Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
Тёплый дом новгородского архиепископа : система отопления во Владычной палате 1433 года. / Antipov, Ilya Vladimirovich; Yakovlev, Dmitriy Evgeniyevich.
в: Актуальные проблемы теории и истории искусства, Том 9, 2019, стр. 446-457.Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Тёплый дом новгородского архиепископа
T2 - система отопления во Владычной палате 1433 года
AU - Antipov, Ilya Vladimirovich
AU - Yakovlev, Dmitriy Evgeniyevich
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2019 Saint Petersburg State University. All rights reserved. Copyright: Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - In 1433 Archbishop Evfimii II commissioned the construction of a new stone building in the Archbishop’s Yard in Novgorod. This year German masters erected so-called Vladychny (Faceted) Palace, a complex which consists of three parts. The main part of this building has survived, in 2012 the research and restoration works on the monument were completed. There are rooms for different purposes (residential, economic etc.) in the structure of the building. Most halls and passageways of the palace were not heated, but some rooms had a heating system. In total, there were three furnaces in the Vladychny (Faceted) Palace, which respectively heated three or four rooms. The furnaces had the same design, only the furnace in the north-western part of the chamber was somewhat different, since it was not placed on a vaulted base, like the rest of the furnaces, but directly on the boulder foundation. Heating worked on the principle of a hypocaust system: before the start of the heating the openings that went into the room were covered with lids. At the first stage the boulders situated on the vault were heated. Then after burning wood and removing smoke, the chimney was blocked, and the holes above the boulders, on the contrary, opened. The hot air from the boulders heated the hall. The hypocaust system of the Faceted Palace existed till the 16th century, when its elements gradually began to be replaced by conventional furnaces; in the 17th century tiled stoves appeared there. The hypocaust heating system in the 13th–15th centuries was widespread in residential and public buildings, castles of the Baltic region. Before the construction of the Faceted Palace, this type of heating was not apparently used in Old Russia. The presence of furnaces under some halls allows us to approach the understanding of the purpose of certain premises of the building, and, accordingly, to understand more clearly the diversity of its functions, as well as to reveal some features of the building façade solution that appeared due to the construction of furnaces.
AB - In 1433 Archbishop Evfimii II commissioned the construction of a new stone building in the Archbishop’s Yard in Novgorod. This year German masters erected so-called Vladychny (Faceted) Palace, a complex which consists of three parts. The main part of this building has survived, in 2012 the research and restoration works on the monument were completed. There are rooms for different purposes (residential, economic etc.) in the structure of the building. Most halls and passageways of the palace were not heated, but some rooms had a heating system. In total, there were three furnaces in the Vladychny (Faceted) Palace, which respectively heated three or four rooms. The furnaces had the same design, only the furnace in the north-western part of the chamber was somewhat different, since it was not placed on a vaulted base, like the rest of the furnaces, but directly on the boulder foundation. Heating worked on the principle of a hypocaust system: before the start of the heating the openings that went into the room were covered with lids. At the first stage the boulders situated on the vault were heated. Then after burning wood and removing smoke, the chimney was blocked, and the holes above the boulders, on the contrary, opened. The hot air from the boulders heated the hall. The hypocaust system of the Faceted Palace existed till the 16th century, when its elements gradually began to be replaced by conventional furnaces; in the 17th century tiled stoves appeared there. The hypocaust heating system in the 13th–15th centuries was widespread in residential and public buildings, castles of the Baltic region. Before the construction of the Faceted Palace, this type of heating was not apparently used in Old Russia. The presence of furnaces under some halls allows us to approach the understanding of the purpose of certain premises of the building, and, accordingly, to understand more clearly the diversity of its functions, as well as to reveal some features of the building façade solution that appeared due to the construction of furnaces.
KW - Architecture of brick Gothic
KW - Heating system
KW - Novgorod the Great
KW - Old Russian architecture
KW - Stone civil buildings
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85086936975&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.18688/AA199-3-39
DO - 10.18688/AA199-3-39
M3 - статья
AN - SCOPUS:85086936975
VL - 9
SP - 446
EP - 457
JO - Актуальные проблемы теории и истории искусства
JF - Актуальные проблемы теории и истории искусства
SN - 2312-2129
ER -
ID: 51294679