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WINDOW (properly. " See also: term applied in architecture (Ital. fenestra, Fr. fenelre, Span. ventana, Ger
.
Fenster) to an aperture or opening in a See also: wall for the See also: admission of See also: light and air to the interior of a See also: hall or
See also: room
.
The earliest windows are those which constituted the See also: clerestory windows of the See also: Great Hall of Columns at See also: Karnak; they were filled with vertical slabs of See also: masonry pierced with narrow slits
.
Other See also: Egyptian temples were lighted in the same way
.
In one at Der el Medinet at See also: Thebes the window was divided by See also: miniature columns with See also: lotus capitals
.
Some of the small ivory carvings found at Nimroud by See also: Layard, now in the See also: British Museum, are evidently of Egyptian workmanship, as they have lotus columns forming a See also: balustrade in the See also: lower See also: part of the window; and such features are shown in the See also: Assyrian bas-reliefs as windows in the towers
.
Dr Arthur See also: Evans's discoveries at See also: Cnossus have revealed, in the eastern portion of the palace, rectangular openings which were certainly windows, with raised sills and See also: stone benches inside, and the representations of the ordinary houses at Cnossus on a series of plaques show that they were in two or three storeys with openings in the upper storeys filled with windows framed in
See also: timber with transoms and mullions
.
It was at one See also: time thought that there were no windows in See also: Greek temples, and those of the west front of the See also: Erechtheum are known now to be later reconstructions of the See also: Roman See also: period, but the remains of two windows placed on either See also: side cf theas to the See also: lighting of some of the temples in See also: Rome, in which were placed all the magnificent statues from See also: Greece, so as to enable them to be seen properly
.
The See also: Pantheon was lighted by a circular opening in the dome 30 ft. in diameter; the rain therefore See also: fell in at times, and consequently the pavement had a See also: convex See also: contour, there being also holes under the hypaethral opening in connexion with drains beneath the pavement
.
There was a window at the See also: south end of the See also: tepidarium of the Forum See also: baths at See also: Pompeii, said to have been filled with a See also: bronze See also: frame with See also: glass in it, See also: half an inch thick
.
Although no window frames have been found in Pompeii,the openings in the walls show that some of the rooms were lighted by windows; one of them in the See also: house of Diomede takes the See also: form of a See also: bow window with three See also: lights in it
.
In the later styles the windows assume much greater importance, and in See also: Gothic cathedrals almost govern the whole design
.
Already, however, in the earliest See also: Byzantine See also: church, Sta
See also: Sophia at Constantinople, the windows constituted one of the chief features of the church; the See also: forty windows round the See also: base of the cupola giving an exceptional lightness to the structure; besides, there are windows in the larger and smaller apses and in the See also: north and south walls
.
The windows in the latter, which are of great See also: size, are subdivided by marble mullions with pierced lattices between of transparent See also: marbles
.
In the later Byzantine churches the windows were of smaller dimensions, but always filled with marble screens, sometimes pierced, and the grouping of two or three under a single See also: arch is the prevailing design
.
In the Romanesque styles the windows are universally round-headed, with infinite variety of design in the See also: mouldings and their enrichment, greater importance being sometimes given by having two or more rings of See also: arches, the See also: outer ones carried by small columns; this is varied in Norman See also: work by dividing them with a See also: shaft into two or more lights placed in shallow recesses under an arched See also: head
.
Circular windows occur occasionally, as in the eastern transept of See also: Canterbury, at Iffley church, See also: Oxford, Barfreston and Patricksbourne in Kent
.
In all these early windows, which are usually small, greater light is obtained by splaying the jambs inside with a scoinson arch over them
.
The coupling together of two or more windows under a single arch, and the piercing of the tympanum above, led to the development of See also: plate and See also: rib See also: tracery (see TRACERY); also to that of the circular or See also: rose windows, which throughout the Romanesque and Gothic periods constituted very important features in the church, being placed high up in the west front over the porch or in the transepts; sometimes, and more particularly in French churches, they occupied the whole of the upper portion of the windows, having vertical lights under them, but the junction was never quite satisfactory
.
Although the employment of tracery continued long after the classic revival, the examples generally are poor in design, and even in those that are more elaborate (as those of the period of See also: Henry II. in the church at Le
See also: Grand Andely) the introduction of classic details in the ordinary and rose windows was of too capricious a character to make them worthy of much See also: attention
.
The early See also: Renaissance architects in See also: France in some cases, and notably in the apsidal chapels of St See also: Pierre at See also: Caen (1520), seemed to feel that the stained glass was too much cut up by the tracery and mullions, and omitted them altogether, trusting to the iron stanchions and See also: cross-bars to carry their glass, so that a return was made to the See also: simple semicircular-headed window of Roman times, retaining only the mouldings of the See also: late Flamboyant period for the jambs and arch-moulds
.
Windows of this description, however, would be out of place in domestic architecture, so that the mullion window was there retained with two or three transoms, all moulded and with square heads; in the Tudor period cusping was introduced in the upper lights and occasion-ally in those below, and this See also: custom lingered for a long time in the collegiate buildings of Oxford and Cambridge and in various houses throughout See also: England
.
In France, square-headed windows were almost always employed, owing to the earlier introduction there of the Renaissance See also: style, when the decoration of the mullions, generally consisting of classic pilasters, required some kind of architrave, See also: frieze and cornice. to render the See also: order See also: complete; eventually the mullion and transom disappear, and in the earlier work of the Louvre the windows are simple rectangular openings, fitted with wooden framework, and, like those in Rome, Milan and Genoa, depend for their architectural effect on the moulded classic jambs, and the lintel, frieze and small cornice over; and in cases where more importance was required, with small semicircular columns or pilasters carrying the usual entablature, with small pediments sometimes angular and sometimes semicircular, repeating in fact an See also: ancient Roman design, of which almost the only examples known are the See also: blank windows and niches which decorated some of the enclosure walls of the Roman thermae
.
In Florence and See also: Siena the early windows of the Renaissance often had semicircular heads and were coupled together, there being two lights to the window divided by shafts, thus continuing the tradition of those of the earlier Tuscan palaces; the same treatment was followed in Venice, See also: Verona and other towns in the north-See also: east, where the Gothic influence of the palaces in Venice created a transition; thus the mouldings of the windows of the Vendramini and Corner Spinelli palaces follow closely those of the Ducal Palace, but the arches are semicircular instead of being either pointed or ogee in form
.
Another type See also: peculiar to Venice is a lofty window with semicircular head enclosed in a rectangular panel and crowned with a small entablature and pediment
.
The only new combination of the 16th century in See also: Italy, which was largely adopted in England by Inigo See also: Jones and his followers in the 17th and 18th centuries, is the so-called Venetian or
See also: Palladian window, the finest example of which is that found in the Sala della Ragione or the See also: basilica at See also: Vicenza; it is true that it was here employed by See also: Palladio to light an open gallery, but the composition was so generally approved that it led to its See also: constant adoption for a window of more importance than the ordinary simple rectangular form
.
It consists of a central light with semicircular arch over, carried on an impost consisting of a small entablature, under which, and enclosing two other lights, one on each side, are pilasters
.
In the library at Venice, Sansovino varied the design by substituting columns for the two inner pilasters
.
The Palladian window was introduced by Inigo Jones in the centre of the garden front at See also: Wilton, by See also: Lord See also: Burlington in the centres of the wings of the Royal See also: Academy, and See also: good examples exist in Holkham House, See also: Norfolk, by Kent, and in See also: Worcester See also: College, Oxford
.
There do not seem to be any examples in either See also: Germany, France or See also: Spain
.
Circular and See also: oval windows, lighting a mezzanine or the upper part of a hall, are found in Italy, France and England, sometimes over ordinary rectangular windows when the See also: main front is decorated with semi-detached columns as in See also: Hampton See also: Court Palace
.
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