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The Plan of St. Gall

a study of the architecture & economy of & life in a paradigmatic Carolingian monastery
  
  
  
  
 II. 
  
  
  

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MEDIEVAL PARALLELS

The external appearance of the House for the Cows and
Cowherds must have been very similar to that of the
Gardener's House (figs. 426-427), except that it was considerably
larger, as one would expect it to be in view of its
different function. It is the standard house of the Plan,
minus one aisle on one of its long sides, which makes the
main room of the house directly accessible from the exterior,
a distinct advantage in buildings where great numbers
of the larger breeds of animals, and especially horned
cattle, are sheltered, because this arrangement reduces the
number of doors through which the cattle must be taken as
they enter and leave their stalls (figs. 483, 486). This house
type must have been very common in the Middle Ages. The
earliest literary evidence for its existence, so far as I can
judge, occurs in a dossier of twelfth-century lease agreements
that record the manorial holdings of the Dean and
Chapter of St. Paul's in London.[633] On a manor located in


282

Page 282
[ILLUSTRATION]

481. TISBURY, WILTSHIRE, ENGLAND. PLAN, GRANGE BARN. 15TH CENTURY

[Redrawn after Dufty, 1947, 168, fig. 2]

The barn at Place Farm was part of a grange once owned by the abbesses of Shaftsbury. Its external dimensions are 196 feet long by 38 feet
wide. It is lengthwise divided into 13 bays by roof trusses with arch-braced collar beams meticulously aligned with the buttresses of the masonry
walls. Two transeptal porches in the middle of the barn are original. The masonry of the jambs of the other four entrances is modern; these
openings were probably not part of the original structure. The roof is thatched.

the parish of Wickham, Essex, there is a barn which in
these lease agreements is described as follows:

Juxta hoc orreum est aliud, quod habet in longitudine xxx. ped. et dim.
preter culacia: et unum calacium est longitudine x. ped. et. dim.
Alterum viii. ped. Tota longitudo hujus orrei cum culatiis xlviii. ped.
Altitudo sub trabe xi. ped. et dim. et desuper usque ad festum ix. ped.,
latitudo xx. ped.; nec habet preter i. alam, quae habet in latitudine v.
ped. et in altitudine totidem. Hoc orreum debet Ailwinus reddere plenum
de mancorno preter medietatem quae est contra ostium, quae debet
esse vacua, et haec pars est latitudinis xi. ped. et dim.
[634]

Adjacent to this barn there is another one, the length of which is
30½ feet, not counting the lean-to's. One of the lean-to's is 10½ feet
deep, the other 8 feet. The total length of the barn, lean-to's included,
is 48 feet. The height below the tie beam is 11½ feet, and
above, between the tie beam and the ridge, 9 feet. The width [of
the nave] is 20 feet. And it has only one aisle, which is 5 feet wide
and equally high. This barn Ailwinus must render full of mancorno
with the exception of the center bay which lies opposite the entrance
and must be left empty, and this part is 11½ feet deep.

The barn of Wickham is just a little over half as large as
the House for the Cows and Cowherds on the Plan of
St. Gall, but its layout is identical. It is noteworthy that
the twelfth-century writer in describing this barn makes a
clear distinction between the aisle (ala) which is attached
to one of the two long sides of the barn and the two leanto's
(culatium) which are attached to the narrow ends of the
building. In English this distinction is not always maintained.
Culatium (from culus = pars cujusvis rei posterior[635] )
is a highly descriptive term for that section of the barn which
lies under the hipped part of the roof at the short end of
the building. The writer also makes a clear distinction
between the principal space of the barn, which he refers to
simply as "barn" (orreum), and all the peripheral spaces.
The dimensions listed for all the constituent parts of the
building make it clear that the center space was higher
than the surrounding spaces and that it had a double-pitched
roof (fig. 485A-D). This is strong evidence for
the correctness of our reconstruction of the House for the
Cows and Cowherds (fig. 486A-E) and all the other buildings
on the Plan which are laid out in a similar manner.


283

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[ILLUSTRATION]

PLAN OF ST. GALL. HOUSE FOR HORSES, OXEN, AND THEIR KEEPERS. AUTHORS' INTERPRETATION [1:192]

482.B

482.A LONGITUDINAL SECTION

PLAN

The only difference between the medieval long houses with transeptal porches shown in figs. 477-481 and the House for Horses and Oxen (fig.
474
) is that the latter is furnished with aisles serving as quarters for the oxherds and horse grooms. Traditionally this building type is single-spaced
and in this form either used as a dwelling, or for the storage of harvest. Aisles were incorporated in the House for Horses and Oxen
because it was intended to accommodate both men and beasts.

The total length of this building on the Plan is 145 feet; the living space measures 35 by 37½ feet and the stables each are 52½ feet long,
suggesting that the roof-supporting trusses were placed at 11
½ foot intervals.


284

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[ILLUSTRATION]

PLAN OF ST. GALL. HOUSE FOR HORSES AND OXEN AND THEIR KEEPERS

482.D WEST ELEVATION

482.C EAST ELEVATION

SCALE 1/16 INCH EQUALS ONE FOOT [1:192] FOR GRAPHIC SCALE SEE PRECEDING PAGE

AUTHORS' INTERPRETATION

Our reconstruction of this house as a transeptal space the ridge of which intersects the main ridge at right angles and at the same height, is
made in consideration of the fact that the transept extends across the entire width of the structure, bisecting the aisles in which the herdsmen
were to sleep. We are also visually emphasizing the great importance of this transept which may have been intended to serve as dining area for
all of the monastery's herdsmen
(cf. above, p. 278).


285

Page 285
[ILLUSTRATION]

PLAN OF ST. GALL. HOUSE FOR HORSES AND OXEN AND THEIR KEEPERS

NORTH ELEVATION is similar but of opposite hand to
the SOUTH ELEVATION

482.F TRANSVERSE SECTION B-B

482.E SOUTH ELEVATION

482.G TRANSVERSE SECTION C-C

AUTHORS' INTERPRETATION

We saw no functional need to raise the roof over the aisles, where the oxherds and horse grooms were to be quartered, above tie-beam level of the
stables. In this same manner bedrooms are treated in all the other guest and service buildings of the Plan. To extend the main roof across the
entire width of the building would have been considerably more costly and in construction functionally superfluous—unless one can assume that
the full width of the building at floor level was needed as loft above the tie-beam level for storage of straw and hay.


286

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[ILLUSTRATION]

PLAN OF ST. GALL. HOUSE FOR COWS AND COWHERDS

483.X SITE PLAN

Virtually all of the houses for monastic livestock lie in a large rectangular yard that extends from the entrance Road to the southern edge of the
monastery site. They consist of the House for Sheep and Shepherds
(No. 35); the House for the Goats and Goatherds (No. 36); the House for
the Cows and Cowherds
(No. 37); the House for the Swine and Swineherds (No. 39); and the House for Broodmares and Foals and their
Keepers
(No. 40). The House for Horses and Oxen and their Keepers (No. 33 and fig. 474) lies outside this yard, but adjacent.

The layout of the House for Cows and Cowherds is identical with that of the House for Broodmares and Foals and their Keepers as well as
with that of the Gardener's House
(fig. 426). In each of these structures, the common living room with its traditional open fire place is
surrounded with subsidiary outer spaces on three sides only
(variant 3B; see above, p. 85, fig. 33). The entrance is in the middle of the long
wall where the aisle is missing. As in the House for Distinguished Guests
(figs. 396-399), in order to gain access to the stables animals have to
be taken through the common living room. For a 12th century structure of the same design see p. 281 and figs. 485. A-D.


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[ILLUSTRATION]

484. UTRECHT PSALTER (CA. 830). DEUTERONOMY, XXXII: 1-4

UTRECHT UNIVERSITY LIBRARY, CODEX 32, fol. 86r (detail)

[Courtesy of Utrecht University Library]

The illusionistic Late Antique style was practiced with superb assurance by the illuminator of the lost manuscript after which the Utrecht
Psalter was modeled. Scenes of agricultural life such as this one of a herd of cattle and a man churning butter are of a richness of perception
surpassing any other Carolingian manuscript. This intensely classical style disappeared from the medieval scene almost as rapidly as it was
adopted, giving way to more abstract concepts of painting. It took close to 500 years of gradual reconquest of reality by art for rural scenes
again to be as accurately depicted as in this unique Carolingian manuscript. The marginal scenes of the Luttrell Psalter
(figs 467, 475, and
476
) are among the high-water marks in this development that, at certain stages, was stimulated by availability of copies of the Utrecht
Psalter that were made in England in the 10th and 11th centuries.

The lease agreements of St. Paul's date from 1114 to
1155.[636] Obviously, they establish only a terminus ante quam,
telling nothing about the age of the barns. Some of them
may have been of relatively recent date, others may have
been centuries old.

 
[633]

Hale, 1858, 122-39; cf. above, pp. 203ff.

[634]

Hale, op. cit., 123.

[635]

Du Cange, II, 1937, 653; and Hale, op. cit., lxxvi.

[636]

For the dates of the leases, see Hale's introductory notes, op. cit.,
xc-c. Cf. Horn, 1958, 11-12.