User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
cellaItalian
Etymology
cella.Noun
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
- For the spanish town, see: Cella, Spain
- Naos redirects here. For other meanings, see naos (disambiguation).
Greek and Roman temples
In Ancient Greek and
Roman
temples the cella is a room at the centre of the building,
usually containing a cult image or
statue (execrated by Early Christians as an "idol") representing the
particular deity venerated in the temple. In addition the cella may
contain a table or plinth
to receive votive
offerings such as votive
statues, precious and semi-precious stones, helmets, spear and arrow heads, and swords. The accumulated offerings
made Greek and Roman temples virtual treasuries, and many of them
were indeed used as treasuries during antiquity.
The cella is typically a simple, windowless,
rectangular room with a door or open entrance at the front behind a
colonnaded portico facade. In larger
temples, the cella was typically divided by two colonnades into a central
nave flanked by two
aisles. A cella may also
contain an adyton, an
inner area restricted to access by the priests—in religions that
had a consecrated priesthood—or by the temple guard
With very few exceptions Greek buildings were of
a peripteral design
that placed the cella in the center of the plan, such as the
Parthenon
and the Temple
of Apollo at Paestum. The Romans favoured pseudoperipteral
buildings with a portico
offsetting the cella to the rear. The pseudoperipteral plan uses
engaged
columns embedded along the side and rear walls of the cella. The
Temple of Venus and Roma built by Hadrian in Rome had two cellae
arranged back-to-back enclosed by a single outer peristyle.
Etruscan temples
According to Vitruvius (Book IV.7), the Etruscan type of temples (as, for example, at Portonaccio near Veio) had three cellae, side by side, conjoined by a double row of columns on the facade. This is an entirely new setup with respect to the other types of constructions found in Etruria and the Tyrrhenian side of Italy, which have one cell with or without columns, as seen in Greece and the Orient.Christian churches
In early Christian and Byzantine architecture, the cella is an area at the centre of the church reserved for performing the liturgy.In later periods a small chapel or monk's cell was also called a
cella.
References
- Vitruvius, De architectura, Book IV. ch 7 : translation, plans and reconstructions of Tuscan cellae.
cella in Czech: Cella
cella in German: Cella
cella in Esperanto: Ţela
cella in Italian: Cella (architettura)
cella in Dutch: Cella
cella in Polish: Naos
cella in Russian: Целла
cella in Serbian: Наос
cella in Swedish: Cella