ascension of Le Mans.
Two other independent groups received Byzantine contributions in the second half of the century. The Rhône region with the Clunician priory of Champ-près-Forges has stained glass windows dated from the years 1160-1170 and you can see in England, in a proto-Gothic style, the stained glass windows of Canterbury Cathedral.[68] [69]**·**[70].
• - Zillis's painted ceiling").
• - Pantheon of kings of the basilica of San Isidoro "Basilica de San Isidoro (León)") (León "León (Spain)")).
• - Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe Abbey.
• - San Clemente de Taull (Lleida).
• - Civate Abbey.
• - Year 1250: era of Gothic architecture.
• - Examples of headers.
• - Clermont-Ferrand Cathedral (?-946).
• - Abbey of San Miguel de Cuixá (956-975).
• - Saint Benigno of Dijon (1002-1018).
• - Abbey of San Martín del Canigó (1005-1016).
• - Abbey of Saint Phillibert of Tournus (1008-1028).
• - Church of Saint-Généroux") (2nd quarter of the 20th century).
In the abbey of San Martín del Canigó where the smallness of the site imposed the construction of two superimposed churches, the lower church, consecrated in 1009, maintains in the western part vaults of transverse arches that define the sections. Esta iglesia parcialmente subterránea no supera los tres metros de altura con un luz central de de anchura y unas naves laterales de . Its construction was the subject of a first rapid campaign in the East, between 997 and 1009, with a structure of columns supporting the groin vaults, a technique used in the crypts, and with three small apses. The columns received masonry reinforcement to solve stability problems, since the lower columns would support the upper church, whose main nave was barrel-vaulted. The second construction campaign towards the West shows the progress of Romanesque architecture at the beginning of the 11th century, with the transition from the column to the composite pillar. The six equal and juxtaposed sections were covered in a barrel with transverse arches on cruciform pillars. This modular space, which is repeated as many times as there are sections in the building, was the basic thought of the architects of the centuries and .[32].
• - Head of Tournus.
• - Head of the Saint-Vorles church").
• - Head of the abbey of San Martín del Canigó.
• - Perrecy-les-Forges.
• - Church of Saint-Généroux").
The cathedral of San Benigno in Dijon is exceptional for its large crypt-hall built between 1001 and 1009 that will be found again in northern Italy and in the Holy Roman Empire in the middle of the century. This eastern rotunda, reminiscent of early Christian mausoleums, has three vaulted levels connected by stairs arranged in side turrets. A central light well illuminates the different levels and is surrounded by two rows of columns arranged in hemicycles.[32][33][34][35].
The first southern Romanesque art was born in northern Italy and in the eastern half of the Pyrenees at the end of the century and beginning of the 19th century. It developed rapidly after the year 1000, probably thanks to the Lombard masters. From Italy, he gained the Rhône Valley and Burgundy. The northern limit seems to be the church of Saint-Vorles") of Chatillon-sur-Seine, where it favored the transition from Ottonian to Romanesque architecture, but had to compete with the strong Carolingian traditions.
In the last third of the century, in southern Europe, an early southern Romanesque building could be recognized by its exterior appearance, made of small stones broken with a hammer and carefully arranged. This style would come from Italy and it is likely that it wanted to imitate brick buildings. The master masons who imposed their construction technique in Catalonia eliminated the presence of carved stones from local architecture.
This art was marked by its decoration of Lombard bands, formed by festoons of small arches that highlighted the height of the walls, and framed with lesenas or pilasters. Between two lesenas, the number of arches was variable and could even form continuous friezes. This decoration went from the apses to the grooved walls of the naves, to the walls of the bell towers and to the facades to organize the composition. These Lombard bands originated in early Christian architecture and pre-Romanesque art, in Ravenna and in the Po plain. Romanesque architecture adopted this architectural motif of the century, giving it a decorative role. Less frequent than the Lombard bands, small niches were arranged, present in Italy at the beginning of the century, related or not to the decoration of Lombard bands. This early southern Romanesque art in the Mediterranean tradition was the beneficiary of ancient and Byzantine contributions, including those from a more distant East.
The plan of the churches is very traditional and takes up those of the basilicas of Ravenna. To meet the new demands of the liturgy, architects minimize the length and height of the transepts, but apply themselves to covering all parts of the buildings with vaults to protect them from fire and, thanks to the reverberation of the vaults, create a miraculous atmosphere.
The construction of vaults throughout the building entailed a profound aesthetic mutation because the support of the vaults organized in juxtaposed bays generated an articulated architecture. The first southern art developed an original type of crypt, a room with columns, low and vaulted with groins, on the same plane as the chevet. The first crypts articulated with the choir appear in Lombardy around the year 1000, in the basilica of San Vicente de Galliano"), in San Vincenzo in Prato in Milan, in San Pietro de Agriate, and later developed in Piedmont, in Savoy in the Saint-Martin d'Aime"), as well as in Switzerland in Amsoldingen and in Spiez, in Catalonia and in Roussillon, and in the valley of Rhône, in the abbey of Sainte-Marie de Cruas").[36][37].
Although the octagonal tower on a raised dome in the transept transept allowed a harmonious staggering of the volumes of the apse, as in Santa María de Ripoll or San Vicente de Cardona (1029-1040),[38] what best characterized this architecture was the bell tower. On the liturgical level, they received chapels often dedicated to the archangel Saint Michael that allowed prayer to be raised, and the bells to be arranged for the call to the divine office, but they also constituted a decoration space where the entire repertoire of the first southern Romanesque was used. In San Miguel de Cuixá and in the abbey of Fruttuaria"), a central lesena crosses the panels to accentuate the verticality. The circular plan of Ravenna spread in central Italy, but the square plan used in Milan and its region was widely preferred for its massive appearance. The triumph of the first southern Romanesque art passes through truly original and promising works, such as the monastery of San Pedro de Roda (878-1022).[39][40].
• - Early southern Romanesque.
• - Basilica of Saint Martin of Aime").
• - Head with octagonal tower of the Ripoll monastery (880-888, expanded in consecrated campaigns in 935, 977 and 1032).
• - Nave of the monastery of San Pedro de Roda (878-1022).
• - Crypt of the collegiate church of Cardona (1029-1040).
In the abbey of Saint Phillibert of Tournus, the Galilee "Galilee (architecture)") built around 1035-1040 is the first testimony of its kind. It is part of the suite of Carolingian façade massifs with a sanctuary often dedicated to Saint Michael above a low hall. The basilica plan is long by wide, on two levels, with a central nave with three sections and side naves. On the ground floor, the central nave is vaulted with groins and the lateral ones with transverse barrel vaults; and on the upper floor, the central nave has a height of and is barrel-vaulted and stabilized on each side by half-barrel vaults.[41].
• - Crypt of the cathedral of Saint-Etienne of Auxerre (1023).
• - Abbey of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire.
• - Abbey of San Filiberto de Tournus.
• - Galilée plant, Tournus.
Norman innovations at Jumièges.
The now-ruined Jumièges Abbey in Normandy is part of the group of timber-roofed architecture found in Ottonian architecture of the Holy Roman Empire. The Duchy of Normandy was, with the Holy Empire, the only stable State of the time with well-defined borders. The dukes began to rebuild the monasteries destroyed by their Norman ancestors and later it was the great lords who endowed many other abbeys.
In the abbey church, the western massif is preceded by an antebody that evokes the Carolingian westwerk of Corvey Abbey. It has three levels, the first gives access to the nave, then a gallery opens widely over the church and the third stabilizes the two tall towers.
For the nave, built around 1050-1060, the traditional two-level elevation was extended into a third level with a total height of . The widely open galleries above the central nave are inserted between the arcades on the ground floor and the high windows on the top floor. The stability of the central nave is ensured by the groin-vaulted side naves and its extension to the galleries was a novelty. The beginning of the section was affirmed by the alternation of strong and weak pillars, and in one section in two, an attached column rises to the level of the roof carpentry. These piers are composed of a square core and four attached columns, and are perfectly coordinated with the deliveries, as in fully vaulted buildings. Thus, at the beginning of Romanesque art, for the section, the essential articulation of medieval architecture, vaulted architecture and wooden roof architecture contributed to the definition of a new mural art.
The Norman technique of the thick wall was used in the transept of the abbey of Jumièges, near the abbey of Bernay"), which seems to bear the prototype and in which the influence of the cathedral of Saint Benigno of Dijon was probably the origin of this first Norman application of the principle of the circulation service which is found later in the transept of the church of Saint-Étienne of Caen and which was later used systematically in the constructions of the Anglo-Norman world.
This association of a visual lightening of the wall with a de facto reinforcement of the structure is one of the greatest successes of the Norman builders. It favored the launching of even heavier vaults, even than in Bernay and Jumièges. The very conception of the walls is perfectly adapted to a later vaulting.[41][44][45][46].
• - Jumièges Abbey.
• - Jumièges Abbey.
• - Ship.
• - Aerial view.
• - Wall passages.
A pilgrimage church, Conques.
In the 19th century, in the Rouergue, the modest and almost inaccessible monastery of Conques subsisted, but at the end of the century the monks organized the kidnapping of the relics in another monastery, those of Santa Fe in Agen. After a century without miracles, they multiplied and Bernard of Angers wrote Le livre des miracles de Sainte-Foy [The Book of Miracles of Sainte-Foy] which ensured his notoriety. Given the influx of pilgrims, a new abbey church had to be built around 1030-1050. Its plan, which served as a prototype for pilgrimage churches, was conceived from the beginning as a whole. It has a nave with three naves, a very projecting transept and a chancel with an ambulatory with three radiating chapels associated with the stepped chapels of the transept transepts. The galleries, designed to counteract the horizontal thrusts of the nave, were also planned and will be built a little later, although the access staircase was built in the same work campaign as the transept. They provide indirect light to the central nave.
With the new abbey of Conques we enter a new era of sculpture. The capitals of the transept are of a Carolingian type, with interlaces to evoke the antiquity of the place and to inscribe in the antiquity of the Christian religion. In the ambulatory and at the entrances to the chapels, capitals of a new, still crude type are used, sometimes set with interlacing, with concave palmettes, with clumsily treated foliage, where human figures are introduced, a centaur in the axial chapel and quadrupeds facing each other in the south chapel of the ambulatory. From the chancel to the portal one can follow the progression of the art of sculpture from 1050 to around 1130 and its entry into the era of historiated capitals.[32][47].
• - The abbey church of Santa Fe, in Conques.
• - The header.
• - The ship.
• - The stands.
• - Capital, with heads and tracery.
Ottonian architecture formed alone, almost in a vacuum, evolving Carolingian models and resisting the contributions of early Mediterranean Romanesque art. The contact areas in Juran Burgundy and in the Alps show that the fusion between these two worlds of forms was difficult. The progression of southern architecture stopped in the area of Ottonian influence that borrowed only decorative elements to transform them and that was only after 1050, in an already decaying Empire, when southern decorative elements and sculptures infiltrated Germanic buildings.
The influence of Ottonian architecture in northern Europe can be felt in the monuments of the northwest and west of France, and the question arises as to whether the different regional types could be regrouped into a single formal ensemble that ran from the Ocean to the Elbe, and from the North Sea to the Loire. The lower transepts of Morienval") and of the churches of the Aisne probably come from the Meuse, the harmonic heads of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, of Melun") and of Morienval, undoubtedly, derive from Lorraine; in Normandy, the façade of Jumièges, with its western massif and its tribune, and the missing façade of Fécamp show a composition similar to that of the Carolingian and Ottonian westwerks, the porch of Saint-Nicolas-de-Caen") is of the Rhineland type; in Campagne, between royal France and the Empire, a different architecture developed around the year 1000 with some typically French characteristics, but similar in its structure and origins Carolingians.[19][48][49].
Since the time of early Christian architecture, the large wall surfaces received paintings and mosaics. At the beginning of the century, the aesthetic vision of Romanesque architecture is manifested not only in the composite font, but also in the sculptural decoration.
To enliven the walls, one finds especially in Italy and Catalonia lesenas or small arches on slightly projecting pilasters, what are called Lombard bands. In the Loire Valley, carved plaques and friezes decorate the exterior walls. Rare works are present in the church of Saint Radegunda in Poitiers "Church of Saint Radegunda (Poitiers)"), with a blessing Christ, and on the lintels of the portals of Roussillon, and in particular, in that of the abbey of Saint-Génis-des-Fontaines.
Technical progress led to a proliferation of available locations for capitals. At the beginning of the century, the vegetal motifs derived from the Corinthian capitals used in Carolingian architecture were questioned. Some preferred a more massive and naked appearance, which they obtained by simply dividing the baskets by lowering the angles, or cubic capitals, composed by the penetration of a sphere into a cube. Others rediscovered ancient Corinthian and Gallo-Roman models.
At the beginning of the century, Romanesque sculptors became interested in figurative and historic capitals. They began to incorporate human figures in them and then gladly associated human beings with fantastic or wild animals and found motifs in illuminations and precious arts. Historiated capitals were still rare, as the style would not be well defined until the end of the century. In the first half of the century, attempts to represent complex scenes within the restrictions related to the block form were hesitant. These difficulties stimulated invention and imposed pragmatic responses regarding the proportions of the characters and the juxtaposition of the scenes.[41].
• - The flight into Egypt, in the same abbey of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire.
The harmonious facade.
The façade of the church of the Saint-Etienne abbey in Caen, which surprised by its purity and rigor, was the first example of a formula destined to dominate the construction of the largest churches in the West: the Norman harmonic façade. It consisted of two western towers of identical elevation arranged in the first section of the side naves, aligned with the main door of the nave "Nave (architecture)"), to create a rectilinear façade.
The three lower levels of the façade form a square block, which contributes to the massive appearance of the complex. Except for some geometric ornaments on the crests of the three portals and the pinion "Piñon (architecture)") of the nave, the nakedness of this block is surprising: the overall impression is subject to the architectural lines, to the four massive buttresses at the beginning, which accompany the gaze from the ground towards the towers; to the ten large windows, whose base is extended with projecting cords.
The thick wall technique.
The Norman technique of the thick wall, initiated in the abbey of Bernay"),[54] was developed in the abbey Saint-Etienne of Caen") in the years 1070-1080. It interrupted all traditional experiences and consisted of creating passages within the walls at the level of the windows of the nave, the transept, the western façade and even the chancel. These passages, which facilitated circulation, allowed effects of transparency unknown in Romanesque architecture thanks to the unfolding of the walls and the multiplication of supports, columns and small columns attached to the composite pillars. At the same time, Norman architects abandoned two-level elevations for three-level elevations that integrated a level of tribunes, with wooden or vaulted roofs. Before the arrival of Gothic architecture, Norman searches focused more on the elements of the structure than on the walls.[44][45][46][55].
It was in the Anglo-Norman world, in which the naves were traditionally covered with wooden carpentry and the alternation of strong and weak pillars occurred after the church of the abbey of Notre-Dame de Jumièges, where the first pointed vaults appeared, perfectly formed, with a diagonal arrangement of ribs that crossed to rest at the corners of the bays.
The cross vaults of the abbey of Sainte Trinité de Lessay"), in Normandy (today department of Manche), which can be dated with certainty before 1098 by the burial in the choir of the abbey of Eudes in Capel, son of the founder and seneschal of William the Conqueror, present clumsiness that attests to somewhat empirical searches because it was in the course of construction that the desire to vault the transept was taken by very clumsily inserting the nerve deliveries.
Durham Cathedral, in England, built around 1093 by Bishop Guillaume de Saint-Calais")—former abbot of the Abbey of St. Vincent du Mans") and advisor to the dukes of Normandy and kings of England, William the Conqueror and William the Red—still offered the rather clumsily designed supports to receive the ribs, but the complexity of the moldings and the perfection of the forms already show that it would have been benefited from previous trials. These two factories under construction must have been inspired by previous and probably very different achievements.[56].
• - Church of San Esteban de Caen.
• - Rochester Cathedral.
• - Winchester Cathedral.
• - Norwich Cathedral.
• - The passage in the wall, abbey of Cerisy-la-Forêt.
• - Lessay Abbey"), pointed vaulted transept.
• - Ogive-vaulted Durham Cathedral.
The desire of architects to construct more substantial vaulted buildings was limited by the horizontal thrusts generated by the vaults. The solution involved the use of new counterthrust techniques, with the help of vaulted side naves and a level of stands. To guarantee the stability of the central nave covered with a barrel vault, vaulted side naves with groins or semi-barrels were used, but these solutions eliminated the high windows and direct lighting of the nave.
By adding one more level to the elevation of the central nave and superimposing a half-barrel vaulted gallery on a perfectly stable groin-vaulted side nave, the stability of the central vault was guaranteed. It also allowed circulation to be improved and could have a liturgical function. The tall side naves allowed the height of the central naves to be considerably increased and also allowed the side aisles to be doubled as in the Saint-Sernin basilica in Toulouse. In Saint-Philibert de Tournus, there is an original variant in which the central nave is covered with transverse barrel vaults with groin-vaulted side naves.
The architects' constructions were increasingly varied and particularly the headers, both in plan and elevation, the internal spaces, the visual passages and the light. The head of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire offered an original interpretation of the ambulatory plan with a significant elongation of the sanctuary. It was probably justified by the desire to build a sanctuary-reliquary around the sanctuary of Saint Benedict, the founder of Western monasticism. The columns of the hemicycle and the sections of the ambulatory have intervals regulated by the openings and, in particular, by the axial window.[55][57].
• - Eastern head of the Basilica of Saint-Sernin in Toulouse.
• - Tournus abbey head.
• - Abbey head of St-Benoît-sur-Loire.
• - Basilica of Saint-Sernin in Toulouse.
• - Nave of the abbey of Tournus.
• - Nave of the abbey of St-Benoît-sur-Loire.
At the beginning of the 19th century, architects used pointed barrel vaults to cover the transepts, and then the naves, in several buildings in Burgundy, Berry, the southwest (in Saint-Pierre de Chauvigny) and Auvergne. Consisting of two circular arches that meet on a keystone, they reduced horizontal forces and were easier to counteract, thus allowing larger openings to be created in the walls. They quickly replaced the semicircular barrel vault. The pointed arch also prevailed in the arcades and transverse arches. This new technique marked an important turning point in medieval architecture. It led to the abandonment of the counter-thrust galleries and the success of the three-nave churches of almost identical heights, with the vaulted side naves that took up the horizontal efforts of the central nave and took them to the foot of the vaults. pointed cannon, as at Notre-Dame de Cunault") in Anjou.
Gross vaults with large spans, Vézelay.
To cover the nave of the Basilica Sainte-Marie-Madeleine in Vézelay with a height and width of 100 cm without the layering of raised side aisles and to obtain high lighting directly on the nave, the architect made an ingenious choice. In the central nave he built a series of groined vaults made of light materials, molded false stones, made up of a mixture of lime, pulverized limestone rubble and heather. The central part of the groin vaults is made with concentric elements and the deliveries were reinforced with deep indentations. The transverse arches were bent and attached to the walls. The solution proved to have problems and soon the walls began to collapse, being first stabilized by braces that absorbed the horizontal forces, which were later removed after the construction of external flying buttresses.
From 1100-1110, buildings covered with rows of domes were being developed in Aquitaine. They allowed large areas to be closed to gather and visualize a crowd in a region crossed by heretical movements. This type of roof generates few horizontal forces, can be juxtaposed and, apart from the important corner masses, the exterior walls do not participate in the supporting structure. The characteristics of the first Romanesque building covered with domes, the Saint-Etienne de Périgueux church), were taken up in the cathedral of Cahors with a larger dome with a diameter of and height. In the cathedral of Saint-Pierre, in Angoulême, the domes are organized according to a Latin cross plan. four radiating apsidioles. Saint-Front de Périgueux, built from 1120 with its Byzantine character, was modeled on the Basilica of Saint Mark in Venice.[57][58].
• - Superimposed orders in the basilica of Paray-le-Monial "Basilica of the Sacred Heart (Paray-le-Monial)").
• - Groin vaults in the Vézelay basilica.
• - Pointed barrel vault, Chauvigny").
• - Cunault ship").
• - Domes in Saint-Front, Périgueux.
In the Cistercian monastery two human communities coexisted in simplicity and consolation, the choir monks, who did not leave the abbey, and the converts. They met in the church separated into three parts: the sanctuary, the choir of the monks and the western sections of the converts. The abbey was organized around a cloister, with the converts' buildings located somewhat away, to the west. The Cistercian abbey had no relics and did not welcome laypeople.
From 1130-1140, the first Cistercians built stone buildings with a sobriety taken to the extreme, rejecting curves, seeking the purity of the line on which thought slid but with an extraordinary quality of the stone. Apart from a painted wooden crucifix, there were to be no paintings or sculptures in the church and stained glass windows were to be colorless and non-figurative. Stone bell towers were prohibited.
In the abbeys of Fontenay (1139-1147) and Thoronet" (1160-1175) Romanesque forms and the pointed barrel vault on transverse arches were used. Between the two abbeys there was a change from a church with a flat apse with an apse and aligned quadrangular chapels to one with hemispherical chapels aligned in a flat apse with a semicircular apse.
After the death of Saint Bernard in 1153, changes were made to the initial scheme: the semicircular or rectangular sanctuary was replaced by a chancel with an ambulatory and chapels, as at Claivaux and at Pontigny. The Cistercian abbeys in Europe are considered daughter abbeys of Cîteaux (1098-1193), La Ferté (1113), Pontigny (1114), Clairvaux (1115-1135) and Morimond (1115).[17][57]**·[60]·**[61][62].
• - Cistercian abbeys in France.
• - Cloister of Fontenay Abbey.
• - Thoronet Abbey Church").
• - Thoronet Cloister.
• - Fountains Abbey.
During a century and a half of Romanesque architecture, each generation of architects and patrons invented without any barrier or limit in a world where there was great freedom to imagine, innovate and create. Everything was put at the service of the idea, the techniques, the forms and the means. Romanesque architecture expressed its time and was only the visible part of the entire society.
He remained faithful to the wall like Roman architecture, but worked on the rhythms, articulations, spaces, visual and luminous passages, and stone rigging. These developments led to Gothic architecture and the disappearance of the wall. They reflected a profound change in society and a new way of understanding construction.[57].
Prisoners of their prohibitions, the monks left the bishops and cathedral chapters with responsibility for innovations in the architectural field in a world very different from that of the monasteries: the world of cities. The rationalism of scholasticism, which sought to apprehend the divine mysteries by the mere resources of the intellect, will constitute the system of thought in which the Gothic style was formed, called to replace the Romanesque style.[63].
Burgundy was marked by the author of the Cluny capitals. He borrowed from Antiquity the nude and the acanthus, he rejected the limitations of the architectural framework and his style was characterized by fabrics that rolled and flew. This agitation is one of the characteristics of Burgundian sculpture. The iconography took up the symbolism of Clunician monastic culture.
Until the last quarter of the century, northern Italy was the third important center of creation before facing the challenges of Gothic sculpture. Two great artists, perhaps the master and the student seem to have guided the sculpted production. Around 1110-1120, the first Wiligelmo offered the Cathedral of Modena a façade program with a portal preceded by a kind of baldachin with a very light appearance that opposed the massive porches of the churches of Languedoc. His disciple Nicoló, who was able to follow him in Sacra di San Michel de Plaisance and from Ferrara to Verona, respected his teacher's teaching but loaded the portals and porches with sculptures. For the first time in Italy, he decorated the tympanum "Tympano (architecture)").
In addition to the style of these artists, Italian Romanesque sculpture offered another orientation that extended the Lombard tradition of the 19th century. The craft continued to be artisanal with a repetition of motifs and a difficulty in representing the human figure. It was regenerated with eastern contributions through Venice and developed in Pavia, which became, at the end of the century and the beginning of the 12th, one of the largest centers of creation in the West. The dominant patterns were intertwining, fantastic animals and some religious themes. This style of sculpture spread in Germany in the Rhine Valley, Bavaria and Hesse, in Poland, in England, to Denmark in Lund Cathedral.[64]
The beginning of the century saw the first sculpture programs appear in the portals. Sculptors fascinated by the human figure gathered in a homogeneous and relatively stable environment in workshops working for local sites. The emergence of these programs was dazzling and barely more than a generation separates the first portals, such as that of the abbey of Charlieu"), from the great achievements of the years 1120-1130, the basilica of Vézelay, the cathedral of Saint-Lazare of Autun, the abbey of Sainte-Foy de Conques abbey, the abbey of Moissac, the abbey of Saint-Pierre of Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne"), the church Saint-Pierre de Carennac...
The portal marked the passage between the profane and the sacred and carried the symbolism of the "gate to heaven." To express this, sculptors of the 1100s explored the possibilities offered by the tympanum sculpted over its entire surface. One of the oldest testimonies of this work in France is the tympanum of the western portal of the church of Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne).
Starting in 1120, to alleviate the limits imposed by the light of the lintels, a mullion was installed in the center of the portal opening that made it possible to double the width of the tympanum and reach as far as Vézelay. To maintain the correct proportions, this change in scale entailed a greater height of the mullions and pedestals and a larger field usable by the sculptors. The iconographic programs were enriched with new themes, the new characters completely occupied the available surfaces.
In southern France, it was at Saint-Sernin in Toulouse that the first tympanum was carved with an iconographic program, illustrating the Ascension of Christ (around 1115). The beginning was then developed in the tympanum of the abbey of Saint-Pierre de Moissac (the Apocalypse of John, the return of Christ, 1130-1135) then that of Sainte-Foy de Conques (Last Judgment, probably after 1165). These three Romanesque churches of the southwest were included in 1998 on the UNESCO World Heritage List as part of the serial property «Chemins de Saint-Jacques-de-Compostelle in France "Paths to Santiago de Compostela in France (World Heritage)")».[65].
In the abbey of Moissac, Christ is in the middle of the Scriptures, in Beaulieu") is the Parousia of Christ at the end of time and Mâcon "Cathedral of Saint Vincent (Mâcon)"), the abbey of Conques and Autun propose three interpretations of the final judgment. In Vézelay, the iconographic program that extends to the three portals is of great coherence, it may be in the image of the abbey of Cluny, of which only a few vestiges.[66] The chosen theme of Pentecost is provided by the central tympanum. The south portal represents scenes preceding the birth of Christ, the Annunciation, the Visitation, the Nativity, the Adoration of the Magi and in the north, the scenes preceding his Ascension, the pilgrims to Emmaus on the lintel and the appearance to the Apostles on the tympanum.
The sculpted scenes were not limited to the tympanums, but also extended to the archivolts and in the west to the facades as in the cathedral of Angoulême and in the church of Notre-Dame la Grande de Poitiers.[67]
• - West tympanum of Charlieu Abbey").
• - Tympanum of the Miègeville door") in Saint-Sernin in Toulouse.
• - Tympanum of the Saint-Pierre de Moissac abbey.
• - The tympanum of Sainte-Foy de Conques.
• - Detail of the tympanum of Conques.
• - Tympanum of Saint-Pierre de Carennac").
• - The tympanum of the Autun cathedral.
• - Tympanum of the Abbaye de Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne").
• - The tympanum of the central portal of the Basilica of Vézelay.
• - Detail of the Vézelay tympanum.
At the heart of the monastic confinement, the cloister was the place of prayer, meditation and relaxation. It was also a connecting space between the chapter house that had to open onto the cloister so that no one would ignore a meeting, the refectory with the washbasin, the bedrooms next to the church for night services, the heater, the library and the study places.
Of the cloisters from the beginning of the 11th century, there are remains of the abbey of San Martin de Canigou that shows simple arcades on pillars; at Saint-Philibert de Tournus around 1050, the pillars are doubled with columnlets; and in the cathedral of Besançon and Saint-Guilhem-le-Désert, the arcades rest alternately on pillars and columns. At that time, a certain richness in materials was sought with sometimes some capitals carved with plants.
The historic cloister of Moissac Abbey dated 1100 is the oldest example of a completely preserved cloister. The galleries are supported, at the corners and in the middle of each side, by quadrangular pillars that are connected by arcades that alternately rest on single and double columns. The pillars are covered with marble plaques carved with large figures with the effigy of the apostles and an abbot of the monastery, which constitutes one of the great achievements of sculpture at the beginning of the century. The historiated capitals are associated with ornamental and figurative capitals.
The abbey's sculptors also made capitals for one of its priories, the Daurade in Toulouse. In the years 1130-1135, work was resumed by a very innovative workshop with accents reminiscent of precious arts. In the first decades of the century, there are few historic cloisters. We can mention those of the abbey of Conques, Eschau"), the chapter house of Marcilhac-sur-Célé"), where the capitals evoke the final judgment. At the abbey of Saint-Sernin in Toulouse and Saint-Michel-de-Cuxa, biblical themes are neglected in favor of animals entwined in plants with monsters and grotesque heads.
In churches, historiated capitals were increasingly numerous at the beginning of the century, but it was difficult to develop themes in them, except in buildings provided with an ambulatory such as Notre-Dame-du-Port de Clermont-Ferrand", the church of Saint-Nectaire or Saint-Pierre de Chauvigny"). If historiated capitals were multiplying, some sculptors were inspired by models from Antiquity for figurative capitals. There is also a revival of the Corinthian capital used in the Abbey of Cluny III accompanied by fluted pilasters that make reference to Roman art.[67].
• - Church of Eschau").
• - Cuixá Abbey.
• - Silos Abbey.
• - Saint-Pierre de Moissac Abbey.
• - Monreale Cathedral.
In Romanesque architecture, painting was made to educate and respond to a certain search for beauty, but it also tended to be for some an insult to the destitution of the poor and a source of entertainment. In the Romanesque era, the irresistible aesthetic attraction of color was justified by its symbolic value and played the role that light will play in Gothic architecture.
The Romanesque buildings offered vast surfaces for painting that was often present in the most sacred places, the choirs and the apses, with the theme of the resurrected Christ. The compositions in honor of the saints were developed near their relics, the Old and New Testaments decorated the nave, the final judgment was often close to the façade, as opposed to the apses.
Artists moved and a painter can be followed by his works on both sides of the Pyrenees or by texts, for example, an artist from Tours produced two cycles on the Apocalypse and the Last Judgment in the abbey of Saint-Benoît-Sur-loire around 1030. The regions of the Berry "Berry (France"), the Poitou and the Loir Valley "Loir (river)") collected the common heritage of a certain art Carolingian ending and Poitiers around the year 1100 and became a true artistic center with an influence on the abbey of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe and perhaps even Upper Aragon and Catalonia. In Burgundy, the Cluniac spirit and the refinement of its culture were reflected in the pictorial creations that integrate diverse artistic contributions, particularly Byzantine, which were also present in the painting of southeastern France.
In northern Italy, the decoration of the apse of the basilica Saint-Vincent of Galliano") is dated to 1007 with ancient, Byzantine and Ottonian influences. Around 1100, San Pietro al Monte of the Abbey of Civate presents very modern Byzantine elements and this influence is even more visible in Santo Angelo in Formis near Capua, where a set of frescoes is the most complete and best preserved in the Southern Italy.
In Rome, around 1100, the popes wanted to convey their reforming message and exercised important patronage of high-level artists. A rich iconography, a clear and lively palette, a certain typology of faces and a minimal taste for ornamentation characterized this school that still existed in 1255, but already with an alteration linked to Gothic.
Romanesque painting is also visible on non-vaulted buildings and a single figured ceiling remains in the small church of Zillis in Graubünden. This iconography from the middle or third quarter of the century is dedicated to Christ and Saint Martin with borders of fantastic sea animals.[68]
The stained glass windows.
Romanesque stained glass has religious and spiritual functions linked to the glass that allowed light to pass through, which could not be more than a divine manifestation. In Romanesque architecture, openings were rare and small and transparent or uncolored glass treated with grisaille was used. The preciousness of the execution is reminiscent of the goldsmith's works, the portable altars and the enameled altarpieces.
The stained glass windows of the Germanic countries were different in style from those of France and in particular from those of the north of the country. There are only three important groups coming from Strasbourg Cathedral, from the Collegiate Church Saint-Patrocle") in Soest "Soest (Germany)") and the series of panels from the Arnstein Monastery, deposited in the Westphalian Museum of Art and History, in Münster. The French stained glass windows of the west group are closely linked to the monumental art and Romanesque painting of southwestern France. The Ascension of Le Mans Cathedral is in the same register as the life of Noah from [Abbey of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe|Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe]]. In the cathedral of Poitiers, in a building begun around 1160, the stained glass windows of the flat head are fully Romanesque and close to the Ascension of Le Mans.
Two other independent groups received Byzantine contributions in the second half of the century. The Rhône region with the Clunician priory of Champ-près-Forges has stained glass windows dated from the years 1160-1170 and you can see in England, in a proto-Gothic style, the stained glass windows of Canterbury Cathedral.[68] [69]**·**[70].
• - Zillis's painted ceiling").
• - Pantheon of kings of the basilica of San Isidoro "Basilica de San Isidoro (León)") (León "León (Spain)")).