AP Art History Unit 3

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Across
  1. 2. A covered walkway, outdoors (as in a church cloister) or indoors; especially the passageway around the apse and the choir of a church.
  2. 4. A sashlike belt worn over one shoulder and across the chest to support a sword.
  3. 7. A bishop's church. The word derives from cathedra, referring to the bishop's seat.
  4. 10. A series of arches supported by piers or columns.
  5. 11. A bell tower of a church, usually, but not always, freestanding.
  6. 13. French, "partition." A cell made of metal wire or a narrow metal strip soldered edgeup to a metal base to hold enamel, semiprecious stones, pieces of colored glass, or glass paste fired to resemble sparkling jewels.
  7. 15. A decorative metalwork technique employing cloisons; also, decorative brickwork in later Byzantine architecture.
  8. 16. A canopy on columns, frequently built over an altar. See also ciborium.
  9. 18. The space reserved for the clergy and singers in the church, usually east of the transept but, in some instances, extending into the nave.
  10. 19. An Italian word literally meaning "light-dark." Used to describe the skillful management of value to create the illusion of three-dimensional forms in a drawing or painting.
Down
  1. 1. A monastery courtyard, usually with covered walks or ambulatories along its sides.
  2. 2. A recess, usually semicircular, in the wall of a building, commonly found at the east end of a church.
  3. 3. Greek, "messenger." One of the 12 disciples of Jesus.
  4. 5. The continuous molding framing an arch. In Romanesque or Gothic architecture, one of the series of concentric bands framing the tympanum.
  5. 6. The engraving or embossing of metal.
  6. 8. The space in a cruciform church formed by the intersection of the nave and the transept.
  7. 9. Subterranean networks of rock-cut galleries and chambers designed as cemeteries for the burial of the dead.
  8. 12. The portion of a basilica flanking the nave and separated from it by a row of columns or piers
  9. 14. In Christian architecture, the building used for baptism, usually situated next to a church.
  10. 17. the open, colonnaded court in front of and attached to a Christian basilica.