Parvise

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File:Basilica San Pietro din Roma16.jpg
Colonnade of St. Peter's Square

Template:Wikt Template:Redirect A parvis or parvise is the open space in front of and around a cathedral or church,Template:Sfn especially when surrounded by either colonnades or porticoes, as at St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.Template:Sfn It is thus a church-specific type of forecourt, front yard or apron.

EtymologyEdit

The term derives via Old French from the Latin paradisus meaning "paradise".Template:Sfn This in turn came via Ancient Greek from the Indo-European Aryan languages of ancient Iran, where it meant a walled enclosure or garden precinct with heavenly flowers planted by the Clercs (Clerics).Template:Cn

Parvis of St Paul's CathedralEdit

In London in the Middle Ages the Serjeants-at-law practised at the parvis of St Paul's Cathedral, where clients could seek their counsel. In the 14th century Geoffrey Chaucer referred to "A sergeant of the laws ware and wise/ That often hadde yben at the paruTemplate:Efnis...".Template:Sfn Later, ecclesiastical courts developed at Doctors' Commons on the same site.

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Late English useEdit

File:Cirencester StJohnBaptistChurch.jpg
Three-storey Perpendicular Gothic porch of Church of St. John the Baptist, Cirencester: an elaborate example of what in later English usage has been called a parvise

In England the term was much later used to mean a room over the porch of a church. The architectural historians John Fleming, Hugh Honour and Nikolaus Pevsner,Template:Sfn and the theologians Frank Cross and Elizabeth Livingstone all say this usage is wrong. The Oxford English Dictionary records this use as being "historical", and current in the middle of the 19th century.Template:Sfn It may stem from an earlier misuse in F. Blomefield's book Norfolk, published in 1744.Template:Sfn

Examples of English parvisesEdit

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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SourcesEdit

Further readingEdit

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