This feature of church design originated in the late Roman period and continued to appear in those built on the European continent and, in Anglo-Saxon England, until the 8th century.[4]
Notes
^Most Latin terms ending in -us are masculine and form their nominativeplural with -i but porticus is a femininefourth-declension noun whose plural is also porticus, sometimes differentiated with a macron as porticūs.[1] The English plural form is porticuses, when the term is not simply translated as portico.
References
Citations
^Lewis, C.T.; Short, C., eds. (n.d.). "porticus". A Latin Dictionary. www.perseus.tufts.edu. Archived from the original on 31 January 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
Cherry, B. (1981) [1976], "Ecclesiastical architecture", in Wilson, D.M. (ed.), The Archaeology of Anglo-Saxon England, Cambridge University Press, pp. 151–200, ISBN0-521-28390-6