rose window
/'rouz,windou/
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A rose window is a large, circular window, typically found in Gothic-style churches and cathedrals. It is characterized by its intricate, symmetrical stone tracery (ornamental stonework) that radiates from the center, often resembling the petals of a rose or a wheel. These windows are often filled with stained glass.
Examples of Usage
- The most famous rose window is the north transept window of Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris.
- Gothic architecture is renowned for its use of the rose window to bring colored light into the nave.
- The intricate tracery of the rose window was designed to support the large expanse of stained glass.
Advanced Usage
- "The west rose window": A specific term used to describe a rose window located on the western façade of a church, which is often the main entrance.
- The west rose window of Chartres Cathedral depicts the Last Judgment.
- The term is sometimes used more broadly in architectural description to refer to any large circular window with radial mullions, even in non-Gothic contexts.
Variants and Related Words
- Catherine wheel window: Another name for a rose window, especially one with a simpler, spoked design resembling a wheel.
- Oculus: A simpler, circular opening in a wall or dome, often without the complex tracery of a rose window.
- Tracery (noun): The ornamental stone openwork in the upper part of a Gothic window, screen, or panel.
Synonyms
- Wheel window
- Marigold window (less common)
Related Phrases
- Stained glass window: While not a synonym, a rose window is almost always a type of stained glass window.
- The rose window is a magnificent example of medieval stained glass artistry.
Noun
- circular window filled with tracery