When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Chancel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chancel

    This is an arch which separates the chancel from the nave and transept of a church. [4] If the chancel, strictly defined as choir and sanctuary, does not fill the full width of a medieval church, there will usually be some form of low wall or screen at its sides, demarcating it from the ambulatory or parallel side chapels.

  3. Crossing (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossing_(architecture)

    Cathedral floor plan (crossing is shaded) A crossing, in ecclesiastical architecture, is the junction of the four arms of a cruciform (cross-shaped) church. [1]In a typically oriented church (especially of Romanesque and Gothic styles), the crossing gives access to the nave on the west, the transept arms on the north and south, and the choir, as the first part of the chancel, on the east.

  4. Architecture of cathedrals and great churches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_cathedrals...

    In a church in which part of the body of the church extends beyond the transept, then this extension is architecturally termed the "chancel", for which the stricter definition includes only the choir and the sanctuary with the high altar, but in the common wider definition includes the whole eastern arm beyond the crossing. [28]

  5. Nave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nave

    The nave (/ n eɪ v /) is the central part of a church, stretching from the (normally western) main entrance or rear wall, to the transepts, or in a church without transepts, to the chancel. [1] [2] When a church contains side aisles, as in a basilica-type building, the strict definition of the term "nave" is restricted to the central aisle. [1]

  6. List of new churches by George Gilbert Scott in Northern ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_new_churches_by...

    The church was built for Sir Joseph Copley, it became redundant in 1990, and was vested in the Churches Conservation Trust the following year. It is in ashlar magnesian limestone and has a slate roof. The church consists of a nave, aisles, a south porch, and a chancel with chapels. At the junction of the nave and chancel is a bellcote. [40] II

  7. Transept - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transept

    Upon its four piers, the crossing may support a spire (e.g., Salisbury Cathedral), a central tower (e.g., Gloucester Cathedral) or a crossing dome (e.g., St Paul's Cathedral). Since the altar is usually located at the east end of a church, a transept extends to the

  8. St James's Church, Kingston, Purbeck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_James's_Church,_Kingston...

    The crossing features the original Victorian choir stalls, made of oak, and can seat ten choristers on each side. [13] The vault below the crossing tower has a large removable hatch to allow the bells to be raised or lowered to and from the tower. The chancel is the most richly decorated part of the church, with Purbeck marble shafts lining the ...

  9. St Mary Magdalene Church, Ickleton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Mary_Magdalene_Church...

    The church was built in the late 11th [1] or early 12th [3] century with a nave, chancel and central tower over the crossing between the two. The nave was built with a clerestory, round-arched west door, north and south aisles and a round-arched four-bay arcade between the nave and each aisle. [4]