The Plans
To analyze a plan, it must be of good quality. You can't pick up a plan from a brochure or an old book! If you compare several plans of the same cathedral, you'll often notice differences in measurements. In the case of Amiens, I found a difference of over three meters in the length of the transept!
In addition to the problem of measurements, there's another problem: the precision with which the buildings are executed. As you will see, some cathedrals suffer from irregularities and asymmetries. The work is splendid, inspired and perfectly executed, but the layouts are sometimes empirical. The eye doesn't see these details, only the plans reveal them. It's important to understand that, for the builder, the monument's stability, overall harmony and quality of detail were paramount. It's important to understand that a master builder couldn't transcribe a layout on the ground and then sit back and build. As work progressed, the cathedral's footprint gradually emerged. This took years.
Construction began with the chevet, the layout with the transept crossing. To find each enclosure, each proportion, we had to base ourselves on built elements. I'm talking about masonry elements, columns that had already been erected. You had to find the axes, the exact centers, an operation that's only easy on a computer or a drawing board. This difficulty is probably at the root of the inaccuracies that litter floor plans.
Fortunately, Gothic techniques offered great freedom of execution. While masonry blocks were "standardized" in the quarry, each stone used for an arch or vault could be adjusted on site. This meant that slight irregularities between spans were of only relative importance. In the worst case, all that was needed to correct the discrepancy was to modify the profile of the arch (see glossary) or the templates. In most cases, the offset was invisible to the eye and had no structural impact.
In the Middle Ages, intention and concreteness took precedence over strict numerical precision, which admittedly made no sense at the time.
The question then arises: how can we justify work based on approximate plans and involving buildings that are sometimes irregular? Methodologically, the position would be untenable, but recently the situation has changed. Thanks in no small part to the work of Professor Andrew Tallon, laser scanning techniques have made it possible to digitize a number of French cathedrals, and a new analysis based on these documents has confirmed my work in principle. The gamble of placing logic and intention above formal precision was the right one.

Leica Geosystems ScanStation C10 - Credit: Andrew Tallon - CC-BY 3.0

Modeling Chartres Cathedral using laser scanning (Leica-geosystems)

Scan of the abbey church of Saint Denis - Credit: Andrew Tallon - CC-BY 3.0
It should be noted, however, that even a scan accurate to a few millimetres does not erase the building's irregularities. The problem remains the same. The compass reveals the idea, but the digital result is lost in a cloud of meaningless data. We need to be able to correlate the information and interpolate it for statistical processing. For the time being, these processing algorithms, the idea itself, do not exist. While the availability of metric data is invaluable, traditional compass-based analysis is still the order of the day.
I would like to point out that the plans used on this site are only intended to illustrate and explain. I have redesigned some of them for greater clarity. I invite anyone wishing to reproduce or verify the work shown as an example to use only plans produced by laser scanning.
Commentaires
David Orbach (Architecte - Ingénieur structure - Enseignant à l’Université Populaire de Caen de Michel Onfray)
Jean-Michel Mathonière - Directeur éditorial chez Éditions Dervy - Historien des compagnonnages
Cathédraloscope
Site : lescathedrales.wordpress.com
Jean-Pierre Bourcier - Spécialiste du trait
Olivier Petit - Médiéviste
Jean-François Lecompte - écrivain
Luciano Xavier - Maquettiste en cathédrales gothiques
Arcana Les Mystères du Monde - Youtubeur (Chaine Arcana)
troph38
Jean-François Lecompte - écrivain
John Brown
Armand Priest (ESTP) - Commentaire Facebook
Anthony CRESTIN - La géométrie et le mythe
Joël Supéry - Site tuskaland.com
Asso Fermat-Science
M. Moldovan
Catherine Leschenne




Dominique Gury