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Nave

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Links to full descriptions of the elements of a Gothic floorplan are also found at the entry Cathedral diagram.
Romanesque nave of the abbey church of Saint-Georges-de-Boscherville, Normandy, France has a triforium passage above the aisle vaulting
File:StGeoBoschervilleDB80.jpg
Plan

In Romanesque and Gothic Christian abbey, cathedral basilica and church architecture, the nave is the central approach to the high altar. "Nave" ( Medieval Latin navis, "ship,") was probably suggested by the keel shape of its vaulting. The nave of a church, whether Romanesque, Gothic or Classical, extends from the entry — which may have a separate vestibule, the narthex — to the chancel and is flanked by lower aisles separated from the nave by an arcade. If the aisles are high and of a width comparable to the central nave, the structure is sometimes said to have three naves.

Though to a modern visitor the impressive nave seems to be the principal part of a Gothic church, ambitious churches were built in a series of campaigns as funds were available, working outward from the liturgically essential sanctuary, and many were consecrated before their nave was completed. Many naves were not completed to the initial plan, as tastes changed, and some naves were never completed at all. In Gothic architecture, the precise number of arcaded bays in the nave was not a material concern.

The height of the nave provides space for clerestory windows above the aisle roofs, which give light to the interior, leaving the apse in shadow, as at the abbey of Saint-Georges-de-Boscherville (illustration, above right). The architectural antecedents of this construction lay in the secular Roman basilica, a kind of covered stoa sited adjacent to a forum, where magistrates met and public business was transacted.


Late Gothic Fan vaulting (1608, restored 1860s) over the nave at Bath Abbey, Bath, England Suppression of the triforium offers a great expanse of clerestory windows.

In Romanesque constructions, where a gallery was required to allow passage above the aisles, an addition to the elevation of the nave was inserted, called a triforium. In later styles the triforium was eliminated, the aisles lowered and great expanses of stained glass took the place of the clerestory windows, as at Bath Abbey (illustration, left).

The Early Renaissance nave of Brunelleschi's San Lorenzo, Florence, built in the 1420s

The crossing is the part of the nave that also belongs to the transepts that intersect its space. The crossing may be surmounted by a tower or spire, or by a dome in Eastern churches, a feature that was reintroduced to the West at the Renaissance, first in Filippo Brunelleschi's San Lorenzo (illustration right). Brunelleschi restored the original Roman form of the basilica and consciously revived Roman details, such as the flat coffered ceiling. Clerestory windows still light San Lorenzo's nave, setting apart in dimness the crossing, with its small dome. In other contexts, lanterns and openings above the transept might bathe the crossing in more light instead. The crossing may be further distinguished from the nave by the rhythm of its architecture: wider-spaced piers supporting the higher vaulting of the transepts.

The nave, ecclesiastically considered, was the area reserved for the non-clergy (the "laity"), while the chancel and choir were reserved for the clergy, and a rood screen (cancellus) separated the sanctuary from the nave. Rood screens were swept away by Protestant reformers in the 16th century. Fixed pews in the nave are a comparatively modern, Protestant innovation. And on weekdays the large open area often served for the town marketplace, political meetings, places of various trades including, on some occasions, even that of prostitution. Often smelling of animal dung and human urine, naves were not very clean places. Hence, rood screens aka jubes were designed to separate the more sacred areas of the cathedral and keep out the unwashed and unholy.

Some naves

  • Longest nave in America: Cathedral of Saint John the Divine, New York City, United States (Anglican) (230 feet)
  • Longest nave in England: St Albans Cathedral, St Albans (Anglican) (348 feet)
  • Longest nave in France: Bourges (91 metres (300 feet), including choir where a crossing would be if there were transepts)
  • Longest nave in Germany: Cologne cathedral (58 metres (190 feet), including two bays between the towers)
  • Longest nave in Spain: Seville (60 metres (200 feet), in five bays)
  • Longest nave in Italy: St Peter's Basilica in Rome (91 metres (300 feet) in four bays)
  • Highest vaulted nave: Cathedral of Milan, 45 metres.(Beauvais is 46 metres (150 feet) high in the choir. Only one bay of the nave was built (also 46 metres).)

Alternate meanings

  • According to an archaic definition, a nave is one's navel
  • A nave can also refer to the hub of a wheel, which is the small knob that protrudes from the wheel's center.
  • Nave also refers to the hub of a wheel, as in "bowl the round nave" from a subplay of Hamlet. This can lead to confusion of the architectural nave (supra) with the crossing of the same with the transept.

See also