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Section dedicated to the architectural plan |
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The architectural idea underlying St. Mark's Church is deeply rooted in the cultural context of Constantinople. The model was the Church of the Twelve Apostles, built in Justinian's day and destroyed in 1462. The present-day church was built on the remains of the first and second church in the space available between the Ducal Palace and the Church of St. Theodore (810-819). A bold solution which in the 11th century united memories - the tomb and its remains of St. Mark's body - with the Greek cross plan of a great new church with five cupolas, the prestigious "Ducal Chapel". In St. Mark's each cupola rests on four great vaults whose weight is borne by four pillars. The interior has a unitary sequence subdivided into individual spatial orchestrations to which gold background mosaics ensure continuity and the church's special way of being. Unlike the Greek models the altar, which is joined to the evangelist's tomb, is not in the centre of the cross but beneath the eastern, presbytery cupola. The church subsequently underwent substantial modifications: the narthex was added, a Gothic rosette was opened towards the Ducal Palace and the window of the horses opened in the façade, thus altering the atmosphere of the old building. Each modification was connected with structural, political or prestige reasons.
Uniqueness of St. Mark'sSt. Mark's church today is considered the living heritage of Roman, Byzantine
and Venetian culture. It may be considered, ideally, as being enclosed
in a quadrilateral space measuring almost 60 metres each side. The plan
is Greek cross. Both arms of the cross are subdivided into nave and two
aisles. The main entrance from the west has a late 10th century wooden door
faced with sheet copper and older bronze grilles. To right and left are
the St. Clement and St. Peter entrances. At the northern end of the façade,
the St. Alipius entrance. In the northern arm the Door of Flowers is also
closed with a bronze gate. The nave and two aisle crypt with apse is beneath the presbytery and the side chapels. In the nave, beneath the high altar, there is the ancient chapel where the evangelist's remains were kept. The crypt has an intersecting barrel-vault ceiling supported by small columns with simple basket-decorated Byzantine capitals datable to between the end of the 10th and the 11th centuries. To the west of the crypt, an area known as the "retro-crypt " contains the tombs of all the patriarchs of Venice since 1807. As a result of repeated fires the women's galleries that covered the aisles of the west, north and south arms of the cross were eliminated. The only remaining women's galleries are those above the wall structures: above the narthex, the chapel of St. Isadore, the palace boundary walls and the semi-domes of the apses in the chapels of St. Peter and St. Clement. All the rest have been reduced to simple passageways. Two areas of the church may be defined: the ducal area in the south transept, closely connected with the palace by passages and windows at various levels, and the St. Mark's primicerius' and priests' area in the north transept, linked to their respective lodgings. The height and size of the buildings around the church reduced the amount of light reaching the latter, so at the beginning of the 15th century the Serenissima decided to create two great openings: the window of the horses on the façade and the rosette in the south transept overlooking the doge's palace. The cupolas - the Ascension in the centre, the Prophets over the presbytery,
the Pentecost over the nave, the St. John over the north arm and the St.
Leonard over the south arms of the transept consist of half-spheres in
masonry standing on great support vaults. Around 1260 the masonry cupolas
were covered by wooden ones of larger size topped with a small cupola
bearing a gilded cosmic cross.
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