Clerestory

Chambers's Encyclopaedia, Volume 3: Catarrh to Dion, p. 290

Clerestory, an upper row of windows rising clear above the adjoining parts of the building, but more probably so named as admitting clearness or light. The term is particularly applied to the windows in the upper part of the central nave of churches (see GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE; and for an illustration, the article BRISTOL). This mode of lighting was also in use among the Romans. See BASILICA.

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