Film Categories
Art Subjects
- 24. Landscape into Art
- 25. The Human Figure in Art
- 26. Animals in Art
- 27. Religious Art
- 28. Drawing and the Graphic Arts
- 29. The Photographic Image
- 30. Art, Architecture and the Environment
- 31. Films for Younger Audiences
- 32. Art and the Subconscious
- 33. Art Appreciation
- 34. Dealers, Exhibitions, Museums and Critics
- 35. Conservation and Preservation
- 36. Techniques of the Artist
- 37. Archaeology
Films to Buy
- 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 Master Builders: The Construction of a Great Church
- Visions of Light
- Beaune: Rogier van der Weyden
- Buildings and Beliefs
- Ecce Homo*
- Fra Angelico
- Jean Fouquet
- Guido Mazzoni
- Rembrandt's Christ
- Via Dolorosa (Stations of the Cross)
- Chapels: The Buildings of Nonconformity
- Star of Bethlehem
- Caspar David Friedrich: Landscape as Language
- Your Church: A Threshold to History
- In Memoriam
- Carved in Ivory*
The Master Builders: The Construction of a Great Church
21 minutes, color, age range: 8 - 15 years, #136
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Roberta Gilchrist reveals aspects of Beverley Minster, England
Medieval builders produced some of the finest structures that the world has seen in terms of technical sophistication, engineering skill, grace in design, and sheer size. This video follows the building of a cathedral from the earliest stages of fundraising and planning to its construction from the foundations to the roof. By looking at the existing fabric of Beverley Minster, England, in an archaeological light, we can reconstruct some of the methods used to design and build it. Firstly a present-day architect shows how the master builders used the principle of proportional geometry to develop the complicated design with a minimum of equipment. Excavations show evidence of how the foundations support the colossal weight of the building and overcome the problems of the ground beneath. A draftsman uses modern techniques to create a template for cutting the stone, basing it on surviving working drawings. Construction methods are shown, including the use of scaffolding and cranes, and the building of curved arches to form an interior framework, and flying buttresses to stop the walls from bulging. Many of the individual tool marks left by the masons, plumbers and joiners survive today and help to date the various stages in the building project. Finally, the cracks in the central tower serve as a reminder that not even the master builders were infallible.
Part of the series Frameworks of Worship
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Credits
Director: John Murray
Writer: Richard Morris
Presenter/Narrator: Roberta Gilchrist
English Heritage:
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