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 Basilica
 
The Latin word basilica (derived from Greek, Basiliké Stoà, Royal Stoa), was originally used to describe a Roman public building (as in Greece, mainly a tribunal), usually located at the center of a Roman town (forum). In Hellenistic cities, public basilicas appeared in the 2nd century BC.

After the Roman Empire became officially Christian, the term came by extension to refer to a large and important church that has been given special ceremonial rites by the Pope. Thus the word retains two senses today, one architectural and the other ecclesiastical.

St. Peter’s Basilica, Rome, Italy
St. Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy
(larger image)

Architecture

The dome of San Pietro in Vaticano (Saint Peter’s Basilica) in Rome, seen from the roof of Engelsburg
The dome of San Pietro in Vaticano (Saint Peter’s Basilica) in Rome, seen from the roof of Engelsburg
(larger image)
In architecture, the Roman basilica was a large roofed hall erected for transacting business and disposing of legal matters. Such buildings usually contained interior colonnades that divided the space, giving aisles or arcaded spaces at one or both sides, with an apse at one end (or less often at each end), where the magistrates sat, often on a slightly raised dais. The central aisle tended to be wide and was higher than the flanking aisles, so that light could penetrate through the clerestory windows.

The oldest known basilica, the Basilica Porcia, was built in Rome in 184 BC by Cato the Elder during the time he was censor. Other early examples include the one at Pompeii (late 2nd century BC).

Probably the most splendid Roman basilica is the one constructed for traditional purposes during the reign of the pagan emperor Maxentius and finished by Constantine the Great after 313. As early as the time of Augustus, a public basilica for transacting business had been part of any settlement that considered itself a city, used like the late medieval covered markethouses of northern Europe (where the meeting room, for lack of urban space, was set above the arcades).

Basilicas in the Roman Forum

  • Basilica Porcia: first basilica built in Rome (184 BC), erected on the personal initiative and financing of the censor Marchus Porcius Cato as an official building for the tribunes of the plebs
  • Aemilian Basilica, built by the censor Aemilius Lepidus in 179 BC
  • Julian Basilica, completed by Augustus
  • Basilica Opimia, erected probably by the consul Lucius Opimius in 121 BC, at the same time that he restored the temple of Concord (Platner, Ashby 1929)
  • Basilica Sempronia, built by the censor Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus in 169 BC
  • Basilica of Maxentius and Constantine (308 - after 313)

Palace basilicas

In the early Imperial period, a basilica for large audiences also became a feature in the palaces. In the 3rd century AD, the governing elite appeared less easily in the forums. "They now tended to dominate their cities from opulent palaces and country villas, set a little apart from traditional centers of public life. Rather than retreats from public life, however, these residences were the forum made private." (Peter Brown, in Paul Veyne, 1987). Seated in the tribune of his basilica the great man would meet his dependent clientes early every morning.

A private basilica excavated at Bulla Regia (Tunisia), in the "House of the Hunt," dates from the first half of the 4th century. Its reception or audience hall is a long rectangular nave-like space, flanked by dependent rooms that mostly also open into one another, ending in a circular apse, with matching transept spaces. The "crossing" of the two axes was emphasized with clustered columns.

Christianising the Roman basilica

In the 4th century, Christians were prepared to build larger and more handsome edifices for worship than the furtive meeting places they had been using. Architectural formulas for temples were unsuitable, not simply for their pagan associations, but because pagan cult and sacrifices occurred outdoors under the open sky in the sight of the gods, with the temple, housing the cult figures and the treasury, as a backdrop. The usable model at hand, when Constantine wanted to memorialize his imperial piety, was the familiar conventional architecture of the basilicas . These had a center nave with one aisle at each side and an apse at one end: on this raised platform sat the bishop and priests. Constantine built a basilica of this type in his palace complex at Trier, later very easily adopted for use as a church. It is a long rectangle two stories high, with ranks of arch-headed windows one above the other, without aisles (no mercantile exchange in this imperial basilica) and at the far end, beyond a huge arch, the apse in which Constantine held state. Exchange the throne for an altar, as was done at Trier, and you had a church. Basilicas of this type were built not only in Western Europe but in Greece, Syria, Egypt, and Palestine. Good early examples of the architectural basilica are the Church of the Nativity at Bethlehem (6th century), the church of St Elias at Thessalonica (5th century), and the two great basilicas at Ravenna.

The first basilicas with transepts were built under the orders of Emperor Constantine, both in Rome and his "New Rome," Constantinople:

"Around 380, Gregory Nazianzen, describing the Constantinian Church of the Holy Apostles at Constantinople, was the first to point out its resemblance to a cross. Because the cult of the cross was spreading at about the same time, this comparison met with stunning successs." (Yvon Thébert, in Veyne, 1987)
Notre-Dame de Québec Basilica-Cathedral in Quebec was the first church in North America to be elevated to the rank of minor Basilica. Thus a Christian symbolic theme was applied quite naturally to form borrowed from civil semi-public precedents. In the later 4th century other Christian basilicas were built in Rome: Santa Sabina, Basilica of St John Lateran and St Paul's-outside-the-Walls (4th century), and later San Clemente (6th century).The cloister of the St. John Lateran monastery, with a cosmatesque decoration.
The cloister of the St. John Lateran monastery, with a cosmatesque decoration.
(larger image)
A cloister (from Latin claustrum) is a part of cathedral, monastic and abbey architecture. A cloister consists usually of four corridors, with a courtyard or garth in the middle. It is intended to be both covered from the rain, but open to the air. The attachment of a cloister to a Cathedral church usually indicates that it is (or was once) a monastic foundation.

A Christian basilica of the 4th or 5th century stood behind its entirely enclosed forecourt ringed with a colonnade or arcade, like the stoa or peristyle that was its ancestor or like the cloister that was its descendant. This forecourt was entered from outside through a range of buildings along the public street. This was the architectural groundplan of St Peter's Basilica in Rome, until first the forecourt, then all of it was swept away in the 15th century to make way for a great modern church on a new plan.

In most basilicas the central nave is taller than the aisles, forming a row of windows called a clerestory. Some basilicas in the Caucasus, particularly those of Georgia and Armenia, have a central nave only slightly higher than the two aisles and a single pitched roof covering all three. The result is a much darker interior. This plan is known as the "oriental basilica."

Famous existing examples of churches constructed in the ancient basilica style include:

  • The church at Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai
  • The Basilica of San Vitale in Ravenna.
Gradually in the early Middle Ages there emerged the massive Romanesque churches, which still retained the fundamental plan of the basilica.

Ecclesiastical basilica

St. Stephen’s Basilica, Budapest
St. Stephen’s Basilica, Budapest
(larger image)
The Early Christian purpose-built basilica was the cathedral basilica of the bishop, on the model of the semi-public secular basilicas, and its growth in size and importance signalled the gradual transfer of civic power into episcopal hands, underway in the fifth century. Basilicas in this sense are divided into classes, the major ("greater"), and the minor basilicas, i.e., three other patriarchal and several pontifical minor basilicas in Italy, and over 1,400 lesser basilicas on all continents.

As of March 26, 2006, there were no less than 1,476 basilicas, of which the majority are in Europe (526 in Italy alone, including all those of elevated status; 166 in France; 96 in Poland; 94 in Spain; 69 in Germany; 27 in Austria; 23 in Belgium; 13 in the Czech Republic; 12 in Hungary; 11 in the Netherlands; and less than ten in many other countries), many in the Americas (58 in the U.S.; 47 in Brazil; 41 in Argentina; 27 in Mexico; 25 in Colombia; 21 in Canada; 13 in Venezuela; 12 in Peru; etc), and fewer in Asia (14 in India; 12 in the Philippines; nine in Israel; and some other countries one or two), Africa (several countries one or two) and Australasia (Australia 4 and Guam one).

The privileges attached to the status of basilica, which is conferred by Papal Brief, include a certain precedence before other churches, the right of the conopaeum (a baldachin resembling an umbrella; also called umbraculum, ombrellino, papilio, sinicchio, etc.) and the bell (tintinnabulum), which are carried side by side in procession at the head of the clergy on state occasions, and the cappa magna which is worn by the canons or secular members of the collegiate chapter when assisting at the Divine Office.

Churches designated as patriarchal basilicas, in particular, possess a papal throne and a papal high altar from which no one may celebrate Mass without the pope's permission.

Numerous basilicas are notable shrines, often even receiving significant pilgrimage, especially among the many that were built above a Confession (Burial Place of a Martyr).

Major basilicas

To this class belong just four great Papal churches of Rome, which among other distinctions have a special "holy door" and to which a visit is always prescribed as one of the conditions for gaining the Roman Jubilee. Pope Benedict XVI renamed these basilicas from Patriarchal to Papal.
  • St. John Lateran is the cathedral of the Bishop of Rome: the Pope and hence is the only one called archbasilica (full name: Patriachal Archbasilica of the Most Holy Saviour, St. John the Baptist and St. John the Evangelist at the Lateran). It is also called the Lateran basilica.

    St. Peter's Basilica is symbolically assigned to the Patriarch of Constantinople, hence the former use of Greek Rite deacons at Papal Masses in St. Peter's. It is also known as the Vatican basilica.

  • St. Paul outside the Walls is assigned to the Patriarch of Alexandria. It is also known as the Ostian basilica.
  • St. Mary Major is assigned to the Patriarch of Antioch. It is also called the Liberian basilica.
The late Baroque façade of the Basilica of St. John Lateran was completed by Alessandro Galilei in 1735 after winning a competition for the design.
The late Baroque façade of the Basilica of St. John Lateran was completed by Alessandro Galilei in 1735 after winning a competition for the design.
(larger image)
The major basilicas form a class that outranks all other churches in precedence, even other papal churches. However, all other basilicas, the so-called "minor basilicas," do not, as such, form a single class. Rather they belong to different classes, most of which also contain non-basilicas of equal rank; for example, within each diocese, the bishop's cathedral takes precedence over all (other) basilicas. Thus after the major basilicas come the primatial churches, the metropolitan, other (e.g. suffragan) cathedrals or co-cathedrals, collegiate churches etc.

Patriarchal basilicas in Rome

The four major basilicas above and the minor basilica of St Lawrence outside the Walls (representing the Patriarch of Jerusalem, and without a holy door) are collectively called the patriarchal basilicas. This group of five is representative of the great ecclesiastical provinces of the world symbolically united in the heart of Christendom (see Pentarchy). It is somewhat curious that St. Lawrence's wasn't at some point simply included in the above class of Major patriarchal basilicas and given a holy door, though this is probably due to Jerusalem being the last of the five great patriarchates to be elevated to that position. On 11th December 2006 it was announced that Pope Benedict XVI had decided they would henceforth be officially known as the Papal Basilicas.

Pontifical "minor" basilicas in the rest of Italy

Two more Italian churches are nominally papal patriarchal basilicas:
  • Patriarchal Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi
  • Patriarchal Basilica of St. Mary of the Angels in Portiuncola
Another is the Patriarchal Cathedral Basilica of St. Mark in Venice, which has its own patriarch. Though the designation of St. Mark's makes sense given that Venice has its own (purely ceremonial) patriarch, why the former two are particularly "patriarchal" instead of merely pontifical, like the ones listed below, is unexplained except as a mere matter of precedence.

Next in rank are four pontifical basilicas (so in name also papal), in Italy:

  • Pontifical Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary of Pompei
  • Pontifical Basilica of Saint Nicholas in Bari
  • Pontifical Basilica of Saint Anthony in Padua
  • Pontifical Basilica of the Holy House at Loreto

Other minor basilicas

The lesser minor basilicas are the vast majority, including some cathedrals, many technically parish churches, some shrines, some abbatial or conventual churches. Some oratories, semi-private places of worship, have been raised to the status of minor basilica, such as Saint Joseph's Oratory in Canada.

Cathedral Basilica of Notre-Dame de Québec in Quebec City was the first basilica in North America, designated by Pope Pius IX in 1874. St. Adalbert's Basilica in Buffalo, New York was the first Basilica in the United States of America in 1907 by Pope Pius X. In Colombia, the Las Lajas Cathedral has been a minor basilica since 1954. Basilica of Our Lady of Peace of Yamoussoukro, in Cote d'Ivoire (West Africa) is reported slightly larger than St Peter's Basilica.

There has been a pronounced tendency of late years to add to their number. In 1960, Pope John XXIII even declared Generalissimo Franco's grandiose tomb in the monumental Valley of the Fallen near Madrid a basilica. In 1961, Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo, in Carmel, California (USA) was designated as a Minor Basilica by Pope John XXIII.

References

  • Basilica Plan Churches
  • Basilica Papale di San Giovanni in Laterano - Arcibasilica del SS.mo Salvatore e dei Santi Giovanni Battista ed Evangelista al Laterano - Cattedrale di Roma (Annuario Pontificio 2007, ISBN 98-88-209-7908-9, p. 1332
  • Basilica Papale di San Pietro in Vaticano (Annuario Pontificio 2007, ISBN 98-88-209-7908-9, p. 1330)
  • Basilica Papale di San Paolo fuori le mura (Annuario Pontificio 2007, ISBN 98-88-209-7908-9, p. 1333)
  • Basilica Papale di Santa Maria Maggiore (Annuario Pontificio 2007, ISBN 98-88-209-7908-9, p. 1334)
  • gcatholic.com

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"Basilica"  < http://timothyministries.org/theologicaldictionary/references.aspx?theword=basilica >   Retrieved: Sep 9 2010 5:47AM
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Short Description
The Latin word basilica (derived from Greek, Basiliké Stoà, Royal Stoa), was originally used to describe a Roman public building (as in Greece, mainly a tribunal), usually located at the center of a Roman town (forum). In Hellenistic cities, public basilicas appeared in the 2nd century BC. ... more
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