Tuesday, 26 May 2009

Rood or rude

 



A rood is a representation of the cross on which Jesus died and the term is usually used to refer to a cross erected at the entry to the chancel in a church. A rood screen is a common feature in late medieval parish church architecture. It is typically an ornate screen, constructed of wood, stone or, very occasionally, wrought iron.

Rude means impolite, crude, ill-mannered, tending towards the pornographic, lacking in refinement or socially incorrect.



In a blog posting the other day I showed these pictures. The carvings are to be found on the rood screen in the Cathedral at Dunblane. A rood screen is not normally rude as well!
 

3 comments:

  1. {ooops-as I hang my head} Thank you, John...for correcting me and enlightening my vocabulary :o).

    These are beautiful photos.

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  2. I loved this. I just recently read about a rood-screen, in the last of the Borrowers books by Mary Norton (The Borrowers Avenged). In this book, a Borrowers family is living in an old church, and one of them paints his face brown to be able to hide among the carved wooden figures on the rood-screen and sit still and pretend he is one of them. (In case someone does not know, borrowers are a kind of very small people, just about that size...)

    Here's a quote:
    "It was indeed a wonderful feat of carving, this rood-screen which divided the chancel from the nave. It rose from the floor at either side, with a wide arch in the middle. --- The background (if anything so frail-looking could be called a background) was a delicate lattice of leaves and flowers, from among which peered a myriad little forms and faces: some human, some angelic, others devilish."

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  3. Wonderful, Dawn Treader - thank you very much!

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