Home

roods

A rood is a crucifix or image of Christ used in Christian church interiors, typically positioned on or above a rood screen that separates the nave from the chancel. The term comes from the Old English rood, meaning cross. In medieval worship the rood served as a focal point for devotion and processions.

In church architecture, the rood screen is a carved or painted partition that allows passage between the

Across Europe, especially in England and parts of the continent, roods and rood screens diminished in visibility

Rood also refers to a unit of land measurement. One rood is commonly defined as a quarter

nave
and
the
chancel
while
marking
a
visual
boundary.
Above
the
screen,
the
rood
beam
or
lintel
often
carried
the
actual
cross,
sometimes
accompanied
by
statues
or
figures
of
saints.
In
some
churches
a
loft
or
gallery—the
rood
loft—was
built
atop
the
screen
to
provide
space
for
readers
or
singers
during
services.
The
combination
of
screen,
beam,
and
cross
defined
a
distinctive
liturgical
and
aesthetic
feature
of
many
medieval
churches.
after
the
Reformation,
when
their
religious
imagery
was
often
removed
or
destroyed.
In
later
centuries
some
roods
were
restored
or
preserved
as
important
records
of
medieval
craftsmanship
and
religious
practice.
Today
surviving
roods
remain
notable
artifacts
in
the
study
of
ecclesiastical
art
and
architectural
history.
of
an
acre
(that
is,
about
40
square
rods),
so
four
roods
equal
one
acre.
This
usage
is
unrelated
to
the
ecclesiastical
cross
but
shares
the
same
Old
English
root.