Left:Outside Right:Inside

This is a picture of the Rose window in Most Pure Heart of Mary Church.It's located on the west side of the church and has a diameter of 12 feet.It was donated by Ladies Sodality during the construction of the Church.


Rose Windows Around The World


"Crucifiction" in St.Pauls Church in Rotterdam,Holland

"The rose window functions as a mystical lens of form and color, focusing light onto the soul of a viewer and creating a spiritual fire." by Adra Hartz


The British author Painton Cowen refers to rose windowsas "the key to one's own soul."


The term Rose window comes from the Greek language, meaning "to enter the mysteries."

The encyclopedia says that rose windows are large, stone-traceried, circular window of medieval churches. Romanesque churches of both England and the Continent had made use of the wheel window-a circular window ornamented by shafts radiating from a small center circle; and from this prototype developed the elaborate rose windows. The latter, in their full development, flourished especially in France, where they appear in practically every important Gothic cathedral, either over the center portal of the west front or on at least one of the transept ends. Stained glass was usually placed in them. The early examples, as on the west facade of the cathedral at Chartres (12th-13th cent.), were filled with plate tracery, pierced from a stone slab. With the perfection of bar tracery, the typical rose, as in the cathedral at Reims (13th-14th cent.) and in Notre-Dame de Paris (12th-14th cent.), was filled with numerous radiating bars and intermediate bars, joining to form pointed arches at the outer edge. In the final or flamboyant period the bars were arranged in wavy curves and more intricate patterns. This rich and closely packed tracery, as in the fine transept window of St. Ouen at Rouen, suggests the design of an open rose.
www.encyclopedia.com
Now heres some pictures of Rose Windows around the world.