Inchurch architecture,thechancelis the space around thealtar,including thechoirand the sanctuary (sometimes called thepresbytery), at theliturgical eastend of a traditional Christian church building.[1]It may terminate in anapse.
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Overview
editThe chancel is generally the area used by the clergy and choir during worship, while the congregation is in thenave.Direct access may be provided by apriest's door,usually on the south side of the church.[2]This is one definition, sometimes called the "strict" one; in practice in churches where the eastern end contains other elements such as anambulatoryand side chapels, these are also often counted as part of the chancel, especially when discussing architecture.[3]In smaller churches, where the altar is backed by the outside east wall and there is no distinct choir, the chancel and sanctuary may be the same area. In churches with aretroquirearea behind the altar, this may only be included in the broader definition of chancel.
In a cathedral or other large church, there may be a distinct choir area at the start of the chancel (looking from the nave), before reaching the sanctuary, and anambulatorymay run beside and behind it. All these may be included in the chancel, at least in architectural terms (see above). In many churches, the altar has now been moved to the front of the chancel, in what was built as the choir area, or to the centre of the transept, somewhat confusing the distinction between chancel, choir and sanctuary. In churches with less traditional plans, the term may not be useful in either architectural or ecclesiastical terms. The chancel may be a step or two higher than the level of the nave, and the sanctuary is often raised still further. The chancel is very often separated from the nave byaltar rails,or arood screen,a sanctuary bar, or an open space, and its width and roof height is often different from that of the nave; usually the chancel will be narrower and lower.
In churches with a traditionalLatin crossplan, and atranseptandcentral crossing,the chancel usually begins at the eastern side of the central crossing, often under an extra-largechancel archsupporting the crossing and the roof. This is an arch which separates the chancel from the nave and transept of a church.[4]If the chancel, strictly defined as choir and sanctuary, does not fill the full width of a medieval church, there will usually be some form of low wall or screen at its sides, demarcating it from the ambulatory or parallel side chapels.
As well as the altar, the sanctuary may house acredence tableand seats for officiating and assistingministers.In some churches, the congregation may gather on three sides or in a semicircle around the chancel. In some churches, thepulpitandlecternmay be in the chancel, but in others these, especially the pulpit, are in thenave.The presbytery is often adorned withchancel flowers.[5]
Name
editThe word "chancel" derives from the French usage ofchancelfrom theLate Latinwordcancellus( "lattice" ).[1][6]This refers to the typical form of rood screens. The chancel was formerly known as thepresbytery,because it was reserved for theclergy.[7]
History
editInEarly Christian architecturethetemplonwas a barrier dividing off the sanctuary from the rest of the church; inEastern Christianitythis developed into different arrangements from those of the Western church, with the sanctuary often not visible to the congregation. In the West theciborium,an open-walled but usually roofed structure sheltering the altar, became common, and was originally fitted with curtains that were drawn and pulled back at different points in the Mass, in a way that someOriental Orthodoxchurches still practice today.
A large (or "deep" ) chancel made most sense in monasteries and cathedrals where there was a large number of singing clergy and boys from achoir schoolto occupy the choir. In many orders "choir monk" was a term used to distinguish the educated monks who had taken full vows, or were training to do so, from another class, called "lay brothers" or other terms, who had taken lesser vows and mostly did manual tasks, including farming the monastery's land. These usually sat in the nave, with any lay congregation.
Following the exposition of the doctrine oftransubstantiationat the fourthLateran Councilof 1215, clergy were required to ensure that theblessed sacramentwas to be kept protected from irreverent access or abuse; and accordingly the area of the church used by the lay congregation was to be screened off from that used by the clergy. This distinction was enforced by the development ofcanon law,by which the construction and upkeep of the chancel was the responsibility of therector,whereas the construction and upkeep of the navewas the responsibilityof theparish.Barriers demarcating the chancel became increasingly elaborate, but were largely swept away after both theProtestant Reformationand then theCounter-Reformationprioritized the congregation having a good view of what was happening in the chancel. Now the lowcommunion railis generally the only barrier; despite being essentially a Counter-Reformation invention, this has proved useful and accepted in the Protestant churches that dispense communion. However the screen enjoyed a small revival in the 19th century, after the passionate urgings ofAugustus Pugin,who wroteA Treatise on Chancel Screens and Rood Lofts,[8]and others.
After the Reformation Protestant churches generally moved the altar (now often called thecommunion table) forward, typically to the front of the chancel, and often used lay choirs who were placed in a gallery at the west end. The rear of deep chancels became little used in churches surviving from the Middle Ages, and new churches very often omitted one. With the emphasis on sermons, and their audibility, some churches simply converted their chancels to seat part of the congregation. In 19th-century England one of the battles of theCambridge Camden Society,the architectural wing of theAnglo-Catholicsin theChurch of England,was to restore the chancel as a necessary part of a church. By pushing the altar back to its medieval position and having the choir used by a lay choir, they were largely successful in this, although the harder end of theHigh Churchobjected to allowing a large group of laity into the chancel.[9]Different approaches to worship in the 20th century again tended to push altars in larger churches forward, to be closer to the congregation, and the chancel again risks being a less used area of the church.
References
editCitations
edit- ^abCurl, James Stevens (2006).A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture.Oxford University Press. p.166.ISBN0198606788.
- ^"priest's door",A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture,Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.
- ^Fleming, "Chancel"; Pevsner, p. 349
- ^Harris, Cyril M. (1977).Illustrated Dictionary of Historic Architecture.Courier Dover Publications. p. 105.ISBN0486132110.
- ^Wilson, Adelaide B.; Wilson, Lois (1967).Flowers for Your Church.M. Barrows. p. 26.
- ^Harper, Douglas (2001)."Chancel".Online Etymology Dictionary.Retrieved2013-10-29.
- ^Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913).Catholic Encyclopedia.New York: Robert Appleton Company. .
- ^Online text
- ^White, 93-97
Bibliography
edit- Fleming, John;Honour, Hugh;Pevsner, Nikolaus(1986),Dictionary of Architecture,1980 (3 ed.), Penguin Books Ltd.
- Pevsner, Nikolaus;Priscilla Metcalf,The Cathedrals of England; Southern England,1985, Viking
- White, James F.,The Cambridge Movement: The Ecclesiologists and the Gothic Revival,1962 (2004 reprint), Wipf and Stock Publishers,ISBN1592449379,9781592449378,google books
- Encyclopædia Britannica.Vol. 5 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 832. .