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(From the Anglo-Saxon word spir, meaning "a stalk" or "shoot"). A
tapering construction -- in plan conical, pyramidal, octagonal, or hexagonal -- crowning a
steeple or tower, or surmounting a building, and usually developed from the cornice; often
pierced by ornamental openings and, where there were ribs, enriched with crockets.
Sometimes an open lantern was interposed between the steeple, tower, or roof and the
spire. On the continent the architects aimed to make the steeple and spire one, merging
them into each other, while in England they openly confessed it was a separate structure
by masking its point of origin behind a plain or pierced parapet, or ornamental
battlements. A spire properly belongs to Pointed architecture and hence has never been
fully developed except in Gothic buildings. As early as the twelfth century they took on
different forms, and almost everywhere, from the thirteenth to the sixteenth century,
became the terminating construction of every church steeple, tower, or lantern, and also
those of secular buildings, more especially in Germany and France. Their decorative value
was very great, more particularly in varying and enriching the sky-line of the buildings
which they crowned, and by the numerous variations of forms and variety of types employed.
These forms from such simple examples as that surmounting the south tower of Chartres
Cathedral to that of Burgos, where the whole structure is an openwork of tracery. In
England Norman churches were without spires, but with the coming in of Early English short
ones were introduced; Decorated Gothic called for much higher ones, and the Perpendicular
still higher. The earlier spires were generally built of timber, and they were always so
when the building was roofed with wood.
These early timber spires were, as a rule, not very tall, but later they reached a
greater elevation; that which crowned old St. Paul's in London is said to have been 527
feet in height. The most lofty spires now in existence -- such as those of Salisbury,
Coventry, and Norwich -- are all of stone. In Central here are many, and in fact wherever
suitable stone was easily obtainable. In the north of England, however, in Scotland, and
in Wales among the mountains the bell-gable takes the place of a spire, no doubt because
the large area of the thinly populated parishes made it necessary to keep the bells
uncovered, so that they might be more widely heard. The most beautiful examples of
existing spires are to be seen at Chartres, Reims, Laon, Freiburg, Ratisbon, Cologne,
Antwerp, Vienna, Burgos, and Salisbury. On some of these buildings there are several
spires, in many instances built at different periods: the south spire of Chartres,
culminating in a pinnacle 350 feet above the ground, was erected in 1175, while the north
spire, with its apex 380 feet above the ground, was not finished until 1513. The so-called
spires of the Renaissance and those built by Sir Christopher Wren are not true spires, but
merely steeples terminating in a point.
CARYL COLEMAN Transcribed by Michael C. Tinkler
From the Catholic Encyclopedia, copyright © 1913 by the Encyclopedia
Press, Inc. Electronic version copyright © 1996 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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