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A crux immissa or Latin cross. A Latin cross or crux immissa is a type of cross in which the vertical beam sticks above the crossbeam, [1] giving the cross four arms. Typically the two horizontal and upper vertical arm are the same length, although sometimes the vertical is shorter, however the lower vertical arm is always much longer than any other arm.
This is partially loosely based on a design in "Celtic Art: The Methods of Construction" by George Bain, which was in turn loosely based on patterns in the Book of Kells. If the lighter green path were to be cut somewhere on the outside of the cross, it would become a labyrinth which returns to its starting point. Date: 2013: Source
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The Latin cross puzzle (left) and the T puzzle (right). The Latin cross puzzle consists of a reassembling a five-piece dissection of the cross with three isosceles right triangles, one right trapezoids and an irregular shaped six-sized piece (see figure). When the pieces of the cross puzzle have the right dimensions, they can also be put ...
A new Protestant interior design scheme was established in many German Lutheran churches during the 18th century, following the example of the court chapel of Wilhelmsburg Castle of 1590: The connection of altar with baptismal font, pulpit and organ in a vertical axis. The central painting above the altar was replaced with the pulpit.