 
    
      
        | 
        Query: The Vaults of Zsambek |  
       
     
    ORIGINAL QUERY: Date:
    Monday, 14 February 2005  
    From: Dirk Huylebrouck
    <huylebrouck@gmail.com> 
     
    
      I would like to propose a topic
      for your "query". Last October, I visited an old church
      in Zsambek, Hungary. Apart from the turbulent history of the
      place, and the church in particular, there was something special
      with some arcs, as shown 
      in this picture: 
        
      
      Well now, Kim, is this a good
      start for a Nexus discussion with your readers? Maybe it is even
      a good idea for a new Nexus column "I have seen this, but
      what (the hell) was it?" 
     
    NNJ READERS'
    RESPONSES:
  
    From Beth Cardier, a writer living
    in Prague: 
    
      I think this is called a keystone
      arch, and I think its story went like this: the engineering of
      the keystone arch was hard to master and in fact kept secret
      by monks (?) for a long time. This church's keystone arch was
      the largest (and perhaps latest) version of this dome-like version
      (as opposed to the corridor-like style). I forget what made this
      dome special apart from its size, but I want to say the number
      of ribs (not the technical word?) leading up to it. Maybe this
      one has more than most - six. Perhaps six is some of feat. 
     
    ------------------------------------------------- From William S. Huff, a Professor Emeritus
    of the State University of New York at Buffalo (USA): 
    
      This is late Romanesque -- while
      all arches are still round -- just before the development of
      the pointed or broken Gothic arch. Note that two of the segments
      are generally parts of a sphere; four parts are warped vaulting.
      These experiments were very intense in Norman architecture where
      some of the earliest Gothic churches occurred/or almost happened.
      Not being an historian (while not being in a library) and not
      knowing the age of the Zsambek church, I cannot tell whether
      it pre-dates the Norman achievements; the Zsambek church facade
      did look like late Romanesque (If any one finds out more, let
      me know.) 
      I do not have my architectural
      dictionaries in Pittsburgh, but in Buffalo. However, I am not
      sure that the center piece can be called a keystone. A keystone
      is the centerpiece of an arch; but I am not sure what the centerpiece
      of a vault is called. The center stone of this 6-part vault may
      not do as much work as a keystone does in an arch; in fact, I
      believe it can be removed and the vault may still hold together,
      a little like a dome. (But note that the ribs thrust into it,
      instead of into each other.) An arch will collapse if the keystone
      is removed. 
      See p. 167 from A.D.F.Hamlin,
      A History of Architecture, New York, 1900: 
       
     
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