Artigo Revisado por pares

The Romanesque Choir of Tewkesbury Abbey and the Problem of a “Colossal Order”

1983; College Art Association; Volume: 65; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/00043079.1983.10788111

ISSN

1559-6478

Autores

John McAleer,

Tópico(s)

Medieval Architecture and Archaeology

Resumo

The Romanesque choir of Tewkesbury Abbey was almost completely destroyed by rebuilding in the 14th century. Just enough was preserved to serve as a basis for the reconstruction by A. W. Clapham of an elevation design that created the illusion of tall cylindrical piers combined with a double arcade, similar to the elevations that still exist at the mid- to late-12th century churches of Romsey and Jedburgh Abbeys and Oxford Cathedral. An examination of the corbels and the lower voussoirs of arches on the surviving 11th-century piers at Tewkesbury suggests that the situation was not actually analogous to the later buildings. Consequently, it is very likely that the illusion of a tall pier and double arcade first actually appeared in England at Romsey Abbey ca. 1140/45, not at Tewkesbury Abbey ca. 1087.

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