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  2. Flying buttress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_buttress

    Arching above a side aisle roof, flying buttresses support the main vault of St. Mary's Church, in Lübeck, Germany.. The flying buttress (arc-boutant, arch buttress) is a specific form of buttress composed of a ramping arch that extends from the upper portion of a wall to a pier of great mass, in order to convey to the ground the lateral forces that push a wall outwards, which are forces that ...

  3. Chartres Cathedral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chartres_Cathedral

    The building's exterior is dominated by heavy flying buttresses which allowed the architects to increase the window size significantly, while the west end is dominated by two contrasting spires – a 105-metre (349 ft) plain pyramid completed around 1160 and the 113-metre (377 ft) Flamboyant (late Gothic) spire on top of an older tower. Its ...

  4. Buttress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buttress

    In addition to flying and ordinary buttresses, brick and masonry buttresses that support wall corners can be classified according to their ground plan. A clasping or clamped buttress has an L-shaped ground plan surrounding the corner, an angled buttress has two buttresses meeting at the corner, a setback buttress is similar to an angled buttress but the buttresses are set back from the corner ...

  5. History of medieval Arabic and Western European domes

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_medieval_Arabic...

    It was covered on the exterior by a cylindrical or polygonal drum and timber roof. The exterior drum was likely polygonal, with eight or sixteen sides, and had two levels of dwarf galleries beneath a cornice row of hanging arches. Evidence remains in the building's eastern corner towers of flying buttresses extending diagonally to the drum. The ...

  6. Mounted search and rescue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mounted_search_and_rescue

    A search and rescue horse is a horse trained and used to perform mounted search and rescue. In many cases, the horse is simply a means of transportation for a SAR responder. In other cases, the horse is a full member of the SAR field team. Like a SAR dog, a SAR horse can be trained to search for lost persons, using its keen senses of hearing ...

  7. Redwings Horse Sanctuary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redwings_Horse_Sanctuary

    Redwings is now the largest horse charity in the UK. [3] Redwings provides a safe home for rescued horses, ponies, donkeys and mules who have been neglected and ill-treated, such as those rescued from Spindles Farm in 2008, the largest case of equine animal cruelty ever seen in the UK at the time.

  8. French Romanesque architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Romanesque_architecture

    Distinctive features of French Romanesque architecture include thick walls with small windows, rounded arches; a long nave covered with barrel vaults; and the use of the groin vault at the intersection of two barrel vaults, all supported by massive columns; a level of tribunes above the galleries on the ground floor, and small windows above the ...

  9. The Horse Trust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Horse_Trust

    The Horse Trust (formerly The Home of Rest for Horses until September 2006) is an equine charity in the United Kingdom, [1] based at Speen near Princes Risborough in Buckinghamshire. It was founded in 1886 and is the oldest equine charity in the world. It was set up to help the working horses in London. Upon the decline of the working horse in ...