A dictionary of architecture and building : biographical, historical, and descriptive . ^ OQ — ^ r-J C^ W •<»? »^ X Ci O — oi ^21 -r- ^,-^, -!M©*C» O m S tfi « I •r ^^ O CJ E S ^ O o e = ?= ^^? fj « ?* *n w C- cc* ai o 923 924 MONASTIC ARCHITECTURE MONASTIC ARCHITECTURE ter House, the Lavatory, tlic Donnitoiy,and the hxlgiiijjs for strangers openedupon tliis cloister, or, in large convents,upon one or two cloisters not far sepa-rated. (See the terms above cited; also|)lan of Westminster Aliliey, under Ab-luy ; also under Certosa.) It is to henoted that minor and yet important dif-feren


A dictionary of architecture and building : biographical, historical, and descriptive . ^ OQ — ^ r-J C^ W •<»? »^ X Ci O — oi ^21 -r- ^,-^, -!M©*C» O m S tfi « I •r ^^ O CJ E S ^ O o e = ?= ^^? fj « ?* *n w C- cc* ai o 923 924 MONASTIC ARCHITECTURE MONASTIC ARCHITECTURE ter House, the Lavatory, tlic Donnitoiy,and the hxlgiiijjs for strangers openedupon tliis cloister, or, in large convents,upon one or two cloisters not far sepa-rated. (See the terms above cited; also|)lan of Westminster Aliliey, under Ab-luy ; also under Certosa.) It is to henoted that minor and yet important dif-ferences existed. Thus, in the Carthusianconvent (see Certosa) there was no dor-mitory ; in a Dominican convent therecould hardly be said to be any separatecells, but the dormitory and tlie generallavatory and the church were number of orders foundeil inChristiainty between tiie fourth and theend of the nineteenth century is so veryiiumerous that even a slight analysis oftheir peculiarities of ])lan and of buildinghas proved hitherto unattainable. The.


Size: 1353px × 1847px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectarchitecture, bookyea