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Rose Window
(redirected from Rose windows)

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rose window, large, stone-traceried, circular window of medieval churches. Romanesque churches of both England and the Continent had made use of the wheel window—a circular window ornamented by shafts radiating from a small center circle; and from this prototype developed the elaborate rose windows. The latter, in their full development, flourished especially in France, where they appear in practically every important Gothic cathedral, either over the center portal of the west front or on at least one of the transept ends. Stained glass was usually placed in them. The early examples, as on the west facade of the cathedral at Chartres (12th–13th cent.), were filled with plate tracery tracery, bands or bars of stone, wood, or other material, either subdividing an opening or standing in relief against a wall and forming an ornamental pattern of solid members and open spaces.
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, pierced from a stone slab. With the perfection of bar tracery, the typical rose, as in the cathedral at Reims (13th–14th cent.) and in Notre-Dame de Paris (12th–14th cent.), was filled with numerous radiating bars and intermediate bars, joining to form pointed arches at the outer edge. In the final or flamboyant period the bars were arranged in wavy curves and more intricate patterns. This rich and closely packed tracery, as in the fine transept window of St. Ouen at Rouen, suggests the design of an open rose.

rose window

In Gothic architecture, a decorated circular window, often glazed with stained glass, that first appeared in mid-12th-century cathedrals. It was used mainly at the western end of the nave and the ends of the transept. The bar tracery of a High Gothic rose window consisted of a series of radiating forms, each tipped by a pointed arch at the outside of the circle. The rose windows of Notre-Dame de Paris are particularly noteworthy. In later Flamboyant-style tracery, the radiating elements consisted of an intricate network of wavy, double-curved bars.


rose window
a circular window, esp one that has ornamental tracery radiating from the centre to form a symmetrical roselike pattern

rose window, Catherine-wheel window, marigold window, wheel window
rose window
A large, circular medieval window, containing tracery disposed in a radial manner.

Rose Window 

a circular window found in Romanesque and especially Gothic structures dating from the 12th to the 15th century. The window has a system of stone bars radiating from the center of the circle. “Rose window” is also the term for a similar decorative motif that crowns lancet windows of Gothic buildings.

REFERENCE

Dow, H. J. “The Rose Window.” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 1957, vol. 20, nos. 3–4, pp. 248–97.


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Besides bringing new life to the rose windows and the statues, Viollet-le-Duc designed Notre-Dame's spire, a new feature of the building, and the sacristy.
d be awe-inspired to see the stained glass of Rose Windows at Notre Dame Cathedral where Quasimodo watched over.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Drawings in colored enamel, all titled Rotante (Rotating Devices), at first appeared to be graphic transcriptions of the light of the bulbs or sketches of ancient rose windows in Medieval cathedrals; perhaps impossible stains of a Pop version of a Rorschach test or transcriptions of kaleidoscopic views; maybe even colored sculptures translated into two dimensions.
 
 
 
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