in northern Spain, an example of a monastic quire In the
Early Church, the sanctuary was connected directly to the nave. The choir was simply the east part of the nave, and was fenced off by a screen or low railing, called
cancelli, which is where the English word
chancel comes from. The development of the architectural feature known as the choir is the result of the
liturgical development brought about by the end of persecutions under
Constantine the Great and the rise of
monasticism. The word "choir" is first used by members of the
Latin Church.
Isidore of Seville and
Honorius of Autun write that the term is derived from the "corona", the circle of clergy or singers who surrounded the altar. When first introduced, the choir was attached to the
bema, the elevated platform in the centre of the nave on which were placed seats for the clergy and a
lectern for scripture readings. This arrangement can still be observed at the
San Clemente al Laterano in Rome. Over time, the bema (or
presbytery) and choir moved eastward to their current position. In some churches, such as
Westminster Cathedral, the choir is arranged in the
apse behind the
altar. The architectural details of the choir developed in response to its function as the place where the
Divine Office was chanted by the monastic brotherhood or the
chapter of
canons. The chancel was regarded as the clergy's part of the church, and any choirboys from a choir school counted as part of the clergy for this purpose. After the Reformation, when the number of clergy present even in large churches and cathedrals tended to reduce, and lay singing choirs became more frequent, there were often objections to placing them in the traditional choir stalls in the chancel. The
pulpit and
lectern are also usually found at the front of the choir, though both Catholic and Protestant churches have sometimes moved the pulpit to the nave for better audibility. The
organ may be located here, or in a loft elsewhere in the church. Some
cathedrals have a retro-choir behind the high altar, opening eastward towards the
chapels (
chantries) in the eastern extremity. After the Reformation Protestant churches generally moved the altar (now often called the
communion table) forward, typically to the front of the chancel, and often used lay choirs who were placed in a gallery at the west end. The choir and rear of deep chancels became little used in churches surviving from the Middle Ages, and new churches very often omitted one. With the emphasis on sermons, and their audibility, some churches simply converted their chancels to seat part of the congregation. In 19th-century England one of the battles of the
Cambridge Camden Society, the architectural wing of the
Anglo-Catholics in the
Church of England, was to restore the chancel, including the choir, as a necessary part of a church. By pushing the altar back to its medieval position and having the choir used by a lay choir, they were largely successful in this, although the harder end of the
High Church objected to allowing a large group of laity into the chancel. Different approaches to worship in the 20th century again tended to push altars in larger churches forward, to be closer to the congregation, and the chancel again risks being a less used area of the church. ==Seating==