cella
(noun)
The inner chamber of a temple where the cult image or statue is kept.
(noun)
Also known as a naos, the central chamber of a temple, usually where the cult statue was housed.
Examples of cella in the following topics:
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Etruscan Temples
- Etruscan temples were usually frontal, axial, and built on a high podium with a single central staircase that allowed access to the cella (or cellas).
- They were tall and widely spaced across a deep porch, aligning with the walls of the cellas.
- In such cases, each god received its own cella, which housed its cult statue.
- Often the three-cella temple would be dedicated to the principal gods of the Etruscan pantheon -- Tinia, Uni, and Menrva (comparable to the Roman gods Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva).
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Temple Architecture in the Greek Orientalizing Period
- In its simplest form as a naos or cella, the temple was a simple rectangular shrine with protruding side walls (antae), forming a small porch.
- Oriental Greek stone temples were fronted by three columns and one entrance which lead into a single room chamber (cella), where the cult statue would be placed.
- The temple cella was reserved for the cult statue, while cult rituals (often sacrifices) took place outside in front of the temple and usually around an altar.
- Early anta-planned temples consisted of a portico (pronaos) and an inner chamber (naos/cella) atop a simple platform.
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Roman Architecture under the Republic
- They are also usually rectilinear, and the interiors consist of at least one cella, which contained a cult statue.
- If multiple gods were worshiped in one temple, each god would have its own cella and cult image.
- For example, Capitolia, temples dedicated to the Capitoline Triad, would always be built with three cellae, one for each god of the triad: Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva.
- This creates an effect of columns completely surrounding a cella, an effect known as psuedoperipteral.
- The temple consists a circular cella within a concentric ring of 20 Corinthian columns.
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Architecture at Pompeii
- Like typical Roman temples, the portico and cella rest on a raised platform connected to the ground by a central stairway.
- To either side of the cella is an arched niche flanked by either Corinthian or Composite pillasters.
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Architecture in the Greek High Classical Period
- The circular wall of the cella was also crowned by a similar frieze, metopes, and triglyphs to a lesser extent.
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Architecture in the Hellenistic Period
- It was to be flanked by a double colonnade of eight columns across the front and back and twenty-one on the flanks, surrounding the cella.
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Roman Sculpture under the Republic
- Despite its most common title, the "Altar" of Domitius Ahenobarbus (late second century BCE) was more likely a base intended to support cult statues in the cella of a Temple of Neptune (Poseidon) located in Rome on the Field of Mars.