[225] See Bond, p. 336.
[226] As a matter of fact these in their turn help to support the ridge rib.
[227] See Street, p. 78 for a drawing (from Wilde) of this vault before its restoration.
[228] See p. 93 for examples.
[229] So far as the writer knows there are no examples of the simple transverse ridge rib in England, where one would naturally expect to find it used.
[230] Moreover the tiercerons at Worcester would seem to have been an afterthought. See Moore, Mediaeval Church Architecture of England, p. 175.
[231] Illustrated in Bond, p. 327.
[232] Illustrated in Bond, p. 327. See also Lichfield’s Cath. nave for similar transverse rib.
[233] Not without their influence, however, as a number of late churches could be cited in which there is no true transverse rib, as for example the minster at Berne (Switzerland), (illustrated in Michel, III, p. 52, Fig. 31).
[234] See Bond, p. 333.