A beginner's guide to the terminology of church architecture. Thread:
Nave
The main, central part of a church. For the congregation to gather.
(Also, churches are aligned East-West)
Chancel
The space surrounding the altar, including the choir and the sanctuary. For the clergy.
Anglo-Saxon churches simply had a nave & a chancel, i.e. a space for the people and a space for the priest.
Choir
Where the clergy sit, and *sometimes* the actual singing choir itself, although that can vary.
Sanctuary
The holiest part of the church, at the easternmost end. Where the altar is.
Ambulatory
Usually only found in cathedrals. The space behind and around the chancel, and separated from it.
Transept
The parts of the church which extend at right-angles from the nave, thus forming a cross shape.
Crossing
The junction of the four arms of the church (nave, transepts, and chancel). Also beneath though the tower, if the tower is central.
Aisle
The areas along the sides of the nave, separated by arcades.
Mullion
The vertical stonework forming the structure of the window and separating the glass.
Light
The individual areas of glass created by the mullions.
Tracery
The decorative stonework on a window.
Pier
What you'd usually call a column. In practice, a vertical load-bearing support.
Arcade
A row of continuous arches supported on piers.
(Arrows point out the individual pieces. The arcade is the whole thing together.)
Capital
The decorative part at the top of a pier, separating it from the arch.
Clerestory
A second storey of windows.
Spandrel
The area between two arches and a third flat element. Or the area between the outer arch of a door and an added flat element.
Archivolt
The decorative underside of an arch, especially above doorways.
Portal
"Door" really just refers to the wooden thing. Portal refers to the door and all the surrounding architectural elements.
Tympanum
The decorative semi-circular section above the door lintel and below the arch.
Reredos
The decorated feature behind an altar.
Rood Screen
A partition, either of stone of wood, separating the chancel from the nave.
There are plenty more, but we'll stop for now.
These introductory terms allow you to better engage with church architecture.
For example, rather than "that stone bit of the window" you can now say "the tracery."
It's a language. And when you speak it, churches come to life.
Your responses to this thread are thrilling - it's a delight to share it & I will to respond to all your comments in course.
I should add, if you enjoyed this, then you'll probably also like my newsletter, Areopagus.
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