Gargoyle: They Are More Than Just Scary Sculptures On Buildings- Drainpipe designs from the 19th century
Gargoyle Statues
The art of gargoyle is not only an artistic element on the buildings, especially churches, but also it has a practical usage. Gargoyles have a gothic style like grotesques. But unlike grotesques, gargoyles often have an open mouth to help drain away rainwater. A groove is cut along the top of the statue. When rain falls, it travels along this groove and falls through the gargoyle’s open mouth onto the roads below. Keeping the rain away from a building protects its stone walls, so they don’t start to wear away.
The Origin of The Word Gargoyle
Etymologically, the word gargoyle comes from the French ‘gargouille’, which translates to the word throat. Gargouille also relates to an old French legend. According to the tale, there was a dragon called La Gargouille with a long and twisted neck, a prominent mouth with powerful jaws, terrifying eyes, and enormous wings, who lived in a cave near the River Seine. It fed on humans and sowed chaos, panic, and destruction wherever it went, sinking boats, causing floods, and burning anything that stood in their way.
The people were frightened by its presence. The inhabitants of Rouen offered it a human sacrifice every year to placate its anger. By the year 600, a Christian priest named Romanus reached Rouen and offered to deliver the people from the dragon in exchange for their converting to Christianity and building a church. Finally, La Gargouille was burnt at the stake, with its head and neck hung at the village entrance as a warning and reminder. People began carving the dragon’s head on the sides of buildings, and often onto water spouts, leading to the gargoyles we see on churches and cathedrals today.
Gargoyle’s History
Gargoyles have a long history. It is known that gargoyles became very popular in churches in Europe during the 1200s. The oldest gargoyle which was found on a building is a 13th-century gargoyle in Kayseri, Turkey. It is also known that the ancient Egyptians, Romans, and Greeks carved gargoyles to use as drain spouts on their buildings.
It is a common fallacy that thinking grotesques and gargoyles are the same thing.
While grotesques include all decorative architectural creatures, whether or not they have functioning drainage capabilities, gargoyles always have drainage conduits. Thus, not all grotesques are gargoyles, but all gargoyles are grotesques.
The 12 Paisley Abbey gargoyles were replaced in 1991. The set includes “see no evil”, “speak no evil”, “hear no evil” and an “alien”.
Reverend Alan Birss, the minister of Paisley Abbey, explains that 12 out of the 13 gargoyles are in really bad condition. True enough, these gargoyles have been there for centuries enduring the damages of harsh weather conditions. Of course, nothing lasts forever and even these mighty figures will eventually deteriorate in time. Restoration of the 11 gargoyles took place in 1991 and this is when the original carvings (except one) were replaced. Since then, the Alien gargoyle has been sitting above the arch doorway of the abbey.
ColinColin
Here are some more pictures of gargoyles:
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