arch. Construction, known as an 
arch-ring, made of truncated wedge-shaped 
blocks (arch-stones or 
voussoirs) that by mutual pressure stay in place, set out in a curved form to span an opening and carry a superimposed load, as an alternative to a 
lintel: it is termed 
arcuated, as opposed to 
trabeated. Terms associated with an arch include:abutment: solid structure from which an arch springs, and which resists the outward 
thrust (all arches will collapse unless adequately supported);archivolt: concentric ring of mouldings round an arch, like an 
architrave bent around the top of the arch;chord: horizontal distance between 
abutments taken from the 
springing-line on one side to that of the other, also called the 
span;crown: highest point of the 
intrados, also called 
vertex;extrados: upper curve of each 
voussoir or outer extremity of the 
archivolt;flank: see 
haunch below;haunch: curved part on the top of the section between the 
crown, the portion of the arch itself, and the extremity of the 
span, also called 
flank;height: rise of an arch, or vertical distance between the 
chord to the 
crown or highest point of the 
intrados;impost: projecting member, often moulded, from which an arch 
springs, e.g. a 
block, 
bracket, 
corbel, or 
dosseret;intrados: lower curve of each 
voussoir, i.e. coinciding with the 
soffit of the arch;keystone: central large wedge-shaped 
voussoir in an arch, often elaborately carved as an 
ancon; 
section of the cavity: vertical plane figure bounded by the 
span and the 
intrados;springing: point at which an arch unites with its support;springing-line: horizontal plane from which an arch begins to rise.Types of arches include:acute arch: see 
lancet-arch;anse de panier: three-centred arch resembling a basket-handle, also known as a 
basket-handled arch, usually formed by a segment of a circle connected to two other segments with smaller radii, but sometimes constructed using five or seven centres to give a similar shape;back arch: see 
rear arch;basket arch: see 
anse de panier;bell arch: arch supported on two 
corbels with curved faces above the reveals, so that the resulting compound curve of the opening resembles a bell;Caernarfon arch: see 
Welsh arch;camber arch: 
flat arch with a slight upward curve to the intrados, or a very 
low segmental arch; 
canted arch: similar to a 
corbel arch, but with straight haunches set at an angle of 45°;catenary arch: formed like an inverted 
catenary, similar to a 
parabolic arch, but less sharp and more elegant;compound arch: 
Order or 
recessed arch consisting of several concentric arches with vertical supports, successively placed within and behind each other, each smaller than that in front, as in a 
Romanesque doorway;contrasted arch: as 
ogee arch;corbel arch: 
false or 
pseudo- arch formed by means of horizontal blocks corbelled out from each side of the opening to be bridged until the latter is closed;cusped arch: see 
foil arch;depressed arch: see 
anse-de-panier, 
four-centred, and 
three-centred arch;diaphragm arch: transverse arch across a nave supporting a gable between sections of a timber roof to prevent the spread of fire;diminished arch: 
segmental arch, less than a 
semicircular arch;discharging arch: see 
relieving arch;drop arch: pointed arch with its centres on the springing-line and with the 
span longer than the radius;Dutch arch: triangular false arch constructed of bricks laid on a slope of 45° starting from a 
skew-back at each 
jamb and meeting at an 
apex;elliptical arch: formed as half an ellipse with its axis coinciding with the springing-line;equilateral arch: pointed 
two-centred arch of two arcs, the radii of which are equal to the span;false arch: see 
corbel arch;flat arch: 
straight arch with a level or slightly 
cambered soffit, the voussoirs seeming to form a lintel;Florentine arch: semicircular arch with extrados and intrados struck from different centres, so that the voussoirs increase in length towards the top;foil arch: 
cusped or 
foliated arch associated with 
Gothic, 
Moorish, and 
Islamic styles. Foil arches can have 
trefoils, 
cinquefoils, or 
multifoils within a pointed arch, can have a series of small arcs cut in the intrados, as in the 
Moorish multifoil or 
scalloped arch, or can themselves be in the form of 
foils, such as the 
pointed trefoil or 
round trefoil arch;foliated arch: see 
foil arch;four-centred arch: 
depressed arch, the characteristic form of late-
Perpendicular openings, with upper central arcs with centres below the springing-line, flanked by two arcs with centres on the springing-line;French arch: 
Dutch arch;gauged arch: 
flat arch, with a slightly 
cambered soffit, formed of voussoirs made of precisely cut stones, or, more usually, finely rubbed bricks (known as 
rubbers), with very fine lime-putty joints;horseshoe arch: usually associated with Islamic styles, such arches are 
horseshoe (semicircular, narrowing towards the base below the springing-line, on straight piers), 
pointed horseshoe (pointed with arcs continuing to narrow the opening below the springing-line), and 
round horseshoe (semicircular with arcs continuing to narrow the opening below the springing-line);interlacing arches: 
intersecting semicircular 
Romanesque arches in a 
blind arcade, overlapping and forming pointed arches;inverted arch: built upside-down, used in foundations;Italian pointed arch: with intrados and extrados struck from different centres, and voussoirs increasing in size towards the apex. Similar to a 
Florentine arch, but pointed;jack arch: 
segmental brick arch spanning between iron beams, thus forming a vault;keel arch: see 
ogee arch;lancet arch: sharply pointed 
two-centred or 
acute type with the radii greater than the span;mitre arch: 
triangular pseudo-arch of two flat stone slabs leaning together at a mitred apex, common in 
Anglo-Saxon architecture; also called a 
pediment arch;Moorish arch: 
horseshoe- shaped arch, sometimes with a pointed top;Moorish multifoil arch: see 
foil arch;obtuse-angled arch: pointed type formed of arcs with centres on either side of the centre-line;ogee arch: pointed 
keel-arch of four arcs with two centres outside it and two inside, thus producing two S-shaped curves. It first occurred around 1300. A 
nodding ogee has its apex projecting beyond the naked of the wall, so it is a double 
ogee in elevation and a single in section;Order arch: see 
compound arch;parabolic arch: shaped like the intersection of a cone with a plane parallel to its vertical axis, sometimes confused with a 
catenary arch, but sharper and less elegant;pediment arch: see 
mitre arch;pointed arch: any pointed arch, but especially an 
equilateral arch. Proportions of pointed arches are governed by the positions of the centre-points from which the arcs are struck. See 
acute, 
drop, 
equilateral, 
foil, 
four-centred, 
horseshoe, 
Italian pointed, 
lancet, 
obtuse-angled, 
ogee, 
Saracenic, 
segmental pointed, and 
Tudor arches;pseudo-four-centred arch: see 
Tudor arch;pseudo-three-centred arch: 
depressed type consisting of two arcs struck from the springing-line supporting a central 
flat or 
straight pseudo-arch of voussoirs with joints struck from a point well below the springing-line;raking arch: 
rampant arch with one impost higher than the other;rampant arch: see 
raking arch;rear arch: 
arrière voussure, 
back, or 
secondary arch spanning an opening on the inside of a thick wall, as when there is a lintel on the outside, but a splayed arched reveal inside;recessed arch: see 
compound arch;relieving arch: 
discharging or 
safety arch, it is usually 
segmental, built flush with the wall-surface over a lintel to relieve the latter from the weight of masonry above, and to discharge the forces away from the lintel;round horseshoe arch: see 
horseshoe arch;round trefoil arch: see 
foil arch;rowlock arch: has small voussoirs laid in a series of concentric rings;safety arch: see 
relieving arch;Saracenic arch: pointed 
stilted, 
striped arch with alternate voussoirs of contrasting colours;scalloped arch: see 
foil arch;scheme arch: 
segmental or 
skene arch;secondary arch: see 
rear arch;segmental arch: with its centre below the springing-line. 
A segmental pointed arch has 
two centres below the springing-line;semicircular arch: with its centre on the springing-line;shouldered arch: flat arch or lintel carried on 
quadrant-ended corbels over jambs;skene arch: see 
scheme arch;skew arch: has jambs at an angle other than 90° to its face, or one spanning something obliquely. The beds of the courses of a skew arch consist of spiral lines wound, as it were, around a cylinder, every part of which cuts the axis at a different angle, the angle being greatest at the keystone and least at the springing; when viewed from beneath the courses appear as straight lines. 
Skew is a slope, as in the abutment of a gauged-brick 
flat or 
straight arch. 
Skewback is the part of the abutment giving support to the arch;soldier arch: 
flat pseudo-arch of uncut ungauged bricks laid on end and supported by some means such as an L-shaped metal angle;squinch arch: diagonal arch or arches (see 
trumpet-arch) in the internal angle of a tower supporting an octagonal 
spire, or used instead of pendentives to carry a dome over a square compartment;stilted arch: with its springing-line raised on piers above the level of the impost;straight arch: see 
flat arch;strainer arch: one constructed between piers or walls to prevent them moving inwards towards each other, as at the 
crossing of Wells Cathedral, Som.;sub-arch: subsidiary minor arch enclosed and framed within a larger structural arch. In 
Gothic work it consisted of two inferior arches, under the main arch, rising naturally from the middle 
mullion and forming two independent arches filled with 
tracery;surbased arch: rises less than half its span;surmounted arch: rises higher than half its span;Syrian arch: series of small arches above a series of wider arches, centred on the arches and piers below;three-centred arch: 
depressed arch with two arcs struck from the springing-line with a central arc struck from below it. A 
depressed three-centred arch has the central arc struck from a point very much lower than the springing-line;transverse arch: divides a compartment of a vault from another, spanning from wall to wall or from wall to pier, forming a 
bay;trefoil arch: see 
foil arch;triangular arch: see 
mitre arch;
triumphal arch: monumental arched free-standing structure, invented by the Romans, and a significant precedent for later 
façade treatments in which columnar and 
trabeated elements were mixed with 
arcuated forms. Many Roman examples survive, including that of Septimius Severus (AD 203), with two smaller arches flanking a wider central arch with a richly coffered vault. The form was revived during the 
Renaissance period, and there are many fine Neo-Classical examples, including the Carrousel arch, 
Paris, by 
Percier and 
Fontaine (1806–7);trumpet-arch: 
squinch-like part of a cone, i.e. with the arches getting wider and higher towards the extremities;Tudor arch: 
pseudo-four-centred late-
Perpendicular arch, similar to the 
four-centred type, but with shanks starting as quarter-circles (with centres on the springing-line) continuing as straight lines to the apex. It is very 
depressed, and often expressed as a single lintel;two-centred arch: 
acute or 
lancet arch;Venetian arch: semicircular arch framing two semicircular-headed 
lights separated by a colonnette above which is a 
roundel in the space between the tops of the smaller arches and the main intrados;Welsh arch: 
Caernarfon arch, comprising a wide keystone resting on two corbels shaped to fit the keystone.
Bibliography
 Gwilt (1903);
 W. Papworth (1852);
 J. Parker (1850);
 Sturgis et al. (1901–2)