释义 |
Romanesque style
Romanesque style Early medieval work that rarely survives. An exception is the famous and so-called Dagobert bronze throne, a monumental eighth-century Frankish continuation of the Roman X-frame folding chair. Chip carving on brightly painted oak timber predominated in pieces resembling the era’s Romanesque architecture.
Romanesque style
Romanesque style Romanesque style An architectural style emerging in Western Europe primarily in the 11th century and lasting until the advent of Gothic architecture in the 12th century; based on Roman and Byzantine elements; found especially in churches and castles; usually characterized by round arches and by massive articulated walls, barrel vaults, groined vaults, ribbed vaults; semicircular arches; served as the basis for the Richardson Romanesque style and occasionally used as a synonym for it.ThesaurusSeeRomanesque architecture |