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The term Norman architecture is used to categorise styles of Romanesque Architecture developed by the Normans in the various lands under their dominion or influence in the 11th and 12th centuries. They introduced large numbers of Castle s and Fortification s including Norman Keep s, and at the same time Monasteries , Abbey s, Church es and Cathedral s, in a style characterised by round Arch es (particularly over windows and doorways) and massive proportions. These Romanesque styles originated in Normandy and became widespread in north western Europe , particularly in England which contributed considerable development and has the largest number of surviving examples. At about the same time a Norman Dynasty ruled in Sicily , producing a distinctive variation incorporating Byzantine and Saracen influences which is also known as Norman architecture, or alternatively as Sicilian Romanesque. ORIGIN OF THE TERM, DEVELOPMENT INTO GOTHIC The term may have originated with 18th Century Antiquarian s, but its usage in a sequence of styles has been attributed to Thomas Rickman in his 1817 work ''An Attempt to Discriminate the Styles of English Architecture from the Conquest to the Reformation'' which used the labels "Norman, Early English, Decorated, and Perpendicular". The more inclusive term "Romanesque" was coined by Charles-Alexis-Adrien De Gerville in 1818. As Master Mason s developed the style and experimented with ways of overcoming the geometric difficulties of Groin Vault ed ceilings, they introduced features such as the pointed arch which were later characterised as being Gothic in style. Architectural historians and scholars consider that a style must be assessed as an integral whole rather than an aggregate of features, and while some include these developments within the Norman or Romanesque styles, others describe them as transitional or "Norman-Gothic Transitional". A few websites [http://www.racine.ra.it/ungaretti/gothic/norman_gothic.htm , use the term "Norman Gothic", but it is unclear whether they refer to the transitional style or to the Norman style as a whole. NORMAN ARCHITECTURE IN NORMANDY The Normans arrived at the mouth of the River Seine as Viking invaders in 911, at a time when Franks were fighting on horseback and Frankish lords were building castles. Over the next century they adopted these customs as well as Christianity and the French language. Norman Barons built timber castles on earthen mounds, beginning the development of Motte-and-bailey castles, and great stone churches in the Romanesque style of the Franks. By 950 they were building stone Keep s. They elaborated on the Early Christian basilica plan, longitudinal with side aisles and an apse, and a western facade with two towers as at the Church Of Saint-Étienne at Caen begun in 1067, which formed a model for the larger English Cathedral s beginning some twenty years later. NORMAN ARCHITECTURE IN ENGLAND In England , Norman nobles and bishops had influence before the Norman Conquest of 1066, and Norman influences affected late Anglo-Saxon Architecture . Edward The Confessor was brought up in Normandy, and in 1042 brought masons to work on Westminster Abbey , the first Romanesque building in England. In 1051 he brought in Norman Knight s who built "motte" castles as a defence against the Welsh . Following the invasion Normans rapidly constructed Motte-and-bailey castles, and in a burst of building activity built Church es and Abbey s, was well as more elaborate Fortification s including Norman stone Keep s. The buildings show massive proportions in simple geometries, the Masonry with small bands of Sculpture , perhaps as Blind Arcading , and concentrated spaces of Capital s and round doorways and in the Tympanum under an Arch . The "Norman arch" is the round arch. Norman mouldings are carved or incised with geometric ornament, such as chevron patterns round arches. The cruciform churches often had deep Chancel s and a square Crossing Tower which has remained a feature of English Ecclesiastical Architecture . Hundreds of Parish churches were built and the great English Cathedral s were founded from 1083. After a fire damaged Canterbury Cathedral in 1174 Norman masons introduced the new Gothic Architecture . Around 1191 Wells Cathedral and Lincoln Cathedral brought in the English Gothic style, and Norman became increasingly a modest style of provincial building. Religious architecture
Domestic architecture NORMAN ARCHITECTURE IN SCOTLAND Scotland also came under early Norman influence, with Norman nobles at the court of King Macbeth around 1050. His successor Malcolm III overthrew him with English and Norman assistance, and his queen Margaret encouraged the Roman Catholic church. The Benedictine order founded a monastery at Dunfermline . Her fourth son who became King David built St. Margaret's Chapel at the start of the 12th Century . Religious architecture
NORMAN ARCHITECTURE IN IRELAND See Also: Romanesque The Normans settled mostly in an area in the east of Ireland , later known as the Pale , and constructed many Norman buildings including Trim Castle and Dublin Castle . NORMAN BUILDINGS IN SICILY Sicily 's Norman period lasted from circa 1070 until about 1200 , debatable perhaps until the demise of Frederick II , in 1250 , so can approximately be equated with the same period in England. Similar in many ways to the Norman architecture which evolved in England and northern France it also incorporated certain Byzantine influences. These Byzantine Motif s were particularly obvious in the interiors of certain churches where the traditional Norman Altar Tribunes were decorated in Gild ed mosaics such as that at the cathedral at Monreale . The Palatin Chapel in Palermo built in 1130 is the perhaps the strongest example of this where the interior of the Dome (itself a Byzantine feature) is decorated in Mosaic depicting Christ Pantocrator accompanied by his Angel s. During Sicily's later Norman era early Gothic influences can de detected such as those in the Cathedral at Messina consecrated in 1197 . However, here the high Gothic Campanile is of a later date, and should not be confused with the early Gothic built during the Norman period, which featured pointed arches and windows rather than the Flying Buttress es and Pinnacle s later to manifest themselves in the Gothic era.
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