Transparent (architecture)


Romanesque slides in the Cistercian abbey in Wąchock

Slide - unglazed, usually decorative opening in the wall, letting in the daylight, usually with a decorative pattern, appearing in Romanesque, Gothic and Islamic architecture.

Mostly, it was separated by a column and called biforium, or by dividing two columns called triforium. Sometimes the slides were filled with a stone or wooden decorative openwork or the hole was covered with a translucent alabaster plate, parchment, or waxed canvas or corner.

Such slides were also used inside the rooms, creating a gallery between them. In the medieval churches, they created decorative arches above the aisle and the interior of the basilica church. Bibliography

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