Calefactory
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The calefactory (also warming house) was an important room or building in a medieval monastery in Western Europe.[1] Here, a communal fire was kept so that the monks could warm themselves after long hours of study in the (unheated) cloister or other work. In the early Middle Ages, this was one of the few heated rooms in the monastery – the others being the infirmary, the guest house and the kitchen. This policy was generally relaxed, save for a few very strict orders, by the latter part of the medieval period when fireplaces became common throughout the claustral buildings.
The warming house was always one of the buildings surrounding the cloister and was entered from it. It was often located close to the refectory so that the warmth could be shared by the monks when they were eating. In many monasteries, an upper floor was built over the warming house that served as the muniment room, where the house's charters, deeds and other legal documents were kept safe from damp.
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Birt 1907, pp. 12–13; Hodges 2005, p. 96.
Works cited
[edit]- Birt, Henry Norbert (1907). Herbermann, Charles G. (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. New York: Robert Appleton Company. pp. 10–15. . In
- Hodges, George (2005). Fountains Abbey: The Story of a Mediaeval Monastery. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4179-5104-8.