Abbot The head of a male monastery. Aisle The spaces along the sides of the nave or chancel, and separated from it by an arcade. Aisles differ from transepts in being longer E-W than N-S. Return to Trail Alms Charitable offerings given to the poor or to the Church, generally for religious reasons. Ambulatory The aisle around the east end of the choir joining the choir side aisles to make a continuous passage. Return to Trail Angel roof A type of late medieval roof in which the ends of the beams were carved to look like angels. Return to Trail Apse Semicircular end of a choir, chancel, or chapel. Return to Trail Arcade A series of arches supported by piers or columns. Return to Trail Attached shaft An architectural feature that looks like a shaft or column partially sunk into the wall surface. Return to Trail Bay A unit of an interior or exterior elevation defined by vertical features such as windows, columns, or arches. Return to Trail Blind arcading An arcade backed by a solid wall. A very popular decorative motif in English medieval architecture. Return to Trail Boss Decorative sculpture at the intersection of two vault ribs. Return to Trail Braces Curved or angled pieces of wood used to strengthen a roof or other timber structure. Return to Trail Buttress A structure (of stone, brick, or wood) built against a building to strengthen it by resisting the thrust of arches, roofs and vaults. A flying buttress uses arches or half-arches to transmit the thrust to a buttress standing clear of the wall. Return to Trail Canon A priest attached to a (non-monastic) cathedral or collegiate church. Canons generally lived a less communal life than monks. Return to Trail Capital The carved block separating a column or pier from the arch or lintel that it supports. Return to Trail Chancel The area of a parish church at the east end, where the altar was located. Also known as the choir in larger churches. Chantry 1) An endowment to provide for the singing of masses for the souls of the founders and/or of persons named by them. 2) The chapel in which these masses were performed. Return to Trail Chapel 1) A separate space within a church containing its own altar. 2) Place of worship, either a separate building or incorporated within another structure such as a house or castle, below the rank of a parish church. 3) Place of nonconformist worship. Return to Trail Chapter house The room in a monastery or cathedral where the entire community gathered for a daily assembly. Return to Trail Choir 1) The part of a cathedral, monastic church or collegiate church where services are sung. Often spelled Quire in older books. 2) A group of singers. Return to Trail Choir stalls The seats in the choir. Often highly decorated and having misericords. Clerestory The uppermost row of windows. So-called because it stands clear of the aisle roof. Return to Trail Cloister An enclosed, square courtyard in a monastery with covered walk-ways open to the centre through an arcade on each side. Return to Trail Column A vertical support, usually round or polygonal. Compound pier A pier comprised of a number of decorative elements such as shafts grouped around a central core. Return to Trail Corbel A projecting bracket often carved with grotesque monster heads. Corbel table A row of corbels used as a decorative feature. Often placed below the eaves of a roof, possibly in imitation of the carved ends of projecting roof beams. Return to Trail Crossing The central space in a church where the nave, chancel, and transepts meet. Return to Trail Crossing arch The arches leading from the nave, choir, and transepts into the central crossing space. Cruciform Cross shaped. Return to Trail Cusps The projecting points formed by partial curves within an arch. Return to Trail Decorated The style of Gothic architecture popular in England c.1260-c.1360. Characterised by all-over use of decoration, especially small-scale architectural motifs like arches and gables. Return to Trail Diocese The area of territory, with its parishes, under the religious jurisdiction of an individual bishop. An archdiocese is a larger area, including several dioceses, controlled by an archbishop. There are two archdioceses in England, Canterbury and York. Doom A representation of the Last Judgement. Often painted above the chancel arch in a medieval parish church. Dormitory The place where the monks slept. In early monasteries dormitories were communal, but in later years, monks were allotted individual cells or rooms. Return to Trail Early English The earliest style of Gothic architecture in England, common from c.1180-c.1250. Known in the 19th century as Lancet style because of its use of lancets; also characterised by stiff-leaf ornament and the use of contrasting Purbeck or other dark, English marble. Return to Trail Elevation A vertical wall face of a building. Return to Trail Feretory The area around the main shrine. Generally located behind the high altar. From feretum, Latin for bier or shrine. Return to Trail Gable The vertical, triangular-shaped end of a roof. Galilee A western annex or porch of a church. Return to Trail Gallery A balcony or mezzanine overlooking the main interior space of a building. In a church the gallery is an upper storey directly above the aisle, with arches looking down into the nave. Return to Trail Gothic The dominant architectural style in the Middle Ages, used primarily from the later 12th century until the mid 16th century. It is characterised by pointed arches, rib-vaults, and large tracery windows. Return to Trail Heriot A type of payment made after the death of the deceased's over-lord. Originally it involved the return of military equipment or weapons which had been loaned for life, but later it became the render to the lord of either the best beast (horse, cow, etc) or the best object owned by the deceased. High altar The main altar, usually located towards the east end of the choir. Return to Trail Lady Chapel A chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary. Return to Trail Lancet A tall, narrow, pointed window. Lantern The windowed upper stage of a tower or dome. Return to Trail Lay A lay person was anyone who was not a priest, monk, or otherwise in religious orders. Return to Trail Liturgy The words and music of a religious service. Return to Trail Lierne An ornamental vaulting rib that joins two other ribs into a net-like pattern but has no structural function. Return to Trail Mass The main rite of the Christian Church, at which the Last Supper is commemorated through the consecration of bread and wine, which is then shared by the priest and the people. Sometimes it is known as Communion or Eucharist in the modern Anglican Church. Misericord A folding seat which has a shelf on its underside to support a standing person. The bracket supporting the shelf was usually carved. Return to Trail Nave The body of the church west of the chancel arch or crossing. The place where lay people stood during the mass. Return to Trail Niche Vertical recess in a wall, often for a statue. Return to Trail Norman A common name for the type of Romanesque architecture used in England in the 11th and 12th centuries after the Norman Conquest in 1066. Return to Trail Ogee A sweeping S-curve commonly used for arches and in tracery from c.1300. Return to Trail Palatinate An area of territory controlled by a 'count palatinate'. While this territory was still technically ruled by the king, the count palatinate had powers which elsewhere were reserved for the monarch alone. Parclose screen A wooden screen partitioning a section of an aisle as a chapel. Perpendicular A style of Gothic architecture popular in England from the mid 14th to the mid 16th century. Characterised by tracery with patterns of intersecting horizontal and vertical lines. Return to Trail Pier A support (usually made of masonry or brick) for an arch. Generally larger and heavier than a column. Return to Trail Piscina A niche with a drain (like a sink) used to wash liturgical vessels after the mass. Pre-Conquest Before the Norman Conquest of England in 1066. Synonymous with Anglo-Saxon. Presbytery The area of the church around and in front of the main or high altar; also a priest’s residence. From presbyter, Latin for priest. Return to Trail Prior A superior officer in a male religious house. Return to Trail Pulpit A raised platform for preaching. A two-decker pulpit also incorporated a reading-desk, while a three-decker pulpit had a reading desk and also a parish clerk’s desk. Pulpitum A stone screen dividing the nave and choir of a great church. The upper section was used as a pulpit for preaching, for a choir, and sometimes for an organ. Return to Trail Purbeck A dark-coloured, shelly limestone from the Isle of Purbeck (Dorset) that can be polished to a high sheen. Quire Archaic term for the chancel or choir. Refectory The communal dining hall of a monastery. Sometimes called a 'frater'. Return to Trail Renaissance The 15th- and 16th-century intellectual and artistic revival of forms from Ancient Greece and Rome. Rere-arch Arch supporting the inner part of the wall around a window or door. Reticulated A type of window tracery which has a net-like pattern formed by a series of inter-linked ogee arches. It was common in the early 14th-century Decorated style (from Latin opus reticulatum: net or lace-work). Return to Trail Retrochoir The part of the church to the east or behind (Latin retro) the choir. Return to Trail Rood A representation of Christ on the Cross, flanked by the Virgin Mary and St John. Almost all medieval roods were destroyed at the Reformation. Return to Trail Rood screen Screen originally surmounted by a Rood. Return to Trail Romanesque The architectural style common in Western Europe in the 11th and 12th centuries. It is characterised by massive masonry and round-headed arches inspired by ancient Roman models, and by the use of stylised ornament. In England it is often called Norman. Return to Trail Secular Not sacred. Of, or pertaining to, the world. Secular clergy were priests, not monks. Sedilia A row of one or more seats near the altar for the officiating priest and his assistants. Shaft The body of a column or pillar between the base and the capital. It is especially used for the small columns found around a window, door, or other opening. Shafts are generally round, but may also be polygonal. Shaft ring A characteristically Early English-style moulded band around a shaft. Used to cover the joints between the sections of a detached shaft, but also as a decorative feature. Shrine A repository for the relics of a saint. Often in the form of an elaborate tomb embellished with gems and precious metals. Return to Trail Spandrel The wedge-shaped area of wall next to the curved ‘shoulder’ of an arch. Spire The pointed top of a tower. Stiff-leaf A type of foliage ornament typical of the Early English style. Return to Trail String course A horizontal moulding projecting from the surface of the wall. Used to visually separate different parts of the elevation. Return to Trail Tabernacle A canopied frame like a miniature building, used around an image or over a statue. Return to Trail Tierceron A type of ornamental vaulting rib. Return to Trail Tithe A tax of 10 per cent of all income which was given to the parish church to support the priest and the work of the church. Tithes were taken on agricultural produce such as grain and newly born animals, on manufactured goods such as woollens, and on money income. In the Middle Ages and early modern period the payment of tithes was compulsory. Tracery The open-work pattern within an opening, especially the upper part of a window. Blind tracery is applied to a solid wall. Plate tracery has a decorative pattern of shapes cut through a solid surface, while in bar tracery the patterns are formed by shaped intersecting bands of stonework. Return to Trail Transept A cross-ways compartment of a church, generally used as a pair leading off the crossing at the junction of the nave and choir. Return to Trail Tympanum The surface within the head of an arch or pediment. Return to Trail Vault A curved stone ceiling. A barrel vault is simply an arched stone tunnel. A groin vault is formed from intersecting barrel vaults. The edges (groins) where the vaults meet do not have ribs or other strengthening. A rib vault is similar to a groin vault but the vault surface (or webbing) is supported by diagonal ribs at the intersections of the compartments. Tierceron and lierne vaults are rib vaults with added decorative ribs. A fan vault was constructed of intersecting conical shapes, usually covered with blind tracery motifs. Return to Trail Vestry 1) A room in a church where the ministers changed into their vestments, which were sometimes also stored there, especially in smaller churches. 2) A group of parishioners who oversaw the secular functions of the parish. Return to Trail
Published: 28-01-2005
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