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FLYING BUTTRESS , in architecture, theSee also: term given to a structural feature employed to transmit the thrust of a vault across an intervening space, such as an See also: aisle, See also: chapel or cloister, to a buttress built outside the latter
.
This was done by throwing a semi-See also: arch across to the vertical buttress
.
Though employed by the See also: Romans and in early Romanesque See also: work, it was generally masked by other constructions or hidden under a roof, but in the I2th century it was recognized as rational construction and emphasized by the decorative accentuation of its features, as in the cathedrals of See also: Chartres, Le Mans, See also: Paris, See also: Beauvais, See also: Reims, &c
.
Sometimes, owing to the See also: great height of the vaults, two semi-See also: arches were thrown one above the other, and there are cases where the thrust was transmitted to two or even three buttresses across intervening spaces
.
As a vertical buttress, placed at a distance, possesses greater power of resistance to thrust than if attached to the See also: wall carrying the vault, verticalbuttresses as at Lincoln and See also: Westminster Abbey were built outside the chapterhouse to receive the thrust
.
All vertical buttresses are, as a See also: rule, in addition weighted with pinnacles to give them greater power of resistance
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