ยง 64.
The warming-house was a rectangular
building, which at Fountains is vaulted in four
compartments from a middle pillar. The fireplace
was usually in a side-wall or, as at Waverley, in the
further wall from the cloister. Two huge fireplaces
remain in the east wall at Fountains, one of which
has been blocked. At Tintern the fireplace was a
middle hearth, surrounded by open arches and connected
by smaller arches with the end walls. The
outer wall was generally pierced by a window and
a doorway which led into a yard at the back. Here
at Fountains, against the west wall of the dorter sub-vault,
was the wood-house from which the fire was
replenished. The west wall of the warming-house
was part of the east wall of the frater, and two
openings in it at Fountains may have been intended
to give the frater some of the benefit of the fire.
The arrangements of the frater, of which a perfect
example, now used as a church, remains at Beaulieu,
were similar, allowing for the difference in plan, to
those of Benedictine and other houses, but were less
elaborate. It was raised a step or two above the
cloister, and on one or both sides of the entrance
were the lavatory arches. The magnificent frater at
Rievaulx had a sub-vault, entered from the foot of
the stair to the pulpit; but this is a rare instance
of a feature often found in Benedictine houses.
At Fountains the frater was divided by a row of
columns into two alleys, each with its separate
wooden roof; but the undivided plan, as at Beaulieu,
was general.