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Rood

A rood or rood cross, sometimes known as a triumphal cross,[1] is a cross or crucifix, especially the large crucifix set above the entrance to the chancel of a medieval church.[2] Alternatively, it is a large sculpture or painting of the crucifixion of Jesus.

Hanging rood with no rood screen but with Mary (left) and John as attendant figures[clarification needed] – in Lye Church on the island of Gotland in Sweden
Rood screen and rood in the abbey church of Wechselburg in Saxony

Derivation edit

Rood is an archaic word for pole, from Old English rōd 'pole', specifically 'cross', from Proto-Germanic *rodo, cognate to Old Saxon rōda, Old High German ruoda 'rod'.[3]

Rood was originally the only Old English word for the instrument of Jesus Christ's death. The words crúc and in the North cros (from either Old Irish or Old Norse) appeared by late Old English; crucifix is first recorded in English in the Ancrene Wisse of about 1225.[4] More precisely, the Rood or Holyrood was the True Cross, the specific wooden cross used in Christ's crucifixion. The word remains in use in some names, such as Holyrood Palace and the Old English poem The Dream of the Rood. The phrase "by the rood" was used in swearing, e.g. "No, by the rood, not so" in Shakespeare's Hamlet (Act 3, Scene 4).

The alternative term triumphal cross (Latin: crux triumphalis, German: Triumphkreuz), which is more usual in Europe, signifies the triumph that the resurrected Jesus Christ (Christus triumphans) won over death.[5]

 
The 800-year-old cross in the Stenkumla Church on Gotland shows the origin of the name Christus triumphans: the crucified figure wears a crown and "shoes" of a ruler.

Position edit

In church architecture the rood, or rood cross, is a life-sized crucifix displayed on the central axis of a church, normally at the chancel arch. The earliest roods hung from the top of the chancel arch (rood arch), or rested on a plain "rood beam" across it, usually at the level of the capitals of the columns. This original arrangement is still found in many churches in Germany and Scandinavia, although many other surviving crosses now hang on walls.

If the choir is separated from the church interior by a rood screen, the rood cross is placed on, or more rarely in front of, the screen.[6][7] Under the rood is usually the altar of the Holy Cross.

History edit

Numerous near life-size crucifixes survive from the Romanesque period or earlier, with the Gero Cross in Cologne Cathedral (AD 965–970) and the Volto Santo of Lucca the best known. The prototype may have been one known to have been set up in Charlemagne's Palatine Chapel in Aachen, apparently in gold foil worked over a wooden core in the manner of the Golden Madonna of Essen,[8] though figureless jeweled gold crosses are recorded in similar positions in Hagia Sophia in Constantinople in the 5th century. Many figures in precious metal are recorded in Anglo-Saxon monastic records, though none now survive. Notables sometimes gave their crowns (Cnut the Great at Winchester Cathedral), necklaces (Lady Godiva to the Virgin accompanying the rood at Evesham Abbey), or swords (Tovi the Proud, Waltham Abbey) to decorate them.[9] The original location and support for the surviving figures is often unclear but a number of northern European churches preserve the original setting in full – they are known as a Triumphkreuz in German, from the "triumphal arch" (or "chancel arch") of Early Christian architecture. As in later examples the Virgin and Saint John often flank the cross, and cherubim and other figures are sometimes seen. A gilt rood in the 10th-century Mainz Cathedral was only placed on a beam on special feast days.[10]

Components edit

 
Rood cross on rood screen at Albi Cathedral, France

Image of Christ edit

In the Romanesque era the crucified Christ was presented as ruler and judge. Instead of a crown of thorns he wears a crown or a halo; on his feet he wears "shoes" as a sign of the ruler. He is victorious over death. His feet are parallel to each other on the wooden support ("four-nail type") and not one on top of the other.[11] The perizoma (loincloth) is highly stylized and falls in vertical folds.

In the transition to the Gothic style, the triumphant Christ becomes a suffering Christ, the pitiful Man of Sorrows. Instead of the ruler's crown, he wears the crown of thorns, his feet are placed one above the other and are pierced with a single nail. His facial expression and posture express his pain. The wounds of the body are often dramatically portrayed. The loincloth is no longer so clearly stylized. The attendant figures Mary and John show signs of grief.[12]

Attendant figures edit

A triumphal cross may be surrounded by a group of people. These people may include Mary and John, the "beloved disciple" (based on John's Gospel – John 19:25–27, Matthew 27:25f, Mark 15;40f and Luke 23:49), but also apostles, angels and the benefactor.

  • The triumphal cross of Öja Church in Öja on Gotland stands on a transverse beam beneath the triumphal arch and is flanked by two people: Mary and John.
  • The triumphal cross in the abbey church of Wechselburg stands in an elevated position on the rood screen and also has the same pair of attendant figures.
  • The triumphal cross in Schwerin Cathedral is also flanked by Mary and John. At the end of the cross' beam the evangelist's symbols may be seen.
  • In St. Mary's Church in Osnabrück there are only the empty stone pedestals of the attendant figures.
  • The triumphal cross above the screen in Halberstadt Cathedral is not flanked by Mary and John, but by two angels.
  • On the supporting beam of the triumphal cross in Lübeck Cathedral there is also a bishop, presumably the benefactor of the cross.

Rood screens edit

Rood screens developed in the 13th century as wooden or stone screens, usually separating the chancel or choir from the nave, upon which the rood now stood. The screen may be elaborately carved and was often richly painted and gilded. Rood screens were found in Christian churches in most parts of Europe by the end of the Middle Ages, though in Catholic countries the great majority were gradually removed after the Council of Trent, and most were removed or drastically cut down in areas controlled by Calvinists and Anglicans. The best medieval examples are now mostly in the Lutheran countries such as Germany and Scandinavia, where they were often left undisturbed in country churches.

Rood screens are the Western equivalent of the Byzantine templon beam, which developed into the Eastern Orthodox iconostasis. Some rood screens incorporate a rood loft, a narrow gallery or just flat walkway which could be used to clean or decorate the rood or cover it up in Lent, or in larger examples used by singers or musicians. An alternative type of screen is the Pulpitum, as seen in Exeter Cathedral, which is near the main altar of the church.

The rood provided a focus for worship, most especially in Holy Week when worship was highly elaborate. During Lent the rood was veiled; on Palm Sunday it was revealed before the procession of palms, and the congregation knelt before it. The whole Passion story would then be read from the rood loft, at the foot of the crucifix, by three ministers.

Few original medieval rood crosses have survived in churches of the United Kingdom.[13] Most were deliberately destroyed as acts of iconoclasm during the English Reformation and the English Civil War, when many rood screens were also removed. Today, in many British churches, the "rood stair" that gave access to the gallery is often the only remaining sign of the former rood screen and rood loft.

In the 19th century, under the influence of the Oxford Movement, roods and screens were again added to many Anglican churches.

Representative examples edit

Germany edit

Sweden edit

Finland edit

United Kingdom edit

Charlton-on-Otmoor Garland edit

 
The Charlton-on-Otmoor rood in 2011
 
Two corn-dolly-like garlands formerly stood in the rood loft, as illustrated in 1823.[citation needed]
 
The single garland in the rood loft at Charlton-on-Otmoor, illustrated by J.H. Parker in 1840.

A unique rood exists at St Mary's parish church, Charlton-on-Otmoor, near Oxford, England, where a large wooden cross, solidly covered in greenery stands on the early 16th-century rood screen (said by Sherwood and Pevsner to be the finest in Oxfordshire).[14] The cross is redecorated twice a year, on 1 May and 19 September (the patronal festival, calculated according to the Julian Calendar), when children from the local primary school, carrying small crosses decorated with flowers, bring a long, flower-decorated, rope-like garland. The cross is dressed or redecorated with locally obtained box foliage. The rope-like garland is hung across the rood screen during the "May Garland Service".[15]

An engraving from 1822/1823 (Dunkin) shows the dressed rood cross as a more open, foliage-covered framework, similar to certain types of corn dolly, with a smaller attendant figure of similar appearance. Folklorists have commented on the garland crosses' resemblance to human figures, and noted that they replaced statues of St Mary and Saint James the Great which had stood on the rood screen until they were destroyed during the Reformation. Until the 1850s, the larger garland cross was carried in a May Day procession, accompanied by morris dancers, to the former Benedictine Studley priory (as the statue of St Mary had been, until the Reformation). Meanwhile, the women of the village used to carry the smaller garland cross through Charlton,[15] though it seems that this ceased some time between 1823 and 1840, when an illustration in J.H. Parker's A Glossary of Terms Used in Grecian, Roman, Italian, and Gothic Architecture shows only one garland cross, centrally positioned on the rood screen.[16]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gothic Sculpture, 1140-1300 by Paul Williamson (1998). Retrieved 26 Oct 2014.
  2. ^ Curl, James Stevens (2006). Oxford Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, 2nd ed., OUP, p. 658. ISBN 978-0-19-860678-9.
  3. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, "Rood"
  4. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, "Cross", and "Crucifix"
  5. ^ Margarete Luise Goecke-Seischab / Jörg Ohlemacher: Kirchen erkunden, Kirchen erschließen, Ernst Kaufmann, Lahr 1998, p. 232
  6. ^ E.g. in the abbey church of Wechselburg
  7. ^ In England the name "rood screen" indicates that there is a (monumental) cross, even if the original cross has not survived.
  8. ^ Schiller, 141–146
  9. ^ Dodwell, 210–215
  10. ^ Schiller, 140
  11. ^ Torsten Droste: Romanische Kunst in Frankreich, DuMont Kunstreiseführer, Cologne, 1992(2), pp. 32f
  12. ^ Formen der Kunst. Teil II. Die Kunst im Mittelalter, bearbeitet von Wilhelm Drixelius, Verlag M. Lurz, Munich, o.J. p. 71 and p. 88
  13. ^ Duffy, 1992, page not cited
  14. ^ Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, page 530
  15. ^ a b Hole, 1978, pages 113–114
  16. ^ Parker, 1840, page not cited

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Manuela Beer: Triumphkreuze des Mittelalters. Ein Beitrag zu Typus und Genese im 12. und 13. Jahrhundert. Mit einem Katalog der erhaltenen Denkmäler ("Rood Crosses of the Middle Ages. An Article on the Typology and Genesis in the 12th and 13th Centuries. With a catalogue of surviving monuments"). Schnell & Steiner, Regensburg, 2005, ISBN 3-7954-1755-4
  • ("The Saviour on the Cross: the Crucifix"), rescissions in the portrayal of the Crucifix or Rood Cross.

External links edit

rood, obsolete, units, area, length, unit, surname, other, uses, disambiguation, rood, rood, cross, sometimes, known, triumphal, cross, cross, crucifix, especially, large, crucifix, above, entrance, chancel, medieval, church, alternatively, large, sculpture, p. For the obsolete units of area and length see Rood unit For the surname and other uses see Rood disambiguation A rood or rood cross sometimes known as a triumphal cross 1 is a cross or crucifix especially the large crucifix set above the entrance to the chancel of a medieval church 2 Alternatively it is a large sculpture or painting of the crucifixion of Jesus Hanging rood with no rood screen but with Mary left and John as attendant figures clarification needed in Lye Church on the island of Gotland in Sweden Rood screen and rood in the abbey church of Wechselburg in Saxony Contents 1 Derivation 2 Position 3 History 4 Components 4 1 Image of Christ 4 2 Attendant figures 4 3 Rood screens 5 Representative examples 5 1 Germany 5 2 Sweden 5 3 Finland 5 4 United Kingdom 5 4 1 Charlton on Otmoor Garland 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksDerivation editRood is an archaic word for pole from Old English rōd pole specifically cross from Proto Germanic rodo cognate to Old Saxon rōda Old High German ruoda rod 3 Rood was originally the only Old English word for the instrument of Jesus Christ s death The words cruc and in the North cros from either Old Irish or Old Norse appeared by late Old English crucifix is first recorded in English in the Ancrene Wisse of about 1225 4 More precisely the Rood or Holyrood was the True Cross the specific wooden cross used in Christ s crucifixion The word remains in use in some names such as Holyrood Palace and the Old English poem The Dream of the Rood The phrase by the rood was used in swearing e g No by the rood not so in Shakespeare s Hamlet Act 3 Scene 4 The alternative term triumphal cross Latin crux triumphalis German Triumphkreuz which is more usual in Europe signifies the triumph that the resurrected Jesus Christ Christus triumphans won over death 5 nbsp The 800 year old cross in the Stenkumla Church on Gotland shows the origin of the name Christus triumphans the crucified figure wears a crown and shoes of a ruler Position editIn church architecture the rood or rood cross is a life sized crucifix displayed on the central axis of a church normally at the chancel arch The earliest roods hung from the top of the chancel arch rood arch or rested on a plain rood beam across it usually at the level of the capitals of the columns This original arrangement is still found in many churches in Germany and Scandinavia although many other surviving crosses now hang on walls If the choir is separated from the church interior by a rood screen the rood cross is placed on or more rarely in front of the screen 6 7 Under the rood is usually the altar of the Holy Cross History editNumerous near life size crucifixes survive from the Romanesque period or earlier with the Gero Cross in Cologne Cathedral AD 965 970 and the Volto Santo of Lucca the best known The prototype may have been one known to have been set up in Charlemagne s Palatine Chapel in Aachen apparently in gold foil worked over a wooden core in the manner of the Golden Madonna of Essen 8 though figureless jeweled gold crosses are recorded in similar positions in Hagia Sophia in Constantinople in the 5th century Many figures in precious metal are recorded in Anglo Saxon monastic records though none now survive Notables sometimes gave their crowns Cnut the Great at Winchester Cathedral necklaces Lady Godiva to the Virgin accompanying the rood at Evesham Abbey or swords Tovi the Proud Waltham Abbey to decorate them 9 The original location and support for the surviving figures is often unclear but a number of northern European churches preserve the original setting in full they are known as a Triumphkreuz in German from the triumphal arch or chancel arch of Early Christian architecture As in later examples the Virgin and Saint John often flank the cross and cherubim and other figures are sometimes seen A gilt rood in the 10th century Mainz Cathedral was only placed on a beam on special feast days 10 Components edit nbsp Rood cross on rood screen at Albi Cathedral France Image of Christ edit In the Romanesque era the crucified Christ was presented as ruler and judge Instead of a crown of thorns he wears a crown or a halo on his feet he wears shoes as a sign of the ruler He is victorious over death His feet are parallel to each other on the wooden support four nail type and not one on top of the other 11 The perizoma loincloth is highly stylized and falls in vertical folds In the transition to the Gothic style the triumphant Christ becomes a suffering Christ the pitiful Man of Sorrows Instead of the ruler s crown he wears the crown of thorns his feet are placed one above the other and are pierced with a single nail His facial expression and posture express his pain The wounds of the body are often dramatically portrayed The loincloth is no longer so clearly stylized The attendant figures Mary and John show signs of grief 12 Attendant figures edit A triumphal cross may be surrounded by a group of people These people may include Mary and John the beloved disciple based on John s Gospel John 19 25 27 Matthew 27 25f Mark 15 40f and Luke 23 49 but also apostles angels and the benefactor The triumphal cross of Oja Church in Oja on Gotland stands on a transverse beam beneath the triumphal arch and is flanked by two people Mary and John The triumphal cross in the abbey church of Wechselburg stands in an elevated position on the rood screen and also has the same pair of attendant figures The triumphal cross in Schwerin Cathedral is also flanked by Mary and John At the end of the cross beam the evangelist s symbols may be seen In St Mary s Church in Osnabruck there are only the empty stone pedestals of the attendant figures The triumphal cross above the screen in Halberstadt Cathedral is not flanked by Mary and John but by two angels On the supporting beam of the triumphal cross in Lubeck Cathedral there is also a bishop presumably the benefactor of the cross Rood screens edit Rood screens developed in the 13th century as wooden or stone screens usually separating the chancel or choir from the nave upon which the rood now stood The screen may be elaborately carved and was often richly painted and gilded Rood screens were found in Christian churches in most parts of Europe by the end of the Middle Ages though in Catholic countries the great majority were gradually removed after the Council of Trent and most were removed or drastically cut down in areas controlled by Calvinists and Anglicans The best medieval examples are now mostly in the Lutheran countries such as Germany and Scandinavia where they were often left undisturbed in country churches Rood screens are the Western equivalent of the Byzantine templon beam which developed into the Eastern Orthodox iconostasis Some rood screens incorporate a rood loft a narrow gallery or just flat walkway which could be used to clean or decorate the rood or cover it up in Lent or in larger examples used by singers or musicians An alternative type of screen is the Pulpitum as seen in Exeter Cathedral which is near the main altar of the church The rood provided a focus for worship most especially in Holy Week when worship was highly elaborate During Lent the rood was veiled on Palm Sunday it was revealed before the procession of palms and the congregation knelt before it The whole Passion story would then be read from the rood loft at the foot of the crucifix by three ministers Few original medieval rood crosses have survived in churches of the United Kingdom 13 Most were deliberately destroyed as acts of iconoclasm during the English Reformation and the English Civil War when many rood screens were also removed Today in many British churches the rood stair that gave access to the gallery is often the only remaining sign of the former rood screen and rood loft In the 19th century under the influence of the Oxford Movement roods and screens were again added to many Anglican churches Representative examples edit nbsp Cross from Linde Church on Gotland today in the Swedish History Museum also displays the symbol of a ruler demonstrating the origin of the name nbsp Triumphal cross of Notke in Lubeck Cathedral nbsp Triumphal cross Christ s side in Doberan Minster nbsp The plate cross Scheibenkreuz in St Mary s Hohnekirche in Soest around 1200 nbsp Forked cross in St Peter s at Merzig nbsp Triumphal cross in the Holy Cross Church in Kaysersberg late 15th century Germany edit the Gero Cross in Cologne Cathedral the Ottonian Cross in Kollegiatskirche St Peter und Alexander Aschaffenburg the Helmstedt Cross in the treasure chamber of Werden Abbey the triumphal cross in Lubeck Cathedral from the workshop of Bernt Notke 1477 height 17 m in St Catherine s Church Lubeck around 1450 in Halberstadt Cathedral in Wechselburg Abbey Holy Cross basilica in Naumburg Cathedral in Doberan Minster in Schwerin Cathedral from St Mary s Wismar in Osnabruck in St Mary s and in St Peter s Cathedral in Alfeld Leine in St Nicholas Church around 1250 in Dinslaken St Vincent around 1310 Sweden edit On Gotland in several of the medieval churches including Alskog Alva Bro Fide Frojel Grotlingbo Hamra Hemse Klinte Lye Oja Rute Stenkumla and Stenkyrka The one at Oja is particularly lavish Finland edit Hauho church Hauho Hameenlinna Kumlinge church Kumlinge Aland United Kingdom edit Church of the Annunciation Marble Arch London St Augustine s Kilburn London St Gabriel s Warwick Square London Grosvenor Chapel Mayfair London St Mary le Bow London St Matthew s Church Sheffield Peterborough Cathedral Church of St Protus and St Hyacinth Blisland Charlton on Otmoor Garland edit nbsp The Charlton on Otmoor rood in 2011 nbsp Two corn dolly like garlands formerly stood in the rood loft as illustrated in 1823 citation needed nbsp The single garland in the rood loft at Charlton on Otmoor illustrated by J H Parker in 1840 A unique rood exists at St Mary s parish church Charlton on Otmoor near Oxford England where a large wooden cross solidly covered in greenery stands on the early 16th century rood screen said by Sherwood and Pevsner to be the finest in Oxfordshire 14 The cross is redecorated twice a year on 1 May and 19 September the patronal festival calculated according to the Julian Calendar when children from the local primary school carrying small crosses decorated with flowers bring a long flower decorated rope like garland The cross is dressed or redecorated with locally obtained box foliage The rope like garland is hung across the rood screen during the May Garland Service 15 An engraving from 1822 1823 Dunkin shows the dressed rood cross as a more open foliage covered framework similar to certain types of corn dolly with a smaller attendant figure of similar appearance Folklorists have commented on the garland crosses resemblance to human figures and noted that they replaced statues of St Mary and Saint James the Great which had stood on the rood screen until they were destroyed during the Reformation Until the 1850s the larger garland cross was carried in a May Day procession accompanied by morris dancers to the former Benedictine Studley priory as the statue of St Mary had been until the Reformation Meanwhile the women of the village used to carry the smaller garland cross through Charlton 15 though it seems that this ceased some time between 1823 and 1840 when an illustration in J H Parker s A Glossary of Terms Used in Grecian Roman Italian and Gothic Architecture shows only one garland cross centrally positioned on the rood screen 16 See also editChancel rails Dream of the Rood Holy Rood Church disambiguation Iconostasis Legend of the RoodNotes edit Gothic Sculpture 1140 1300 by Paul Williamson 1998 Retrieved 26 Oct 2014 Curl James Stevens 2006 Oxford Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture 2nd ed OUP p 658 ISBN 978 0 19 860678 9 Oxford English Dictionary Rood Oxford English Dictionary Cross and Crucifix Margarete Luise Goecke Seischab Jorg Ohlemacher Kirchen erkunden Kirchen erschliessen Ernst Kaufmann Lahr 1998 p 232 E g in the abbey church of Wechselburg In England the name rood screen indicates that there is a monumental cross even if the original cross has not survived Schiller 141 146 Dodwell 210 215 Schiller 140 Torsten Droste Romanische Kunst in Frankreich DuMont Kunstreisefuhrer Cologne 1992 2 pp 32f Formen der Kunst Teil II Die Kunst im Mittelalter bearbeitet von Wilhelm Drixelius Verlag M Lurz Munich o J p 71 and p 88 Duffy 1992 page not cited Sherwood amp Pevsner 1974 page 530 a b Hole 1978 pages 113 114 Parker 1840 page not citedReferences editDodwell C R 1985 1982 Anglo Saxon Art A New Perspective Manchester University Press Cornell University Press ISBN 0 7190 0926 X Duffy Eamon 1992 The Stripping of the Altars Traditional Religion in England 1400 1580 Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 06076 9 Hole Christina 1978 A Dictionary of British Folk Customs Granada Publishing Ltd Paladin Press pp 113 114 ISBN 0 586 08293 X Parker J H 1840 A Glossary of Terms Used in Grecian Roman Italian and Gothic Architecture Oxford Sherwood Jennifer Pevsner Nikolaus 1974 Oxfordshire The Buildings of England Penguin Books p 530 ISBN 0 14 071045 0 Schiller G 1972 Iconography of Christian Art Vol II Lund Humphries pp not stated figures 471 75 ISBN 0 85331 324 5 Simpson Jacqueline Roud Steve 2000 A Dictionary of English Folklore Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 210019 X dead link Further reading editManuela Beer Triumphkreuze des Mittelalters Ein Beitrag zu Typus und Genese im 12 und 13 Jahrhundert Mit einem Katalog der erhaltenen Denkmaler Rood Crosses of the Middle Ages An Article on the Typology and Genesis in the 12th and 13th Centuries With a catalogue of surviving monuments Schnell amp Steiner Regensburg 2005 ISBN 3 7954 1755 4 Der Erloser am Kreuz Das Kruzifix The Saviour on the Cross the Crucifix rescissions in the portrayal of the Crucifix or Rood Cross External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roods nbsp Look up rood in Wiktionary the free dictionary Archbishops Council St Mary s Charlton on Otmoor A Church Near You Church of England Archived from the original on 18 December 2007 Retrieved 4 November 2007 Rood Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rood amp oldid 1145885317, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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