자료: Wikipedia, http://www.answers.com/topic/transept
Occasionally, the basilicas and the church and cathedralplanning that descended from them were built without transepts; sometimes the transepts were reduced to matched chapels. More often the transepts extended well beyond the sides of the rest of the building, forming the shape of a cross. This design is called a "Latin cross" ground plan and these extensions are known as the arms of the transept. A "Greek cross" ground plan, with all four extensions the same length, produces a central-plan structure with consequences for theliturgy.[clarification needed]
When churches have only one transept, as at Pershore Abbey, there is generally a historical disaster, fire, war or funding problem, to explain the anomaly. At Beauvais only the chevet and transepts stand; the nave of the cathedral was never completed after a collapse of the daring high vaulting in 1284. At St. Vitus Cathedral, Prague, only the choir and part of a southern transept were completed until a renewed building campaign in the 19th century.
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Cathedral ground plan
Shaded area: nave
Darker shading: crossing
Modified from Transept.png at Wikipedia Commons.
Original author: Lusitania Date: 2005
Note: This is not an exact representation of the proportions or technical elements
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