Prototype: the ancient Roman basilica
The church plan
The major arcade (row of arches) at the ground floor level is topped by a second arcade, called the gallery, which is topped by the clerestory (the windows). In later Gothic churches, we sometimes see yet another level below the clerestory, called the triforium.
Development of this plan over time shows that very soon the apse was elongated, adding more room to the choir. Additionally, the ends of the aisles developed into small wings themselves, known as transepts. These were also extended, providing room for more tombs, more shrines, and more pilgrims. The area where the axes of the nave and transepts meet is called, logically, the crossing.
An aisle often surrounds the apse, running behind the altar. Called the ambulatory, this aisle accessed additional small chapels, called radiating chapels or chevets. Of course, there are many variations on these typical building blocks of medieval church design. Different regions had different tastes, greater or lesser financial power, more or less experienced architects and masons, which created the diversity of medieval buildings still standing today.
Candela Citations
- Medieval Churches: Sources and Forms. Authored by: Valerie Spanswick. Provided by: Khan Academy. Located at: https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/medieval-world/latin-western-europe/romanesque1/a/medieval-churches-sources-and-forms. Project: Medieval Churches: Sources and Forms. License: CC BY-NC-SA: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike