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spire

 
(spīr) pronunciation
n.
  1. A top part or point that tapers upward; a pinnacle.
  2. A structure or formation, such as a steeple, that tapers to a point at the top.
  3. A slender, tapering part, such as a newly sprouting blade of grass.

v., spired, spir·ing, spires.

v.tr.
To furnish with a spire.

v.intr.
To rise and taper steeply.

[Middle English, from Old English spīr.]


spire2 (spīr) pronunciation
n.
    1. A spiral.
    2. A single turn of a spiral; a whorl.
  1. The area farthest from the aperture and nearest the apex on a coiled gastropod shell.

[Latin spīra, coil, from Greek speira.]


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Steeply pointed termination to a tower or roof. In Gothic architecture, the spire is a spectacular visual culmination of the building as well as a symbol of heavenly aspiration. The church spire originated in the 12th century as a simple, four-sided pyramidal roof capping a tower. Methods used to integrate an octagonal spire with a square tower below include broaches (sloping triangular sections of masonry added to the bottom of the four spire faces not coinciding with the tower sides), gabled dormers added to spire faces, and steep pinnacles (vertical ornaments of pyramidal or conical shape) added to tower corners. During the Decorated period (14th century) in England, a slender needle spire set in from the edge of the tower was popular; corner pinnacles and a low parapet around the tower's edge became customary. In the 20th century, architects tended to limit spires to rather elementary geometric shapes.

For more information on spire, visit Britannica.com.

Any slender pointed construction surmounting a building; generally a narrow octagonal pyramid set above a square tower.


spire, high, tapering structure crowning a tower and having a general pyramidal outline. The simplest spires were the steeply pitched timber roofs capping Romanesque towers and campaniles. In later Romanesque architecture the spire was commonly octagonal, topping a square tower. Transition between the two shapes was effected by filling each corner with a decorative pinnacle or a small turret. With Gothic development the spire became more elaborate. Generally the tower proper was capped by a parapet, behind which rose the stone spire, its edges finished with a molding and adorned with crockets. The corner pinnacles, with their niches, gables, and crockets, were often joined to the spire roof by flying arches. In France spires (called flèches) sometimes were placed over the two western towers of the cathedrals; at Chartres they are of two different periods, Romanesque and Gothic. In England the central tower of a cathedral often had a spire; at Lichfield one crowns each western tower as well. The ultimate elaboration in Gothic spires was attained with the addition of openwork tracery, as in the flamboyant example of Rouen (Tour de Beurre). The Germans, particularly, favored intricate openwork compositions, as at the cathedrals of Strasbourg (1015-1439) and Vienna (15th cent.). England in the late 17th cent. gave the spire new form in the numerous churches that Sir Christopher Wren built for London after the great fire. These were either the roof type, with richly curved baroque outlines, or cupola compositions with such classical features as columns and pediments. St. Martin-in-the-Fields (1722-26), built by James Gibbs, illustrates the Georgian spire or steeple with its receding stages of classic architecture terminated by a steep pyramidal roof. It was an influential prototype for the slender, classical spires of American colonial churches.


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For a list of words related to spire, see:

  See crossword solutions for the clue Spire.
The spires of Uppsala cathedral in Sweden
Gothic spires. The 108-metre tall spires of Clermont-Ferrand Cathedral tower above the city
The Gothic spire of Antwerp Cathedral
The Gothic spire of Ulm Cathedral
The spire of Salisbury cathedral, 123 metres tall

A spire is a tapering conical or pyramidal structure on the top of a building, particularly a church tower. Etymologically, the word is derived from the Old English word spir, meaning a sprout, shoot, or stalk of grass.[1]

Currently, the largest spire to be part of the architecture of another building is the spire mounted on the recently completed Q1 residential tower on the Gold Coast in Australia.[citation needed]

Contents

General functions

Symbolically, spires have two functions. The first is to proclaim a martial power. A spire, with its reminiscence of the spear point, gives the impression of strength. The second is to reach up toward the skies.[2] The celestial and hopeful gesture of the spire is one reason for its association with religious buildings.[citation needed] A spire on a church or cathedral is not just a symbol of piety, but is often seen as a symbol of the wealth and prestige of the order, or patron who commissioned the building.

As an architectural ornament, spires are most consistently found on Christian churches, where they replace the steeple. Although any denomination may choose to use a spire instead of a steeple, the lack of a cross on the structure is more common in Roman Catholic and other pre-Reformation churches. The battlements of cathedrals featured multiple spires in the Gothic style (in imitation of the secular military fortress).

Spires are also common and notable as solo structure, in the way that obelisks are used. In the Modernist movements of the 20th century, office towers in the form of free-standing spires also began to be built. Some famous buildings, such as the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington, use the spire as a testimony of civic power and hope; in the case of this example, it is also a reference to Seattle's participation in aerospace. A 1,776-foot (541-m) "Freedom Tower" is a projected feature of the 9/11 Memorial in New York City, and is to be topped by a spire.

Gothic and neo-gothic spires

A spire declared the presence of the gothic church at a distance and advertised its connection to heaven. The tall, slender pyramidal twelfth-century spire on the south tower Chartres Catedral is one of the earliest spires. Openwork spires were an astounding architectural innovation, beginning with the early fourteenth-century spire at Freiburg cathedral, in which the pierced stonework was held together by iron cramps. The openwork spire, according to Robert Bork,[3] represents a "radical but logical extension of the Gothic tendency towards skeletal structure." The organic skeleton of Antoni Gaudi's phenomenal spires at the Sagrada Família in Barcelona represent an outgrowth of this Gothic tendency. Designed and begun by Gaudi in 1884, they were not completed until the 20th century.

In England, "spire" immediately brings to mind Salisbury Cathedral. Its 403-foot (123-m) spire, built between 1320 and 1380, is one of the tallest of the period anywhere in the world, and in its way is as remarkable as the Coliseum in Rome or the parthenon in Athens. A similar but slightly smaller spire was built at Leighton Buzzard in Bedfordshire, England, which indicates the popularity of the spire spreading across the country during this period. We will never know the true popularity of the medieval spire, as many more collapsed within a few years of building than ever survived to be recorded. In the United Kingdom spires generally tend to be reserved for ecclesiastical building, with the exception to this rule being the spire at Burghley House, built for Elizabeth I's Lord Chancellor in 1585.

In the early Renaissance the spire was not restricted to the United Kingdom: the fashion spread across Europe. In Antwerp the 123 m spire was the tallest structure in the low countries for over five centuries. Between 1221 and 1457 richly decorated open spires were built for the Cathedral of Burgos in Spain while at Ulm Cathedral in Germany the 529-foot (161-m) spire built in the imported French Gothic style between 1377 and 1417 ultimately failed.[4]

Interestingly, the Italians never really embraced the spire as an architectural feature, preferring the classical styles. The gothic style was a feature of Germanic northern Europe and was never to the Italian taste, and the few gothic buildings in Italy always seem incongruous.

The blend of the classical styles with a spire occurred much later. In 1822, in London, John Nash built All Souls' Church, Langham Place, a circular classical temple, with Ionic columns surmounted by a spire supported by Corinthian columns. Whether this is a happy marriage of styles or a rough admixture is a question of individual taste.

During the 19th century the Gothic revival knew no bounds. With advances in technology, steel production, and building techniques the spire enjoyed an unprecedented surge through architecture, Cologne Cathedral's famous spires, designed centuries earlier, were finally completed in this era.

Spires have never really fallen out of fashion. In the twentieth century reinforced concrete offered new possibilities for openwork spires.

Traditional types of spires

  • Conical stone spires: These are usually found on circular towers and turrets, usually of small diameter.
  • Masonry spires: These are found on medieval and revival churches and cathedrals, generally with towers that are square in plan. While masonry spires on a tower of small plan may be pyramidal, spires on towers of large plan are generally octagonal. The spire is supported on stone squinches which span the corners of the tower, making an octagonal plan. The spire of Salisbury Cathedral is of this type and is the tallest masonry spire in the world, remaining substantially intact since the 13th century. Other spires of this sort include the south spire of Chartres Cathedral, and the spires of Norwich Cathedral, Chichester Cathedral and Oxford Cathedral.
  • Openwork spires: These spires are constructed of a network of stone tracery, which, being considerably lighter than a masonry spire, can be built to greater heights. Many famous tall spires are of this type, including the spires of Strasbourg Cathedral, Ulm Minster, Vienna Cathedral, Prague Cathedral, Burgos Cathedral and the twin spires of Cologne Cathedral.
  • Complex spires: These are stone spires that combine both masonry and openwork elements. Some such spires were constructed in the Gothic style, such as the north spire of Chartres Cathedral. They became increasingly common in Baroque architecture, and are a feature of Christopher Wren's churches.
  • Clad spires: These are constructed with a wooden frame, often standing on a tower of brick or stone construction, but also occurring on wooden towers in countries where wooden buildings are prevalent. They are often clad in metal, such as copper or lead. They may also be tiled or shingled.
Clad spires can take a variety of shapes. These include:
Pyramidal spires, which may be of low profile, rising to a height not much greater than its width, or, more rarely, of high profile.
Rhenish helm spires: This is a four-sided spire which rises,, not from a horizontal base but from between four high steep gables, rising from the four sides of the tower. Each of the sections of the spire is trapezoid in shape, rising with increasing width from the corners of the tower to the top of the gables, to meet the other sides, then rising in pyramidal form to the apex.
Broached spires: These are octagonal spires sitting on a square tower, with a sections of spire rising from each corner of the tower, and bridging the spaces between the corners and four of the sides.
Bell-shaped spires: These spires, sometimes square in plan, occur mostly in Northern, Alpine and Eastern Europe, where they occur alternately with onion-shaped domes.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Online Etymology Dictionary
  2. ^ Robert Odell Bork, Great Spires: Skyscrapers of the New Jerusalem, 2003, explores the complex layering of religious and political significance in spires.
  3. ^ Robert Bork, "Into Thin Air: France, Germany, and the Invention of the Openwork Spire" The Art Bulletin 85.1 (March 2003, pp. 25-53), p 25.
  4. ^ The present spire at Ulm is neo-Gothic.

Translations:

Spire

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Dansk (Danish)
1.
n. - spir, spidst kirketårn, top, spids, tinde
v. tr. - forsyne med spir
v. intr. - spire, løbe op, skyde op

2.
n. - spiral, vinding

Nederlands (Dutch)
torenspits

Français (French)
1.
n. - (Archit) flèche, pointe
v. tr. - munir d'une pointe, pointer
v. intr. - pointer

2.
n. - spirale

Deutsch (German)
1.
n. - Turmspitze
v. - spitz zulaufen (lassen)

2.
n. - Spirale

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (αρχιτ.) βέλος (μυτερή κορυφή πύργου), περιέλιξη, σπιράλ
v. - χτίζω οβελίσκο

Italiano (Italian)
guglia

Português (Portuguese)
n. - torre da igreja (f), cone (m)
v. - adelgaçar

Русский (Russian)
росток, острие, язык пламени, шпиль, макушка, остроконечная вершина

Español (Spanish)
1.
n. - cima, cúspide, ápice
v. tr. - rematar en punta
v. intr. - elevarse

2.
n. - espiral

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - tornspira, spira, spets, topp, vindling, slinga, bukt
v. - smalna uppåt, skjuta upp, spira, gro

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
1. 尖塔, 锥形体, 尖顶, 幼叶, 幼苗, 给...加塔尖, 塔状矗立, 发芽, 耸立

2. 螺旋, 螺线的一圈, 螺线, 螺旋部, 螺塔

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
1.
n. - 螺旋, 螺線的一圈, 螺線, 螺旋部, 螺塔

2.
n. - 尖塔, 錐形體, 尖頂, 幼葉, 幼苗
v. tr. - 給...加塔尖
v. intr. - 塔狀矗立, 發芽, 聳立

한국어 (Korean)
1.
n. - 뾰족탑, (풀의) 어린 싹, (산의) 정상
v. tr. - ~에 뾰족탑을 달다, 싹트게 하다, 늘이다
v. intr. - 높이 치솟다, 돌출하다, 쑥 내밀다

2.
n. - 나선, 고둥 등의 돌돌 말린 껍데기, 나탑 (권패의 윗 부분)

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - とがり屋根, 尖塔, 円すい形の物, 細い葉
v. - 突き出る

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) قمه, ذروة, الطرف المدبب في برج كنيسه (فعل) صعد و هبط لولبيا‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮צריח, מבנה חרוטי, מגדל-מחט‬
v. tr. - ‮בנה מגדל מחודד‬
v. intr. - ‮התרומם לגובה, עלה, צמח‬
n. - ‮צורה שבלולית‬


 
 
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American Heritage Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture & Construction. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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