FIG. 217. CHURCH OF BIOT.
be to a great extent rebuilt. But some of it bears the signs of having been erected at an earlier date by the Templars. The plan ([Fig. 218]) is very unusual. A simple oblong divided into three aisles with three terminal apses such as we see here is common enough, but the plain round columns which separated the nave and aisles are very uncommon. The bases and caps are of a simple and early character ([Fig. 219]). The pillars are too light to have been intended to carry vaulting, and the original church would thus seem to have had a row of plain arches on each side, with perhaps a clerestory wall above supporting a wooden roof. The building would thus have originally the characteristics of a primitive basilica, somewhat like San Miniato at Florence ([Fig. 33], [p. 101]). But this design has now been ingeniously altered and destroyed, and the whole character of the interior degraded from being one of the most interesting churches of Provence into a commonplace Renaissance chapel. By means of stucco the old round pillars have been converted on the side next the nave into flat
FIG. 218. PLAN OF CHURCH OF BIOT.
pilasters which are carried up and finished with Ionic caps, supporting an entablature which runs along each side of the church above the old arches. A groined vault in plaster springing from the top of the cornice is
FIG. 219. CHURCH OF BIOT.