Mediaeval Church Vaulting

Part II, p. 208). See also Enlart, I, p. 485, note 2.

Chapter 5246 wordsPublic domain

[452] Baudot and Perrault-Dabot, V, pl. 79.

[453] Such chapels were frequently omitted all through both the Romanesque and Gothic periods even in churches with an ambulatory and were not therefore established parts of the church plan. For examples of such chapels see Enlart, I, p. 228 note 2 and p. 485 note 3 and Lasteyrie, p. 297.

[454] For discussion of prototypes see Lasteyrie, pp. 187, 188.

[455] For examples see Lasteyrie, p. 301 and Enlart, I, p. 231, note 4.

[456] For examples see Lasteyrie, p. 301 and Enlart, I, p. 486, note 1.

[457] See Enlart, I, p. 231, note 2.

[458] For examples see Lasteyrie, p. 297, and Enlart I, p. 233, note 1 and p. 486, note 3.

[459] For examples see Lasteyrie, p. 297, and Enlart, I, p. 233, note 2.

[460] For examples see Lasteyrie, p. 297, and Enlart, I, p. 233, note 3.

[461] Orcival (Lasteyrie, p. 297, Fig. 458).

[462] For examples see Enlart, I, p. 233, note 3.

[463] Rather rare in the Romanesque period. For examples see Enlart, I, p. 232.

[464] See page 173 _et seq._

[465] For examples of square chapels see Enlart, I, p. 231, note 2 and p. 487, note 7.

[466] For example, the chapels with other chapels added to them toward the east at Norwich cath. and Mehun-sur-Yevre (Cher) see Enlart, I, p. 234, note 4.

[467] See p. 112.

End of Project Gutenberg's Mediaeval Church Vaulting, by Clarence Ward