The Plan of St. Gall a study of the architecture & economy of & life in a paradigmatic Carolingian monastery |
I. |
I. |
I. 1. |
I.1.1. |
I.1.2. |
I.1.3. |
I.1.4. |
I.1.5. |
I.1.6. |
I.1.7. |
I. 2. |
I.2.1. |
I. 3. |
I.3.1. |
I.3.2. |
I.3.3. |
I. 4. |
I.4.1. |
I.4.2. |
I. 5. |
I.5.1. |
I.5.2. |
I.5.3. |
I. 6. |
I.6.1. |
I. 7. |
I.7.1. | I.7.1 |
I.7.2. |
I.7.3. |
I.7.4. |
I. 8. |
I. 9. |
I.9.1. |
I. 10. |
I.10.1. |
I.10.2. |
I. 11. |
I.11.1. |
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I. 12. |
I.12.1. |
I.12.2. |
I.12.3. |
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I.12.5. |
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I. 13. |
I.13.1. |
I.13.2. |
I.13.3. |
I.13.4. |
I.13.5. |
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I. 14. |
I.14.1. |
I.14.2. |
I.14.3. |
I.14.4. |
I.14.5. |
I.14.6. |
I.14.7. |
I.14.8. |
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I. 15. |
I.15.1. |
I. 16. |
I. 17. |
II. |
II. 1. |
II.1.1. |
II.1.2. |
II.1.3. |
II.1.4. |
II.1.5. |
II.1.6. |
II.1.7. |
II.1.8. |
II.1.9. |
II.1.10. |
II.1.11. |
II.1.12. |
II.1.13. |
II. 2. |
II.2.1. |
II.2.2. |
II. 3. |
II.3.1. |
II.3.2. |
II.3.3. |
II.3.4. |
II.3.5. |
II.3.6. |
II.3.7. |
II.3.8. |
II.3.9. |
II.3.10. |
III. |
III. 1. |
III.1.1. |
III.1.2. |
III.1.3. |
III.1.4. |
III.1.5. |
III.1.6. |
III.1.7. |
III.1.8. |
III.1.9. |
III.1.30. |
III.1.11. |
III. 2. |
III.2.1. |
III.2.2. |
III.2.3. |
III.2.4. |
III.2.5. |
III.2.6. |
III.2.7. |
III.2.8. |
III. 3. |
III.3.1. |
III.3.2. |
III.3.3. |
III.3.4. |
III.3.5. |
IV. |
IV. 1. |
IV.1.1. |
IV.1.2. |
IV.1.3. |
IV.1.4. |
IV.1.5. |
IV.1.6. |
IV.1.7. |
IV.1.8. |
IV.1.9. |
IV.1.10. |
IV.1.11. |
IV.1.12. |
IV. 2. |
IV.2.1. |
IV.2.2. |
IV.2.3. |
IV. 3. |
IV.3.1. |
IV. 4. |
IV.4.1. |
IV.4.2. |
IV. 5. |
IV.5.1. |
IV. 6. |
IV.6.1. |
IV. 7. |
IV.7.1. |
IV.7.2. |
IV.7.3. |
IV.7.4. |
IV.7.5. |
IV.7.6. |
IV.7.7. |
The Plan of St. Gall | ||
I.7.1
THE PROTOTYPAL CHARACTER
OF THE PLAN
It has long been observed that the Plan of St. Gall, although
obviously made to assist Abbot Gozbert in the reconstruction
of his monastery, is not a plan for a specific site, but
is rather an ideal scheme that demonstrates what buildings
an exemplary Carolingian monastery should be composed
of and in what manner they should be arranged.[114]
The
Plan is inscribed into a rectangle, not dissimilar to the shape
of a Roman military camp,[115]
and does not reflect the particular
topographical conditions of the monastery of St.
Gall, wedged as it was into an area of irregular shape formed
by the capricious course of two converging streams.[116]
It was in view of the ideal, schematic character of the
Plan that Alphons Dopsch, in 1916, made the suggestion
that the original version from which the Plan of St. Gall
was derived might be a product of the great monastic
reform movement that stirred the life of the Church during
the reign of Louis the Pious.[117]
Hans Reinhardt, in 1952,
challenged this view. Before entering into the particulars
of his argument, however, it is necessary to make a few
remarks about the general scope of the monastic reform
movement and the legislation resulting from it.
On the question of "site plan" or "general plan," see Keller, 1844,
4; Willis, 1848, 89; Dehio, 1930, 51; Hardegger, Schlatter, and Schiess,
1922, 21; Hecht, 1928, 29-30; Reinhardt, 1937, 277; and idem, 1952, 18.
The Plan of St. Gall | ||