Online Encyclopedia

ORIEL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 269 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ORIEL  , in

architecture, a projecting
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bay window on an upper storey, which is carried by corbels or
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mouldings . It is usually polygonal or semicircular in plan, but at Oxford in some of the colleges there are examples which are rectangular and rise through two or three storeys . In Germany it forms a favourite feature, and is sometimes placed at the angle of a
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building, carried up through two or three floors and covered with a lofty roof . The oriel is also said to have been provided as a recess for an altar in an oratory or small
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chapel . In the 15th century oriels came into general use, and are frequently found over entrance gateways . The origin of the word is unknown . The suggested derivation from
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Lat. aureolurn, with the supposed meaning of a gilded chamber or
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room, is not, according to the New
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English
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Dictionary, borne out by any
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historical evidence, and early French forms —such as eurieul—do not point to an origin in a word beginning with au . Du Cange (Glossarium, s.v . Oriolum) quotes Matthew of Paris (1251, Vitae Abbatum S . Albani): adjacet atrium nobilissimum in introitu, quad porticus vel Oriolum appellatur; and also a French use of 1338, where a licence to build an oriol is granted to one Jehan Bourgos . The earliest meaning seems to be a gallery, portico or corridor, and the application of the
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term to a particular form of window apparently arose from such a window being in an " oriel." In
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Cornwall " oriel " is still used of a balcony or porch at the head of an outside
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staircase leading to an upper story in a fisherman's cottage . The name of Oriel College, at Oxford, comes from a tenement known as Seneschal Hall or La Oriole, and granted to the college in 1327 .

There is no trace of the

reason why the tenement was so called, but it would seem that it referred to one of the earlier applications of the word, to a gallery or porch, rather than to a window .

End of Article: ORIEL
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ORIBI, or OUREBI
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BARON JOHN FOSTER ORIEL (1740-1828)

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