Description
"Masons' marks” are the signature symbols of masons inscribed on a building's stones, particularly in Medieval Europe. Believed to have been used to tally work completed for payment, they are now used to trace a building's chronology and construction history. At Chartres, John James has used them to propose that the cathedral was erected from the bottom up, instead of either east to west or west to east. See John James, Chartres, The Masons Who Built a Legend.
This mason's mark drawn or photographed at the upper third of the North Tower Staircase (below belfry).
Subject
Cathédrale de Chartres--Pictorial works.;Church decoration and ornament--France--Chartres--Pictorial works.;Church architecture--France--Chartres--Pictorial works.;Christian art and symbolism--France--Chartres--Medieval, 500-1500--Pictorial works.