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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • June 11, 1864
  • Page 3
  • MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, June 11, 1864: Page 3

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The Interior Oe A Gothic Minster.

women , Avho were furnished with books , shoes , garments , and all necessaries , purchased with the money there given , and distributed by a priest and boy attending at it ; but , adds the old chronicler sorroAvfully , these brotherhoods , by reason of the frequent frauds committed by some , and the

ingratitude of others , and their universal variance , were dissolved and broken up . At St . David ' s , adjoining the north arm , is the chapter-house , on the first-floor of a three-storied building , Avith the treasury over it . Two centuries ago old people could remember having seen in the former alms

apportioned by basinsful , there not being leisure to tell them ; these oblations were made by seamen , passengers , and pilgrims , at the little dependent seaside chapels , and distributed on Saturdays among the clergy then officiating . In the great transept occasionallAve find two

y large rose-windows , one in each arm , as at Westminster and Lincoln : in the latter instance that on the north was called the bishop's , and the southern one the dean ' s eye , as representing their several jurisdictions . At St . Paul ' s the Lady Chapel had a superb rose-windoAv , in the east wall ,

and one still adorns the Nine Chapels of Durham . At Chichester , at York , and at Winchester , the rose-AvindoAV occurs in the transept gable .

The choir transept is the Ala Superior of Gervase . It usually marks the termination of the sanctuary , as the main transept marks the entrance of the choir . As Le ] and calls "the second transept of Salisbury , a light and division between the choir and presbytery" ( Itin ., hi . 96 ) . This

additional structure would not only accommodate altars , but also sick and infirm monks and canons who Avere permitted to attend in the retroehoir . M . Vitet gives twenty-four examples of this transept on the Continent , and attributes its origin to an Oriental source ( Cathed . de NoyonMonum . Ined .

, pp . 204 , 225 ) . M . Didron likewise refers it to the influence of Byzantium . M . Martin found it ordinarily in churches built before tho Ogival period . It came , probably , from Clugny into England . Chapels at Wells , Hereford , and York ,

lona a quasi transept . It marks the limits of the choir at Canterbury , SoutliAvell , Lincoln , York , Salisbury , Rochester , Worcester , Beverley . At Canterbury a pair of toAvers flanked this transept . At Rochester , in the north Aving-, the doorway of the Sacristan ' s chamber remains ; and in the

south Aving the Avell-knoAvn archway of the sacristy , Avith its remarkable series of carvings , a similar design to Avhich Avas painted at York . The Choir ( Oliorus cantorum , Gervase , Scarf , ii . 255 ) , —so called because formerly the choir sangarranged in a circle like a crown around the altar

( Erances , p . 87 ) , —in the Norman churches extended under the lantern , and sometimes into the nave , which a screen parted off , as at Winchester , Peterborough , Westminster , Norwich , Gloucester , Chichester , Ely . Sometimes it merely occupied the crossing , as at Chester , Hereford , St . David's ,

The Interior Oe A Gothic Minster.

St . Asaph , Bangor . But at length the crossing was constituted a separate division , Avhen the choirs were reconstructed and prolonged eastward during the thirteenth century ; a solid rood-screen being constructed under the eastern tower-arch to Avard off cold draughts of air , and a reredos added

behind the altar . This was the case at Canterbury , York , Lichfield , Carlisle , Exeter , and Bristol . At Canterbury , York , Salisbury , Lincoln , Rochester , Worcester , the choir occupies the space between the main and choir trancepts . At Worcester and York , the Avestern and eastern

limbs of the church are of equal length . In many churches a deflection on symbolical reasons was given to the ground plan of the eastern arm , which Avas regarded as the caput or drooping head of the crucified , reproduced in the ground plan . The inclination is ordinarily to the north , and is first observable in churches of the thirteenth and

fourteenth centuries : at Christchurch , Dublin , Bridlington , and St . Mary's , York , it Avas in this direction ; but southward at York , Lichfield , Ely , Tynemouth , Canterbury . At Canterbury we may also observe the remarkable contraction of the

central alley towards the east , contributing to improve the perspective and give the appearance of greater length , although designed to avoid the older side toAvers of the choir , and adapt the new structure to the width of the more ancient chapel beyond .

The Anchorage . —A recluse lived in the aisle of Westminster , at Leicester ( Leland ' s Collect ., hi . 337 ) , and another near the Lady Chapel of Peterborough . At Durham , the cell Avas approached by a staircase from the north choir aisle . At Norwicha gallerystill existing in the north

, , choir aisle , communicated Avith the sanctuary men ' s chamber , which , before the fifteenth century , was the relic chapel of St . Osyth , and occupied by a recluse . ( To be continued . )

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

ST . lEVYNE . Is there any foundation for the events related in " St . Irvyne , or the llosicrucian , " and who is its author?—R . X . —[ It is a romance by Shelley . ] EABLT MABTXKS FOR FBEEHASOOTIT . "Wanted a list of early martyrs who have suffered

for being Freemasons . — -J . W . —[ We can't spare the space to give such a list . The MAGAZINE would require to be enlarged to treble its size , for years to come , in order to print their names only . ] THE GUILD TIIEOBY . Prom what Guilds do the Freemasons deduce their

lineage ? _ . . _ . G . C . S . —[ The Guild theory is only an infinitesimal portion of the subject . We do not derive from operative but from spiritual guilds . Don't take such hap-hazard assertions for facts without a semblance of proof . Numbers of middle age Freemasons did belong to operative guilds , but cen-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1864-06-11, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 7 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_11061864/page/3/.
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Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—LXXVI. Article 1
THE INTERIOR OE A GOTHIC MINSTER. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 3
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 7
PROVINCIAL. Article 9
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 11
MARK MASONRY. Article 12
IRELAND. Article 12
Untitled Article 12
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 13
TURKEY. Article 13
COLONIAL. Article 14
CHINA. Article 15
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Interior Oe A Gothic Minster.

women , Avho were furnished with books , shoes , garments , and all necessaries , purchased with the money there given , and distributed by a priest and boy attending at it ; but , adds the old chronicler sorroAvfully , these brotherhoods , by reason of the frequent frauds committed by some , and the

ingratitude of others , and their universal variance , were dissolved and broken up . At St . David ' s , adjoining the north arm , is the chapter-house , on the first-floor of a three-storied building , Avith the treasury over it . Two centuries ago old people could remember having seen in the former alms

apportioned by basinsful , there not being leisure to tell them ; these oblations were made by seamen , passengers , and pilgrims , at the little dependent seaside chapels , and distributed on Saturdays among the clergy then officiating . In the great transept occasionallAve find two

y large rose-windows , one in each arm , as at Westminster and Lincoln : in the latter instance that on the north was called the bishop's , and the southern one the dean ' s eye , as representing their several jurisdictions . At St . Paul ' s the Lady Chapel had a superb rose-windoAv , in the east wall ,

and one still adorns the Nine Chapels of Durham . At Chichester , at York , and at Winchester , the rose-AvindoAV occurs in the transept gable .

The choir transept is the Ala Superior of Gervase . It usually marks the termination of the sanctuary , as the main transept marks the entrance of the choir . As Le ] and calls "the second transept of Salisbury , a light and division between the choir and presbytery" ( Itin ., hi . 96 ) . This

additional structure would not only accommodate altars , but also sick and infirm monks and canons who Avere permitted to attend in the retroehoir . M . Vitet gives twenty-four examples of this transept on the Continent , and attributes its origin to an Oriental source ( Cathed . de NoyonMonum . Ined .

, pp . 204 , 225 ) . M . Didron likewise refers it to the influence of Byzantium . M . Martin found it ordinarily in churches built before tho Ogival period . It came , probably , from Clugny into England . Chapels at Wells , Hereford , and York ,

lona a quasi transept . It marks the limits of the choir at Canterbury , SoutliAvell , Lincoln , York , Salisbury , Rochester , Worcester , Beverley . At Canterbury a pair of toAvers flanked this transept . At Rochester , in the north Aving-, the doorway of the Sacristan ' s chamber remains ; and in the

south Aving the Avell-knoAvn archway of the sacristy , Avith its remarkable series of carvings , a similar design to Avhich Avas painted at York . The Choir ( Oliorus cantorum , Gervase , Scarf , ii . 255 ) , —so called because formerly the choir sangarranged in a circle like a crown around the altar

( Erances , p . 87 ) , —in the Norman churches extended under the lantern , and sometimes into the nave , which a screen parted off , as at Winchester , Peterborough , Westminster , Norwich , Gloucester , Chichester , Ely . Sometimes it merely occupied the crossing , as at Chester , Hereford , St . David's ,

The Interior Oe A Gothic Minster.

St . Asaph , Bangor . But at length the crossing was constituted a separate division , Avhen the choirs were reconstructed and prolonged eastward during the thirteenth century ; a solid rood-screen being constructed under the eastern tower-arch to Avard off cold draughts of air , and a reredos added

behind the altar . This was the case at Canterbury , York , Lichfield , Carlisle , Exeter , and Bristol . At Canterbury , York , Salisbury , Lincoln , Rochester , Worcester , the choir occupies the space between the main and choir trancepts . At Worcester and York , the Avestern and eastern

limbs of the church are of equal length . In many churches a deflection on symbolical reasons was given to the ground plan of the eastern arm , which Avas regarded as the caput or drooping head of the crucified , reproduced in the ground plan . The inclination is ordinarily to the north , and is first observable in churches of the thirteenth and

fourteenth centuries : at Christchurch , Dublin , Bridlington , and St . Mary's , York , it Avas in this direction ; but southward at York , Lichfield , Ely , Tynemouth , Canterbury . At Canterbury we may also observe the remarkable contraction of the

central alley towards the east , contributing to improve the perspective and give the appearance of greater length , although designed to avoid the older side toAvers of the choir , and adapt the new structure to the width of the more ancient chapel beyond .

The Anchorage . —A recluse lived in the aisle of Westminster , at Leicester ( Leland ' s Collect ., hi . 337 ) , and another near the Lady Chapel of Peterborough . At Durham , the cell Avas approached by a staircase from the north choir aisle . At Norwicha gallerystill existing in the north

, , choir aisle , communicated Avith the sanctuary men ' s chamber , which , before the fifteenth century , was the relic chapel of St . Osyth , and occupied by a recluse . ( To be continued . )

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

ST . lEVYNE . Is there any foundation for the events related in " St . Irvyne , or the llosicrucian , " and who is its author?—R . X . —[ It is a romance by Shelley . ] EABLT MABTXKS FOR FBEEHASOOTIT . "Wanted a list of early martyrs who have suffered

for being Freemasons . — -J . W . —[ We can't spare the space to give such a list . The MAGAZINE would require to be enlarged to treble its size , for years to come , in order to print their names only . ] THE GUILD TIIEOBY . Prom what Guilds do the Freemasons deduce their

lineage ? _ . . _ . G . C . S . —[ The Guild theory is only an infinitesimal portion of the subject . We do not derive from operative but from spiritual guilds . Don't take such hap-hazard assertions for facts without a semblance of proof . Numbers of middle age Freemasons did belong to operative guilds , but cen-

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