ON THE ARRANGEMENT OF CHAPELS EAST OF TRANSEPTS.
145
ON THE AERANGEMENT OF CHAPELS EAST OF TRANSEPTS. 145
111 like manner, an arrangement is sometimes found which forms a hnk between the arrangement of Sompting and that of Oxford Cathedral. On the north side of Brecon Priory B tzl Brocou Priory Church, a Presbyterj'. b b Transepts, c Tower, d Site of Rood Loft, e Nave. F Site of Cloister. and the south of Llanthony, — the other side in each has been tampered with — we can make out the original arrange- ment, which was of this kind. The chapels might be as well considered as attached to the presbytery as to the transept, were it not that the two arches connecting them with the latter, though not strictly a continuous arcade, are much more prominent than the small arches a a, connecting them with the presb^^tery. Both at Brecon and Llanthony this arrangement of two small chapels has given way to a single very large one, of later date. We also find that the old system of attaching chapels to transepts, and that of forming them in their eastern aisles, often run very much into one another. Thus, at Tintern and Wenlock, the transepts have regular eastern