Romanesque Architecture - University of Southern Mississippi
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Romanesque
Architecture
Architectural History
ACT 322
Doris Kemp
Topics
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque: Structures
Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture: Early Romanesque in
Germany and Normandy
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque
After the move of the seat of the Roman
Empire to Constantinople, the Greco-Roman
culture went into collapse
Latin was displaced as the common language
Disintegration of Roman law
Cessation of urban life
A major decline in monumental art and architecture
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque
Charlemagne
King of the Franks who vowed to restore the
Roman culture to its height
Crowned Holy Roman Emperor by the Roman pope
on Christmas Day, 800 A.D.
Carolingian Renaissance
Latin for Charles the Great (Charlemagne)
Renewal of the Latin language, literature, art, and
architecture
Birth of Pre-Romanesque architecture
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque
Pre-Romanesque
Architecture looked back to Rome in its glory days
The style was never recaptured despite the effort
Structures were reinterpretations of antiquity, forwardlooking and innovative
Non-Roman qualities of abstraction, fragmentation, and
volumetric energy
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Traits of Carolingian Pre-Romanesque
structures:
Strongly defined spatial units
Chains of modular construction
fragmentation
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Palatine Chapel
c. 796 – 805
Located at Charlemagne's palace at Aachen
Domed
Double-shelled
Two-storied octagon plan
Monumental façade
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Palatine Chapel
Reminiscent of early
Christian and Byzantine
Architecture
Was a rebuilt version of S.
Vitale
One of the most
impressive of late antique
Roman structures
Photo: Sullivan
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Photo: Sullivan
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Photo: Sullivan
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
St. Riquier
Transformed the fundamental concept of the early
Christian basilica
More complex, composed of many independent group
formations
Powerful vertical massings at both ends
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Photo: Sullivan
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Gatehouse/Torhalle
Located in Lorsch, Germany
c. 767 – 774
Saddle-roofed central block flanked by twin vertical
stair towers
Features a chapel originally dedicated to St. Michael
Resembles Roman triumphal arches
Two-storied facades
Richly ornamented
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Photo: Sullivan
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Photo: Sullivan
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Germigny-des-Pres
Located on the Loire
River
c. 806
Reflects the influences of
both Byzantium and
Islam
Photo: Sullivan
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
Photo: Sullivan
Carolingian Pre-Romanesque:
Structures
The main aspects of the standard monastery
were conceived during the Carolingian period
St. Gall plan
Ideal architectural plan of a traditional monastery
Was never built
Plan included:
A small city featuring a medical center and a cemetery
U-shaped corridor to provide orderly traffic flow
Romanesque Architecture
Charlemagne’s death in 814 led to a dark century
for Europe due ton invaders
Slavic, Magyar, Arab pirates, and Vikings
When the invasions ceased economic conditions
improved
Cultural revival and religious enthusiasm brought
about a wave of church-building
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Imperial Romanesque (Germany)
Antithetical tendencies
Conservative and nostalgic
Looked back fondly to the works of Charlemagne
Inventive and progressive
Drew on early Christian, imperial Roman, and Byzantine
models
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Munster Cathedral
Located in Essen, Germany
Late 10th century
Retrospective, loosely based on St. Riquier and St.
Gall
Freedom in design and energy that contrast with the
perfectionist spirit of the cathedral’s Byzantine
models and the determination of Charlemagne's
architecture
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Photo: Sullivan
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
St. Michael’s Cathedral
Located at Hildesheim,
Germany
More contemporary style
than at Munster
Square schematic
c. 1001 - 1033
Photo: Sullivan
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Imperial Cathedral of Speyer
Located in Speyer, Germany
c. 1030 – 1060
Built by Emperor Konrad II
Impressive wall articulation
Crucial for the development of Romanesque architecture
Wall shaped into powerful multilayer configuration
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Photo: Sullivan
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Norman Romanesque
In the early tenth century the Vikings settled in
Normandy, France
Buildings in Normandy were crucial to the development
in France
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Mont-Saint-Michael
Medieval shrine in
Normandy, France
Norman counterpart to
the Speyer Cathedral in
Germany
Photo: Sullivan
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Abbey Church of Notre Dame de Jumieges
Notable for the immense height of its crossing
tower
Facade was derived from Carolingian westwork
tradition
Central structure was set forward between twin bases of
square towers that rise as octagons above lines of the roof
Set precedence for the twin-towered facades that
dominated the exteriors of the major French Gothic
cathedrals
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Photo: Sullivan
Romanesque Architecture:
Early Romanesque in Germany and
Normandy
Photo: Sullivan
References
Sullivan, Mary; http://www.bluffton.edu/~sullivanm/
http://www.brynmawr.edu/Acads/Cities/wld/wdpt1.html
Trachtenburg/Hyman; Architecture: From Prehistory to
Postmodernity
Wodehouse/Moffett; A History of Western Architecture
Romanesque
Architecture
Architectural History
ACT 322
Doris Kemp