ยง 41.
The preference for a rectangular chancel,
in our larger churches at any rate, may be attributed
in some measure to the architectural influence exercised
by the Cistercian order. It is certainly possible
to trace Cistercian influence in some of the churches
of canons regular. It cannot be said that churches
of Augustinian canons followed any definite or uniform
plan. Some, like St Bartholomew's, Smithfield,
preferred plans for which the best contemporary
models were Benedictine. But the plan of the first
church at Haughmond was very like the early plans
of Waverley and Tintern; and when this was superseded
by a larger church with its longer axis further
north than before, the new presbytery was still aisleless
and was still walled off from the transept-chapels
immediately adjoining. Of these there were two on
either side, both rectangular in shape, and those next
the presbytery were longer than those on the outside.
The same plan of presbytery and transept-chapels is
found at Lilleshall, and is known to have existed at
Fountains before the presbytery was aisled. Similarly
the plan of presbytery and transepts at Bolton and
Brinkburn is distinctly Cistercian in origin, and, when
the presbytery at Bolton was lengthened in the fourteenth
century, its aisleless form was retained. In
Premonstratensian churches the likeness to the normal
Cistercian plan is often obvious. The original plan
of the eastern portion of the church at St Agatha's
was almost the same as that of Kirkstall; while the
plan of the same part of Torre is virtually identical
with those of Buildwas and Roche. As at Bolton,
the aisleless presbytery at St Agatha's was prolonged
in the fourteenth century to twice its original
length.