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I. An open place or court before a church. It consisted of a large quadrangle with
colonnaded walks on its four sides forming a portico or cloister. It was situated between
the porch or vestibule and the body of the church. In the center of the atrium was a
fountain or well, where the worshippers washed their hands before entering the church. A
remnant of this custom still survives in the use of the holy-water font, or basin, usually
placed near the inner entrances of churches in the atrium those that were not suffered to
advance farther, and more particularly the first class of penitents, stood to solicit the
prayers of the faithful as they went into the church. It was also used as a
burying-ground, at first only for distinguished persons, but afterwards for all believers.
The covered portion next the church was called the narthex and was the place for
penitents. The basilicas at Ravenna seem usually to have had a closed narthex, while those
of Rome were open to the West. A mosaic in S. Apollinare Nuovo Ravenna shows an open
narthex closed by curtains. The atrium existed in some of the largest of the early
Christian churches such as old St. Peter's at Rome in the fourth century, and Sancta
Sophia at Constantinople, in the sixth. In the residences (palatia, domus) of the Roman
aristocracy, where the Roman Christians first worshipped, there was a threefold division,
first, on entering, a court called the atrium; then, farther in, another colonnaded court
called the peristyle, and then the tablinum, where the altar was probably placed, and
services conducted. (See BASILICA.) So large a
fore-court to a church required an area of land costly and difficult to obtain in a large
city. For this reason the old Roman atrium survived only occasionally in Eastern and
Western churches. Typical examples may be seen in the churches of St. Clement, at Rome,
and St. Ambrose, at Mllan; also in the seventh century churches of Novara and Parenzo.
II. In secular architecture the atrium was the principal entrance-hall and apartment in
a Roman house, and formed the reception-room. It was lighted by an opening in the roof,
called the compluvium, the roof sloping so as to throw the rain-water into a cistern in
the floor called the impluvium. In large houses it was surrounded by a colonnade.
THOMAS H. POOLE Transcribed by Joseph P. Thomas
From the Catholic Encyclopedia, copyright © 1913 by the Encyclopedia
Press, Inc. Electronic version copyright © 1997 by New Advent, Inc., P.O. Box 281096,
Denver, Colorado, USA, 80228. (knight@knight.org) Taken from the New Advent Web Page
(www.knight.org/advent).
This article is part of the Catholic Encyclopedia Project, an effort
aimed at placing the entire Catholic Encyclopedia 1913 edition on the World Wide Web. The
coordinator is Kevin Knight, editor of the New Advent Catholic Website. If you would like
to contribute to this worthwhile project, you can contact him by e- mail at
(knight.org/advent).
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