Online Encyclopedia

EARLY ENGLISH PERIOD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 798 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EARLY
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ENGLISH PERIOD
  , in architecture, the
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term given by Rickman to the first pointed or
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Gothic style in England, nominally 1189–1307, which succeeded the Romanesque or Norman period towards the end of the 12th century, and
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developed into the Decorated period in the commencement of the 14th century . It is chiefly characterized by the almost universal employment of the pointed arch, not only in arches of wide span such as those of the
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nave
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arcade, but for doorways and windows . The actual introduction of the pointed arch took place at a much earlier date, as in the nave arcade of the Cistercian Abbey of Buildwas (1140), though the clerestory window above has semicircular arches . It is customary, therefore, to make allowance for a transitional epoch from the
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middle of the 12th century . Although the pointed arches used are sometimes equilateral and sometimes drop-arches, the lancet-arch is the most characteristic . The period is best recognized in England by the
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great
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depth given to the hollows of the
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mouldings, alternating with fillets and rolls, by the decoration of the hollows with the
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dog-tooth ornament, by the circular abacus of the capitals, and the employment of slender detached shafts of Purbeck marble which are attached to piers by circular moulded shaf t-rings (Fr. anneau) . The arches are sometimes cusped; circles with trefoils, quatrefoils, &c., are introduced into the
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tracery, and large rose windows in the transept or nave, as at Lincoln (1220) . The conventional foliage decorating the capitals is of great beauty and variety, and extends to spandrils, bosses, &c . In the spandrils of the arches of the nave, transept or choir arcades, diaper
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work is occasionally found, as in the transept of Westminster Abbey . The latter is one of the chief examples of the period, to which must be added the
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cathedral of Salisbury (except the tower); the Galilee at Ely; nave and transept of Wells (1225–1240); nave of Lincoln; west front of
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Peterborough; and the minster at Beverley . (R . P .

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