Archaeoacoustic Research of Ljubostinja and Naupara Medieval Monastic Churches
Abstract
The overall experience of religious practice is significantly affected by the acoustical properties of temples. Divine service is the most important act in the Orthodox Church, which equally demands intelligibility of speech for preaching and as well as adequate acoustics for Byzantine chanting as a form of a song-prayer. In order to better understand and contribute to unlocking the role of sound in these historical sacral spaces, this paper explores the acoustics of two well-preserved Orthodox churches, from Ljubostinja and Naupara monastery, built in the last building period of medieval Serbia (1371-1459). These represent two types of the Morava architectural style - triconch combined with a developed and compressed inscribed cross, respectively. Using EASERA software, we measured the impulse response for two sound source positions - in the altar and in the southern chanting apse, as the main points from which the Orthodox service is carried out. Thus obtained acoustic parameters (RT..., EDT, C50 and STI) were further analysed, pointing out the differences in experiencing sound between naos and narthex, as well as how the position of the sound source influenced the experience of sound. Finally, we compared the results with previous archaeoacoustic research of the churches from the same building period.
Keywords:
Orthodox Church acoustics / Morava architectural style / medieval Serbia / architectural heritage / acoustic heritageSource:
Open Archaeology, 2019, 5, 1, 274-283Publisher:
- De Gruyter Poland Sp Z O O, Warsaw
Funding / projects:
- Theory and practice of science in society: multidisciplinary, educational and intergenerational perspectives (RS-179048)
DOI: 10.1515/opar-2019-0018
ISSN: 2300-6560
WoS: 000478820200003
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85070252769
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Institution/Community
Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanjaTY - JOUR AU - Đorđević, Zorana AU - Novković, Dragan PY - 2019 UR - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1255 AB - The overall experience of religious practice is significantly affected by the acoustical properties of temples. Divine service is the most important act in the Orthodox Church, which equally demands intelligibility of speech for preaching and as well as adequate acoustics for Byzantine chanting as a form of a song-prayer. In order to better understand and contribute to unlocking the role of sound in these historical sacral spaces, this paper explores the acoustics of two well-preserved Orthodox churches, from Ljubostinja and Naupara monastery, built in the last building period of medieval Serbia (1371-1459). These represent two types of the Morava architectural style - triconch combined with a developed and compressed inscribed cross, respectively. Using EASERA software, we measured the impulse response for two sound source positions - in the altar and in the southern chanting apse, as the main points from which the Orthodox service is carried out. Thus obtained acoustic parameters (RT, EDT, C50 and STI) were further analysed, pointing out the differences in experiencing sound between naos and narthex, as well as how the position of the sound source influenced the experience of sound. Finally, we compared the results with previous archaeoacoustic research of the churches from the same building period. PB - De Gruyter Poland Sp Z O O, Warsaw T2 - Open Archaeology T1 - Archaeoacoustic Research of Ljubostinja and Naupara Medieval Monastic Churches EP - 283 IS - 1 SP - 274 VL - 5 DO - 10.1515/opar-2019-0018 ER -
@article{ author = "Đorđević, Zorana and Novković, Dragan", year = "2019", abstract = "The overall experience of religious practice is significantly affected by the acoustical properties of temples. Divine service is the most important act in the Orthodox Church, which equally demands intelligibility of speech for preaching and as well as adequate acoustics for Byzantine chanting as a form of a song-prayer. In order to better understand and contribute to unlocking the role of sound in these historical sacral spaces, this paper explores the acoustics of two well-preserved Orthodox churches, from Ljubostinja and Naupara monastery, built in the last building period of medieval Serbia (1371-1459). These represent two types of the Morava architectural style - triconch combined with a developed and compressed inscribed cross, respectively. Using EASERA software, we measured the impulse response for two sound source positions - in the altar and in the southern chanting apse, as the main points from which the Orthodox service is carried out. Thus obtained acoustic parameters (RT, EDT, C50 and STI) were further analysed, pointing out the differences in experiencing sound between naos and narthex, as well as how the position of the sound source influenced the experience of sound. Finally, we compared the results with previous archaeoacoustic research of the churches from the same building period.", publisher = "De Gruyter Poland Sp Z O O, Warsaw", journal = "Open Archaeology", title = "Archaeoacoustic Research of Ljubostinja and Naupara Medieval Monastic Churches", pages = "283-274", number = "1", volume = "5", doi = "10.1515/opar-2019-0018" }
Đorđević, Z.,& Novković, D.. (2019). Archaeoacoustic Research of Ljubostinja and Naupara Medieval Monastic Churches. in Open Archaeology De Gruyter Poland Sp Z O O, Warsaw., 5(1), 274-283. https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2019-0018
Đorđević Z, Novković D. Archaeoacoustic Research of Ljubostinja and Naupara Medieval Monastic Churches. in Open Archaeology. 2019;5(1):274-283. doi:10.1515/opar-2019-0018 .
Đorđević, Zorana, Novković, Dragan, "Archaeoacoustic Research of Ljubostinja and Naupara Medieval Monastic Churches" in Open Archaeology, 5, no. 1 (2019):274-283, https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2019-0018 . .