The Cenacle is traditional site of "the upper room": venue of Last Supper. Structure is probably partly a 1stc synagogue, built on top 12thc with a Gothic hall by Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem, and also venerated as the tomb of King David. Ottomans turned it into a mosque 16thc.
"Tomb of David" and undercroft below the Cenacle, and roof above 12thc vaults with the Ottoman minaret and dome over the tomb of David.
The complex is now overshadowed by the Dormition Basilica, built 1900-10 by German Catholics after purchase of site by Kaiser Wilhelm II.
The structure stood next to the double-aisled Byzantine basilica of Hagia Sion, and then was incorporated into the SE corner of the Frankish church built on its ruins. This explains why only the S side of the Cenacle is fenestrated.
before i get to the point here's some pictures. first 1870s looking SW over the cemetery where the Dormition basilica would be built, then 1900 looking SE when construction begins
yeah I know it's quite a mental effort to get your head round this with no good satellite photos.
12thc church with Cenacle at Mt Sion, until Kingdom of Jerusalem collapsed, was run by Austin Canons.
Beginning with Austin house of Easby in Yorkshire, conventual refectories in England often had an undercroft included in their builds, so brethren always ate in an "upper room".
The Cistercian community that came under the wing of Crusader Roger de Mowbray got a refectory with undercroft at their final Byland site in the early 1160s, almost certainly consciously evoked the Cenacle.
Copied at Cistercian Rievaulx pretty quickly (superstructure early 13thc)
some Benedictine houses I can think I've been to of with undercrofts under the refectory are Worcester Cathedral Priory, and Durham Cathedral monk crash-pad Finchale Priory.
both of these actually have their undercroft vaults intact too.
"Cenacle" is English form of the word "coenaculum" the Vulgate uses in Mark 14:15, Luke 22:12, and Acts 1:13/9:39. A cenaculum was the upper dining room of a multi-storey Roman house. In these monastic builds I think there's a fair bit of prestige involved as well as symbolism.
yeah they kept stuff in the undercroft, it's functional. but jacking up your refectory certainly a choice: there's loads that are just built on ground level. e.g. Fountains, Westminster, Lilleshall.
someone should do a refectories catalogue and work out how many had undercrofts.
not me though lol. Wont be thinking about this until next Maundy Thursday. A happy Easter to all observe the vigils and celebrate.
"Sic non potuistis una hora vigilare mecum?
Vigilate, et orate ut non intretis in tentationem. Spiritus quidem promptus est, caro autem infirma."
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1882 photograph of the construction of the western steeples of Clermont-Ferrand cathedral. They were topped out 2 years later.
Man, it took me a long time to find this pic, but still the question remains... what did the unfinished medieval cathedral front look like before this?!
Yes while those soaring black spires of volcanic rock are the landmark now, for hundreds of years it was just one corner tower on the 1270s/80s north transept that rose tall.
1855 view from next to the 18thc monastery of the Discalced Carmelites, which, um, sorta survives.
The so-called Bayette (bayeur: watchman) tower over the north transept front, here at the visit of Napoleon III in 1862. Note on the right you have the nave roof that just... ends.
Bath Abbey, two engravings of the panelled perp-survival nave ceiling of c.1608-16, replaced with masonry fan vaulting, following the pattern of the 1499 work by the royal masons Robert and William Vertue under G.G. Scott from 1859 (the crossing and transept vaults are post 1574)
of course this nowhere near as interesting as how big the Romanesque cathedral ambulatory they pulled down in 1499 to build it is. still convinced the weird E front boxes in its crossing piers.
Suppose I could animate this and also claustral ranges, but really know nothing about Bath outside the abbey. though this is cool. Henry Savile's map of c.1588, showing the abbey church without a nave roof and no S transept window, and lost parish church of St Mary Stall to the W
This is actually a Moscow patriarchate church. It's the Church of the Ascension (Вознесенська церква) in Bobryck (Бобрик). That scaffolding the camera is looking through is probably there as the nave was still being painted last year.
The church was built from 1993 and consecrated in 1998, not untypical for round here (a lot are even later, 2000s, and often not easy to get interiors of) More images and detailed history here too
For instance, the church of St Nicholas, Rozhivka, that was only dedicated 21 Dec 2019: the 2015 Google street view shows it as just foundations. This is OCU, the autocephalous Orthodox church of Ukraine
Genappe Mill, part of the grand Dalton Mills complex in Keighley, West Yorkshire was totally burnt out with a full roof collapse on Thursday this week. The block was begun 1868. (The fanciest bit is the N-S Tower Mill to the NE of the complex, begun 1866)
From SW, you can see the wing connecting Genappe Mill with New Mill (1869-) was already roofless and overgrown, the site was always a bit of mess and not sure what could ever be done with it. hardly profitable to make into flats round here.
Here's an amazing series of urban explorer images. Don't which are in the wing that's been totally burnt out though
Guildhall, York, originally built by the city corporation and guild of St Christopher under mason John Barton 1449-53, after a Luftwaffe "Baedeker" raid 29 April 1942.
that's twisted steel scaffolding there because since 1935 the roof had been under restoration for death watch beetle infestation. These pics of the original roof under a temporary shelter were taken less than two weeks before the bombing, 17 April 1942
Charred timbers of the roof and columns later in 1942 with the opening of the assizes in June