TY - BOOK ID - 2919422 TI - Design and construction in Romanesque architecture : first Romanesque architecture and the pointed arch in Burgundy and northern Italy AU - Armi, C. Edson AU - Cambridge University Press PY - 2004 SN - 0521830338 1107407265 1107148138 0511184425 0511166303 0511313039 0511497709 1280437464 0511164378 051116517X 0511162774 9780511162770 9780511164378 9780521830331 9780511184420 9780511166303 9780511165177 9781280437465 9786610437467 6610437467 DB - UniCat KW - Abbayes romanes KW - Architecture [Romanesque ] KW - Architecture romane KW - Architectuur [Romaanse ] KW - Cathédrales romanes KW - Cloîtres romans KW - Romanesque architecture KW - Églises romanes KW - 72.033.4 <44> KW - 72.033.4 <45> KW - 624.072.32 KW - Architecture, Romanesque KW - Architecture, Medieval KW - Romaanse bouwkunst--Frankrijk KW - Romaanse bouwkunst--Italië KW - Arches. Arched beams and girders KW - Architecture, Romanesque. KW - 624.072.32 Arches. Arched beams and girders KW - 72.033.4 <45> Romaanse bouwkunst--Italië KW - 72.033.4 <44> Romaanse bouwkunst--Frankrijk KW - Arts and Humanities KW - Architecture, Fine and Decorative Arts UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:2919422 AB - In this 2003 study, Edson Armi offers a fresh interpretation of Romanesque architecture. Armi focuses on buildings in northern Italy, Switzerland, southern France and Catalonia, the regions where Romanesque architecture first appeared around 1000 AD. He integrates the study of medieval structure with an understanding of construction, decoration and articulation in an effort to determine the origins and originality of medieval architecture and the formation of the High Romanesque style, especially in Burgundy, at sites such as Cluny III. Relying on a close analysis of the fabric of key buildings, Armi's in-depth study reveals a lot about design decisions in the early Middle Ages. It also demonstrates that the mature Romanesque of the twelfth century continues many of the applications created and perfected over the previous one hundred years. ER -