Digital Analysis of Vaults in English Medieval Architecture

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A01=Alexandrina Buchanan
A01=James Hillson
A01=Nicholas Webb
Apex Height
archaeology
Author_Alexandrina Buchanan
Author_James Hillson
Author_Nicholas Webb
Bounding Arches
Britain
Category=AM
Category=AMX
Category=N
cathedral
Chester
Choir Aisles
Chord Method
conservation
construction
Diagonal Ribs
Digital Diary
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Europe
Exeter
geometries
Gloucester
Gloucester Cathedral
gothic
heritage
High Vault
history
Lady Chapel
Lincoln
Lincoln Cathedral
Medieval Masons
Medieval Vaults
method
Norton Priory
Perpendicular Bisector
Pershore Abbey
Rectangle ABCD
religious
reverse engineering
rib vaults
Ribbed Vaults
Ridge Ribs
South Choir Aisle
South Transept
St Stephen's Chapel
St Stephen’s Chapel
stone
structure
Tewkesbury
Transverse Arches
Transverse Rib
Vault Surface
vaults
Wall Ribs
Wells
Wells Cathedral

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138541320
  • Weight: 730g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jul 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Medieval churches are one of the most remarkable creative and technical achievements in architectural history. The complex vaults spanning their vast interiors have fascinated both visitors and worshippers alike for over 900 years, prompting many to ask: ‘How did they do that?’ Yet very few original texts or drawings survive to explain the processes behind their design or construction.

This book presents a ground-breaking new approach for analysing medieval vaulting using advanced digital technologies. Focusing on the intricately patterned rib vaulting of thirteenth and fourteenth century England, the authors re-examine a series of key sites within the history of Romanesque and Gothic Architecture, using extensive digital surveys to examine the geometries of the vaults and provide new insights into the design and construction practices of medieval masons. From the simple surfaces of eleventh-century groin vaults to the gravity-defying pendant vaults of the sixteenth century, they explore a wide range of questions including: How were medieval vaults conceived and constructed? How were ideas transferred between sites? What factors led to innovations? How can digital methods be used to enhance our understanding of medieval architectural design?

Featuring over 200 high quality illustrations that bring the material and the methods used to life, Digital Analysis of Vaults in English Medieval Architecture is ideal reading for students, researchers and anyone with an interest in medieval architecture, construction history, architectural history and design, medieval geometry or digital heritage.

Alexandrina Buchanan is an archivist and architectural historian in the Department of History at the University of Liverpool. She specialises in the study of the material past, both archival and architectural, with a particular interest in the history and historiography of medieval architecture including vaults.

James Hillson is an art historian who worked as Postdoctoral Research Associate on the Tracing the Past: English Medieval Vaults project at the University of Liverpool. He specialises in the study of architectural design practices and international artistic exchange in Northwestern Europe during the twelfth to fourteenth centuries.

Nicholas Webb is an architect and lecturer at the Liverpool School of Architecture. His research focuses on the application of digital tools and techniques to enhance our understanding of historic works of architecture, particularly methods enabling new information that would not have been possible in a pre-digital context.

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