Film Categories
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- 1.Early Cultures
- 2.First Civilizations
- 3.Africa
- 4.Pre-Columbian America
- 5.Romanesque and Gothic
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Films to Buy
- French Romanesque Art
- Romanesque Painters
- Romanesque Architecture of Alsace
- Romanesque Architecture of Burgundy
- Romanesque Architecture of Languedoc
- Romanesque Architecture of Normandy
- Romanesque Architecture of Poitou-Charente
- Romanesque Architecture of Provence
- The Norman Conquest of England
- English Romanesque Art
- Pisa, Story of a Cathedral Square
- The Romanesque in Austria
- And They Sang a New Song
- Popular Art in Brittany
- The Master Builders: The Construction of a Great Church
- Looking at an Abbey
- Building an Abbey: Rievaulx
- Villard de Honnecourt: Builder of Cathedrals
- Visions of Light
- Antelami: The Baptistery of Parma
- Art in the Making: Italian Painting before 1400*
- The Birth of European Painting
- Dijon: The Four Grand Dukes of Burgundy
- An Eye for Detail*
- Beaune: Rogier van der Weyden
- Buildings and Beliefs
- Ecce Homo
- Carved in Ivory*
- Looking at a Castle
- Castles of Northumberland
Building an Abbey: Rievaulx
Approaching Technology through an Historic Building
14 minutes, color, age range: 8 - 15 years, #138
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Rievaulx is a twelfth-century Cistercian abbey set in a beautiful and secluded valley in North Yorkshire, England. Children from a local primary school are shown looking for clues to the design and engineering problems faced by the monks who built this large group of buildings. A great deal can be learned from looking carefully at both the buildings and the remains of fallen masonry. For example, it is possible to work out how the monks built such tall columns and high walls. We see how the buttresses and pinnacles, beautiful as they are, have more than a mere decorative function, being an integral part of the engineering. Weight, stresses and load-bearing in a vaulted stone roof are introduced through the medium of an instructive children's game. While the magnificent nave and choir are the central core of Rievaulx, the remains of the extensive monastic buildings are also examined for clues to the way of life of the monks who lived, worked and worshiped here. Evidence of the hearths, the kitchens and refectory all add to our understanding of how they lived. The film is a stepping-off point for a multi-disciplinary study of the history of any abbey or cathedral.
Part of the series Evidence on Site
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Credits
Director: Frank Harris
Writer: Michael Scarborough
English Heritage:
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