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Chapter house

A chapter house or chapterhouse is a building or room that is part of a cathedral, monastery or collegiate church in which meetings are held. When attached to a cathedral, the cathedral chapter meets there. In monasteries, the whole community often met there daily for readings and to hear the abbot or senior monks talk. When attached to a collegiate church, the dean, prebendaries and canons of the college meet there. The rooms may also be used for other meetings of various sorts; in medieval times monarchs on tour in their territory would often take them over for their meetings and audiences. Synods, ecclesiastical courts and similar meetings often took place in chapter houses.

For other uses, see Chapter house (disambiguation).

History and uses[edit]

The community of monks would meet in the chapter house with the abbot to "hold chapter"; that is, "for the reading of the 'Martyrology' and the 'Necrology', for the correction of faults, the assigning of the tasks for the day, and for the exhortation of the superior, and again for the evening Collation or reading before Complin".[1] The first meeting took place in the morning, after the church services of Prime or Terce. The monks might sit along the length of the walls in strict age-order, apart from the office-holders.


The Carolingian Plan of St Gall (c. 820) is the plan for an ideal 9th century monastery, with a great variety of buildings and rooms, but none that really can be assigned the function of chapterhouse; nor is such a room mentioned by Saint Benedict. But the chapter house is mentioned in the proceedings of the Council of Aachen in 816. The church or cloister may have been used for all meetings in earlier monasteries, or there was usually a refectory (hall for eating). But by at least 1000 such a room had become normal in large monastic establishments. The east side of the cloister on which the chapter house was often located was usually the first to be constructed; it would have been begun shortly after the church walls were built.

Spain, whose very important Romanesque frescos are now in the Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya in Barcelona

Monastery of Santa María de Sigena

- octagonal, unusually for Scotland

Elgin Cathedral

Romanesque in Poland

Wąchock Abbey

Westminster Abbey

rectangular chapter house

Canterbury Cathedral

palm tree like central pillar carrying 32 lierne ribs that form the inner part of the vault

Wells Cathedral

Exeter Cathedral

the earliest English octagonal annex

Lincoln Cathedral

Salisbury Cathedral

with famous carved capitals

Southwell Minster

octagonal Late Gothic

York Minster

France, a Plantagenet base, large and low-vaulted

Fontevraud Abbey

The "Spanish Chapel" at the Basilica of Santa Maria Novella in Florence, with important frescos

Dominican

Romanesque, in central Portugal

Alcobaça Monastery

Late Gothic with Manueline elements, in central Portugal

Batalha Monastery

Convent of the Order of Christ in Tomar

The at the Franciscan Basilica di Santa Croce di Firenze, a key building in Early Renaissance architecture

Pazzi Chapel

16th century and later, with important frescos

Toledo Cathedral

Important examples of chapter houses from an architectural or artistic point of view can be seen at:


Non-religious use of the circular chapter house style of plan:

French Romanesque chapter house now moved to The Cloisters, New York

French Romanesque chapter house now moved to The Cloisters, New York

Museum installation of the Romanesque frescos from the Monastery of Santa María de Sigena

Museum installation of the Romanesque frescos from the Monastery of Santa María de Sigena

The royal Fontevraud Abbey

Entrance at Fontevraud Abbey

Entrance at Fontevraud Abbey

The former chapterhouse, now the "Spanish Chapel", at the Basilica of Santa Maria Novella in Florence

The former chapterhouse, now the "Spanish Chapel", at the Basilica of Santa Maria Novella in Florence

Salisbury Cathedral from the cathedral tower, with cloister at right

Salisbury Cathedral from the cathedral tower, with cloister at right

Interior of the chapter house of Kuopio Cathedral in Kuopio

Interior of the chapter house of Kuopio Cathedral in Kuopio

The octagonal chapter house at York Minster

The octagonal chapter house at York Minster

Exterior of the Pazzi Chapel

Exterior of the Pazzi Chapel

Interior of the Pazzi Chapel

Interior of the Pazzi Chapel

The modern boardroom-style Chapter house at Guildford Cathedral

The modern boardroom-style Chapter house at Guildford Cathedral

. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 855.

"Chapter-house" 

Historical Images of Chapter House at Westminster Abbey circa 1870 - 1990