- Rood
:"rood" is also the Dutch word for "
red "."Rood has several distinct meanings, all derived from the same basicetymology ."Rood" is an archaic word for "pole", from Anglo-Saxon rōd "pole", specifically "
crucifix ", fromProto-Germanic "*rodo", cognate toOld Saxon "rōda",Old High German "ruoda" "rod"; the relation of "rood" to "rod", from Anglo-Saxon "rodd" "pole" is unclear; the latter was perhaps influenced byOld Norse "rudda" "club").Measurement of area or length
Specifically, rood is an Old
English unit of area, equal to quarter of anacre , i.e. 10 890 square feet or 1011.7141056 m² (for the internationalinch ) or about 10.1are . A rectangular area with edges of onefurlong and one rod respectively is one rood, as is an area consisting of 40 perches (square rods.) The rood was an important measure insurveying on account of its easy conversion to acres. When referring to areas, rod may be found in old documents and has exactly the same meaning as rood. [A [http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0272%2FKC%2FKCAR%2F6%2F2;recurse=1 catalogue of old documents] with many areas quoted as "acres rods perches" including [http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0272%2FKC%2FKCAR%2FMON%2F38 this one] as recent as 1907.]It is confusingly called an acre in some ancient contexts.Fact|date=August 2008
"Rood" also refers to a British unit of linear measure between 16.5 and 24 feet. It is related to the German Rute (12.36 to 12.47 feet) and Denmark's rode (12.34 feet) [Herbert Arthur Klein. (1988). "The Science of Measurement: A Historical Survey". New York: Dover. A corrected republication of "The World of Measurements: Masterpieces, Mysteries and Muddles of Metrology" published by Simon & Schuster in 1974 and by George Allen & Unwin in 1975. 65–66.]
Crucifix or cross
In the meaning "
crucifix ", rood usually refers to a sculpture or painting of the cross withChrist hanging on it. More precisely, "the Rood" refers to the Cross, the specific wooden cross used in Christ's crucifixion. The word remains in use in some names, such asHolyrood Palace and the Anglo-Saxon poem "The Dream of the Rood". The phrase "by the rood" was used inswearing , e.g. "No, by the rood, not so" inShakespeare ’s "Hamlet (Act 3, Scene 4).In
church architecture arood screen is a wooden or stonescreen , usually separating thechancel orchoir from thenave . The screen may be elaborately carved and was often richly painted and gilded. It supported a large cross or crucifix (the rood), sometimes with attendant figures. Rood screens are not unique to Britain: they are found in Christian churches in many parts of Europe; they are the Western equivalent of the Byzantinetemplon beam , which developed into theEastern Orthodox iconostasis . Some rood screens incorporate a rood loft, a narrow gallery which could be used by singers or musicians. An alternative type of screen is thePulpitum , as seen inExeter Cathedral , which is near the main altar of the church.The rood itself provided a focus for worship, most especially in
Holy Week , when worship was highly elaborate. DuringLent the rood was veiled; onPalm Sunday it was revealed before the procession of palms and the congregation knelt before it. The whole Passion story would then be read from the rood loft, at the foot of thecrucifix , by three ministers.No original medieval rood now survives in a church in the
United Kingdom [ Eamon Duffy, "The Stripping of the Altars (Yale 1992) ] . Most were deliberately destroyed as acts of iconoclasm during theEnglish Reformation and theEnglish Civil War , when many rood screens were also removed. Today, in many British churches, the rood stair which gave access to the gallery is often the only remaining sign of the former rood screen and rood loft.The Charlton-on-Otmoor Garland
A unique rood exists at St Mary's Church, Charlton-on-Otmoor, near
Oxford , England, where a large wooden cross, solidly covered in greenery, stands on the 16th-century rood screen, said byNikolaus Pevsner to be the finest inOxfordshire . The cross is redecorated twice a year, on1 May and19 September (the patronal festival, on the Julian Calendar), when children from the local primary school, carrying small crosses decorated with flowers, bring a long, flower-decorated, rope-like garland. The cross is dressed or redecorated with locally obtained box box foliage. The rope-like garland is hung across the rood screen during the "May Garland Service".An engraving from 1823 shows the dressed rood cross as a more open, foliage-covered framework, similar to certain types of
corn dolly , with a smaller attendant figure of similar appearance.Folklorist s have commented on the garlands' resemblance to human figures and noted that they replaced statues of St Mary and St James which had stood on the rood screen until they were destroyed during the Reformation. Until the 1850s, the larger garland was carried in aMay Day procession, accompanied bymorris dance rs, to the formerBenedictine priory at Studley (as the statue of St Mary had been until the Reformation). Meanwhile the women of the village used to carry the smaller garland through Charlton, though it seems that this ceased some time between 1823 and 1840, when an illustration in J. H. Parker's "Glossary of Architecture" shows only one garland, centrally positioned on the rood screen.References
* Pevsner, Nikolaus, "The Buildings of England: Oxfordshire", Penguin Books (original series, 1951–1974)
* [http://www.highbeam.com/ref/doc0.asp?DOCID=1O71:CharltononOtmoorGarland&num=4&ctrlInfo=Round18%3AMode18c%3AREFSR%3AResult Extract from Jacqueline Simpson and Steve Roud, "A Dictionary of English Folklore", Oxford University Press, 2000]
* Hole, Christina, "A Dictionary of British Folk Customs", Granada/Paladin 1978
* [http://www.acny.org.uk/album.php?V=283 St. Mary's, Charlton-on-Otmoor] (from acny.org.uk, accessed 07:10, 04 November 2007 (UTC) )
*
* [http://yorkshire-guide.co.uk/buckden_pike_hubberholme.aspx Hubberholme Church, Yorkshire. Rood loft dated 1558] Possibly the oldest in England.ee also
*
Holy Rood Catholic Church
*Rood (Scots)
*Rod (unit) for the "rod, pole or perch" unit of measurement
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