Page:Charles Moore--Development and Character of Gothic Architecture.djvu/357

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INDEX
333

In Spanish pointed buildings of the early I3th cent., 195.

Vaux-sous-Laon, church, façade, 104 (cut).

Venice, church of the Frari, piers, 189; east end, 191.

Ducal palace, capitals, 297.

Vercelli, church of S. Andrea, vaulting system Gothic, 181.

Verona, church of Sta. Anastasia, vaulting system, 189.

Tower of the Scaligeri, 192, 193 (cut).

Verula, abbey church, 195; its chevet and vaulting ribs, 196.

Vézelay, abbey church, sculpture, 249; capitals of the porch, 268.

Villeneuve-sur-Verberie, ch., rib section, 221 (cut).

Viollet-le-Duc, on Gothic architecture, 7; on the Greek elements in Gothic sculpture, 24; on the piers and vaults of the cath. of Paris, 54; on the construction of buttresses, 112; on the relation between abacus and capital, 203; on the sculpture of Chartres, 253; on the antagonism between decorative and pictorial art, 37.

Vitet, on the cathedral of Noyon, 38.

Vitruvius, mathematical formulas of, 21.


Walls, gradual reduction in Gothic architecture, 18; general character in Gothic buildings, 19, 85-92.

Roman, 10.
Romanesque, 11.

Wall openings, in Gothic buildings, 19, 85-92; grouped, 87; in English pointed architecture, 157, 164; English, compared with French, 149. See also Clerestory; Pier-arches; Windows.

Wall painting, 298-300; compared with stained glass in the character of its design, 301; Italian, 305-309.

Walpole, Horace, his interest in Gothic, 3.

Wells, cathedral, vaulting and structural relations, 150 (cut); compared with the Abbaye-aux- Dames at Caen, 151; external aspect, 153; the sculpture contemporary with great Italian sculpture, 247; nave and transept substantially Norman structures, 313 ;—abaci, 232 (cut); capitals of the west facade, 228, of the transept and eastern end of nave, 230, 231 (cut);—facade, 164;—plinths of north porch, 234 (cut);—portals, 285; sculpture of the west front, 284-287 (cut), compared with French work, 286, foliate sculpture, 292;—string-course profiles, 235.

Westminster Abbey, pier arches, 149; the most Gothic structure in England, 154; capitals, 231; absence of sculpture, 292.

Whewell, his Notes on German Churches, 4.

Whitby Abbey, Early English in form, but Romanesque in principle, 141; pier arches, 149; bases from clerestory of choir, 233 (cut).

Willis, his Architecture of the Middle Ages and Essay on Vaulting, 4; on the stilting of the longitudinal arch in clerestory vaults, 68.

Winchester, cathedral, length of the nave, 167.

Windows, dormer, in spires, 114.

Wheel, further developed in France than in England, 160.
Of the cath. of Reims, apsidal chapels, 88, 89 (cut);—the ch. of St. Remi at Reims, 96.
In English pointed architecture, 157.
Italian, 193;—of the ch. of St. Francis of Assisi, 182;—the cath. of Florence, 187; the ch. of Sta. Croce. 185.
See also Clerestory; Stained Glass; Tracery; Wall openings.

Worcester, cathedral, the smaller transept not true Gothic, 153; tower, 165.

Wren, Sir Christopher, his taste for the pseudo-classic orders, 3.


York, cathedral, the transept not true Gothic, 154; transept facade, 160; tower, 165; chapter-house, 168.


THE END

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