Jump to content

Semi-dome

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bender the Bot (talk | contribs) at 02:50, 7 November 2016 (clean up; http→https for Google Books using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Typical Early Christian/Byzantine apse with a hemispherical semi-dome decorated in mosaic (Basilica di Sant'Apollinare in Classe in Ravenna).

A semi-dome, also called a "half-dome", is the term in architecture for half a dome ("cut" vertically), used to cover a semi-circular area.[1] Similar structures occur in nature.

Architecture

Semi-domes are a common feature of apses in Ancient Roman and traditional church architecture, and mosques and iwans in Islamic architecture.

A semi-dome, or the whole apse, may also be called a conch after the scallop shell often carved as decoration of the semi-dome (all shells were conches in Ancient Greek), though this is usually used for subsidiary semi-domes, rather than the one over the main apse.[2] Small semi-domes have been often decorated in a shell shape from ancient times,[3] as in Piero della Francesca's Throned Madonna with saints and Federigo da Montefeltro,[4] and the example in the gallery below. Islamic examples may use muqarnas decorative corbelling, while in Late Antique, Byzantine and medieval church architecture the semi-dome is the classic location for a focal mosaic, or later fresco.[5]

Looking up at the radiating semi-domes of Hagia Sophia.

Found in many Ancient Greek exedras, the semi-dome became a common feature of the apse at the end of Ancient Roman secular basilicas, which was adopted in Early Christian architecture as the commonest shape for churches, becoming the focal point for decoration. In buildings like Hagia Sophia in Byzantine architecture, apsidal openings or exhedras from the central nave appear in several directions, not just to the litugical east.[6] The tetraconch, triconch and cross-in-square are other typically Eastern Christian church plans that produce several semi-domes.

When the Byzantine styles were adapted in Ottoman architecture, which was even less concerned with maintaining a central axis, a multiplicity of domes and semi-domes becomes the dominating feature of both the internal space and the external appearance of the building. The buildings of Mimar Sinan and his pupil Sedefkar Mehmed Agha are the masterpieces of this style. Mihrabs are another common location for semi-domes.

In Western Europe the external appearance of a semi-dome is less often exploited than in Byzantine and Ottoman architecture, and is often disguised as a sloping rather than curved semi-circular roof.[7]

The Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal in Cincinnati, OH features the largest semi-dome in the western hemisphere, measuring 180 feet wide and 106 feet high.[8]

Notes

  1. ^ OED, "Semi-dome"
  2. ^ OED, Conch, 5: "The domed roof of a semi-circular apse; also, the apse as a whole".
  3. ^ Hachlili (1998), p. 373, on ancient Jewish examples.
  4. ^ Commons image
  5. ^ Talbot Rice, 118 and 123
  6. ^ Talbot Rice, 93-98
  7. ^ See illustration at Glossary of Medieval Art and Architecture, s.v "semi-dome" (retrieved on 18 April 2009).
  8. ^ Cincinnati Union Terminal Architectural Information Sheet. Cincinnati Museum Center. Retrieved on February 8, 2010.

References