温莎圣乔治教堂院长和牧师之家。建筑史。

IF 0.2 2区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
Nigel Saul
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引用次数: 1

摘要

自1992年女王晚年发生大火以来,温莎城堡已成为英国调查最彻底的王室住所。在火灾发生地Upper Ward,杰弗里·怀亚特维尔爵士19世纪初在州立公寓中的大量作品被摧毁,这使得对爱德华三世500年前的大规模重建进行系统调查成为可能,这使温莎成为当时最宏伟的皇家住宅。最近,自从上院区的工程结束后,人们的注意力转向了下院区,那里迫切需要对圣堂回廊进行翻新,这为对爱德华新的圣乔治学院附属的圣堂和牧师的住宿进行类似分析创造了机会。十多年来,院长和牧师的考古学家顾问约翰·克鲁克(John Crook)享受着无与伦比的进入这些建筑的机会,因为灰泥被剥去,屋顶瓷砖被拆除,地板被拉起;正是他精心记录的成果成为了这项全面而精美的研究的主题,这项研究对威廉·圣约翰·霍普爵士在一个多世纪前对城堡的不朽历史中的描述进行了重大修订。当14世纪的原始织物被后来的添加和增生所覆盖时,修道院回廊的重要性很容易被忽视。然而,这座看起来不起眼的建筑群不仅构成了英国现存最早的木结构大学宿舍;值得注意的是,它的建造也被记录在可能是现存最完整的中世纪织物记录中。回廊占据的空间很小,形状很笨拙,挤在南面院长回廊和典狱长宿舍之间,北面城堡的幕墙之间,形成了一个奇怪的细长吊廊,南北比东西窄得多。在这个空间周围是分组住宅,最初容纳牧师和牧师,每栋房子都占据一个海湾,每栋都由两层楼组成,楼上和楼下各有一个单间,楼上的房间都高达屋顶,俯瞰着回廊走道。斯蒂芬·康林(Stephen Conlin)的一幅有用的剖面艺术家重建图(图3.41)展示了住宅完工后可能的外观。最近最令人着迷的发现之一是有明确的证据表明,在构成房子主客厅的一楼房间里,提供了壁炉,每个壁炉上方都有一个木制烟罩和一个石膏内衬的烟道,将烟雾输送到烟囱。早些时候,人们认为供暖只能通过插入南北两侧石墙的烟道来提供。在木框架建筑中使用这样的壁炉显然构成了重大的燃烧危险,但没有证据表明
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The Dean and Canons’ Houses of St George’s Chapel, Windsor. An Architectural History.
Since the great fire in the late Queen’s annus horribilis of 1992, Windsor Castle has become the most thoroughly investigated royal residence in England. In the Upper Ward, where the fire started, the destruction of so much of Sir Jeffry Wyatville’s early-19th-century work in the state apartments made possible, for the first time, the systematic investigation of Edward III’s extensive rebuilding of 500 years earlier, which made Windsor the grandest royal residence of its day. In more recent times, since the ending of works in the Upper Ward, the spotlight has turned to its lower counterpart, where the need for urgent refurbishment of the canons’ cloister created the opportunity for comparable analysis of the accommodation of the canons and vicars attached to Edward’s new college of St George. For over a decade John Crook, the consultant archaeologist to the dean and canons, enjoyed unrivalled access to the buildings as plaster was stripped, roof tiles removed and floorboards pulled up; and it is the fruits of his meticulous recording which are the subject of this comprehensive and beautifully illustrated study, which offers significant revisions to Sir William St John Hope’s account in his monumental history of the castle over a century ago. The significance of the canons’ cloister can easily be overlooked when so much of the original 14th-century fabric has been overlain with later additions and accretions. Yet, this unassuming-looking block of buildings not only constitutes the earliest surviving timber-framed collegiate accommodation in England; remarkably, its construction is also documented in what is perhaps the fullest surviving set of medieval fabric accounts. The space occupied by the cloister is a small and awkwardly shaped one, squashed between the dean’s cloister and warden’s quarters immediately to the south, and the castle’s curtain wall to the north, resulting in a strangely elongated garth, much narrower north–south than east–west. Around this space are grouped dwellings which originally accommodated both canons and vicars, each house occupying a bay, and each one comprising two storeys with a single room upstairs and downstairs, with the upstairs room both rising to the roof and oversailing the cloister walkway. A useful cut-away artist’s reconstruction by Stephen Conlin (fig. 3.41) gives an idea of the dwellings’ likely appearance when completed. Among the most fascinating of the recent findings has been the clear evidence that in the first-floor room, which constituted the main living room of the house, fireplaces were provided, each with a wooden smoke hood above and a plaster-lined flue carrying the smoke up to the chimney. It had earlier been supposed that heating had been provided only by flues inserted into the stone walls immediately to the north and south. The use of such a fireplace in a timber-framed building obviously constituted a major incendiary hazard, but there is no evidence that any of
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