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Joggle (architecture)

Joint that interlocks blocks From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joggle (architecture)
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A joggle is a joint or projection that interlocks blocks (such as a lintel's stone blocks or an arch's voussoirs). Often joggles are semicircular and knob-shaped, so joggled stones have a jigsaw- or zigzag-like pattern.

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Joggling above a window lintel of the Damascus Gate, Jerusalem
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Mausoleum of Theodoric, Ravenna: joggles[1] resembling rabbets (rebates)

Joggling can be found in pre-Frankish buildings, in Roman Spain and Roman France.[2] In Islamic architecture, the earliest joggles were in the desert castles of the Umayyad Caliphate, such as Qasr al-Hayr al-Sharqi.[2] In Mamluk architecture, joggling is usually combined with ablaq (alternating colors).[2] Joggling also characterize Ottoman architecture in Cairo.[3]

The protruding joggle is also called a "he-joggle", whereas the corresponding slot is called a "she-joggle".[4]

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