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nave and church
The church is on the Latin cross plan, with a nave and two aisles with three apses decorated by a frieze.
As a result, he was moved to the nave of the church.
Æthelberht built Justus a cathedral church in Rochester ; the foundations of a nave and chancel partly underneath the present-day Rochester Cathedral may date from that time.
The church is built with a nave, two aisles, a transept and a tower.
The church has a nave with side chapels.
The interior of the church has a nave and two aisles.
* Rood screen, a partition in a church which separates the chancel from the nave
It appears his designs would have made the church a good deal gloomier than the final design, with massive piers all the way down the nave, " like an alley " according to a critical posthumous analysis by Antonio da Sangallo the Younger.
It is the second largest church in the city after the cathedral and is built on the Latin cross plan, with a perimeter of 80 x 40 meters comprising a nave and two aisles.
The current nave of the church is partially built over the old 11th century church, of which only a dome and the underlying structure remain, in today's altar area.
The church consists of a vast nave of eleven bays, entered by a narthex, with a transept and short apsidal choir.
In England, this motif usually appears in a prominent place in the church, such as the central rib of the chancel roof, or on a central rib of the nave.
The nave of the church of Saint Ouen was completed at last, but without the facade flanked by twin towers.
The church, with a single nave, has traces of the ancient frescoes ( 13th century ), which probably covered all the walls.
Most Gothic churches, unless they are entitled chapels, are of the Latin cross ( or " cruciform ") plan, with a long nave making the body of the church, a transverse arm called the transept and, beyond it, an extension which may be called the choir, chancel or presbytery.
A section of the main body of a Gothic church usually shows the nave as considerably taller than it is wide.
The foundations of the earliest church ( the Church of the Holy Trinity ) are under the present superb Romanesque nave built in the 12th century.
The church is laid out in a cruciform plan with an aisled nave and a clerestorey of seven bays.
The main nave is short and narrow ( as is the case with other mission churches ), but at San Luis Obispo there is a secondary nave of almost equal size situated to the right of the altar, making this the only " L "- shaped mission church among all of the California missions.
Within three years, an aisled nave had been added to the stone church, and the first permanent claustral buildings built in stone and roofed in tile had been completed.
Bishop King planned a smaller church, covering the area of the Norman nave only.
The new church is not a typical example of the Perpendicular form of Gothic architecture ; the low aisles and nave arcades and the very tall clerestory present the opposite balance to that which was usual in perpendicular churches.
The nave, which has five bays, is long and wide to the pillars and rises to, with the whole church being long and wide.

nave and whether
The transept of a church separates the nave from the sanctuary, whether apse, choir, chevet, presbytery or chancel.
Gaulli's program for the nave was likely heavily overseen by Oliva and Bernini ; though it is not clear how much all three contributed and whether they all shared the same philosophy.

nave and Romanesque
The original edifice, in Romanesque style, had a nave and two aisles with a semicircular apse.
The result is that the Cathedral reflects a hodgepodge of architectural styles, with a Gothic nave, a Romanesque crossing under the dome ; chapels in French, English and Spanish Gothic styles, as well as Norman and Byzantine ; Gothic choir stalls, and Roman arches and columns separating the high altar and ambulatory.
The nave and transepts, Romanesque in style, date mainly from the earliest, the façade of the south transept from the latest of those periods, the choir and apse chapels from the 12th and 13th centuries.
In 1200, a fire destroyed part of the old Romanesque cathedral, leaving St Romain's tower, the side porches of the front, and part of the nave.
The old building was a fine example of simple and massive Romanesque, as the nave testifies, and has a beautiful doorway in its west front.
The nave of the Abbey church is in a mixture of Romanesque and Gothic styles
It has, among other things, a granite Romanesque baptismal font, frescoes from about 1250, a crucifix from about 1300 and the nave from 1750.
It was constructed in the Romanesque style with twin aisles either side of the nave and a single tower at the west end, aligned with the main axis of the church.
Domes in Romanesque architecture are generally found within crossing towers at the intersection of a church's nave and transept, which conceal the domes externally.
Dozens of other Romanesque churches in the region have a single nave with domed roofs.
In this quarter of the town, too, is the Liebfrauenkirche, a fine church ( nave 1250, choir 1404 – 1431 ) with lofty late Romanesque towers ; the castle of the electors of Trier, erected in 1280, which now contains the municipal picture gallery ; and the family house of the Metternichs, where Prince Metternich, the Austrian statesman, was born in 1773.
The smaller and older is the Mariakirke, a single nave church built in the Romanesque style.
The small Romanesque church of the 10th century known as the Basse Oeuvre occupies the site destined for the nave ; much of its east end was demolished to make room for the new cathedral.
The apse and transept at the west end are the remains of a Romanesque church, while the nave and eastern apse are in the Gothic style and belong to the 14th century.
The base of the tower forms a porch and the large tower arch, leading into the nave, is thought to be Romanesque.
Romanesque nave of the abbey church of Saint-Georges de Boscherville Abbey | Saint-Georges-de-Boscherville, Normandy, France has a triforium passage above the aisle vaulting
In Romanesque and Gothic Christian abbey, cathedral basilica and church architecture, the nave is the central approach to the high altar, the main body of the church.
In Romanesque architecture, however, the roofs are at roughly equal heights, with those of the aisle being only slightly lower than that of the nave.
The earliest surviving architecture is the south-east doorway in the nave from the cloister, which has a round arched doorway typical of Romanesque or Norman architecture which was the prevalent architectural style before the adoption of Gothic.
The church nave was originally Romanesque in style, was enlargened however around 1300 with a long and high choir and at that time changed into the Gothic style.
The " greatest surviving monument of Romanesque wall painting ", much reduced from what was originally there, is in the Abbey Church of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe near Poitiers, where the rounded barrel vault of the nave, the crypt, portico and other areas retain most of their paintings.
A side portal is decorated with 11th century motifs, while the interior has a nave covered by cross vaults, while the aisles, separated by columns with Romanesque capitals, have half-barrel vaults.

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