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6
Jan

Gothic Medieval Architecture: Taking the Goth out of Gothic

   Posted by: Trish    in Cultural History, European History, History Blog, Medieval History, Personalities in History, The Renaissance, World History, World War II

Gothic Medieval Architecture: Notre Dame Cathedral ParisIt was the Italians of the Renaissance that first referred to the art and architecture of the middle or medieval period as ‘gothic’ and it had little to do with the infamous Goths that sacked Rome in the 4th century. In fact, ‘gothic’ was meant as a derogatory term for the heavy, dark and ornate decoration and symbolism that covered the churches and paintings of the middle ages. Stone roofs, flying buttresses, highly vaulted ceilings and pointed arches marked this change in architectural taste that the Renaissance men felt moved the art of building in the wrong direction after the end of the Romanesque period.

Despite such famous examples of Gothic architecture as Notre Dame Cathedral and York Minister Abbey, the Italians never really allowed the form to take hold in their region. Gothic architecture spread quickly across the rest of Europe during the eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth centuries bringing with it innovations in the designs of buildings, specifically churches and castles.

Gothic Medieval Architecture: St. Vitus Cathedral PragueThe flying buttress was introduced during the period as a way of providing extra support to high church and castle walls that had in the past buckled under the weight of the stones used in their construction. By attaching pillars of stone to the outside of the building, the Gothic architect was able to transfer the weight of the interior wall by a connecting arch to the pillars and increase the amount of available height and light inside the building. This innovation paved the way for the medieval stained glass window.

Gothic Medieval Architecture: Pointed ArchesPointed arches were another change from the preceding Romanesque period that had favored the rounded arch. The pointed arch allowed for higher arches that supported more weight and therefore more decorative application. They worked well with the flying buttress and by extending the height and width of a building, adding to its grandeur and the amount of light within its walls.

Gothic Medieval Architecture: Ribbed VaultThe ribbed vault also allowed for greater experimentation and artistic expression in Gothic architecture. By connecting three separate arches and having them traverse each other rather than one single arch, the ribbed vault provided better distribution of weight during construction and can be compared with the use of steel in the modern skyscraper: essential and strengthening.

Notre Dame Cathedral: Coronation of Napoleon BonaparteThe Cathedral at Notre Dame remains one of the most famous examples of the Gothic style. Within the high and impressive walls of this medieval cathedral, Napoleon was crowned in 1804 showing that centuries after it was built in 1160s, Notre Dame was well regarded for its beauty and permanence among the French landscape. Highlighting all the innovations of the Gothic period from flying buttresses and stained glass windows to pointed arches and ribbed vaults, Notre Dame has both inspired architects and engineers as well as writers and composers.

The church and castle of the medieval period were not only designed to impress but also to intimidate. The Roman Catholic church of the period wanted to instill a sense of fear and awe of a god just out of reach to the layman, thereby impressing the importance of the pope and his various cadres. The medieval castle was a show of strength meant to deter any wayward rival from making an attack. For the most part, the effect seems to have worked with many examples of Gothic architecture surviving unharmed until the modern period when the bombs and bullets of the first and second world wars caused major damage to some of the finest examples of Gothic architecture in existence.

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So it was that Gothic architecture pulled away from the sense of balance and smooth lines that had ingratiated European and Near Eastern design for centuries and moved the continent into a moodier, more self expressive form of architecture that allowed many artist and engineers to see that Roman styles were not the only ones available anymore. The unconscious colonialism of the Roman Empire was not so deeply embedded in the European psyche as it had once been. Well, if we discount the Italians of the Renaissance that is.

Tags: Archangel Michael Wall Relief, Architecture, Architecture History, Coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte, Deep Visored Sallet, England Henry VI Silver Groat - 1422-61, Flying Buttress, Goth, gothic, Gothic Architecture, medeival architecture, Napoleon, Notre Dame, Notre Dame Cathedral, Pointed Arch, Renaissance, Renaissance History, renaissance store, Roman, Roman Empire, Romanesque, St. Vitus Cathedral Prague, Stained Glass, York Minster

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17
Nov

Gothic Art and Medieval European Fashion

   Posted by: Scribner    in Fashion History, History Blog, Medieval History, The Renaissance, World History

Medieval Gothic Virgin and Child StatueChanges in clothing styles in the middle ages were not very dramatic until the mid-13th century when the tunic styles that had dominated both men’s and women’s wardrobes began to diversify and manifest unique designs.  A dramatic shift in artwork during this same medieval period, when fashion essentially began its history, reflects the changes of those times.  What Giorgio Vasari, the Renaissance art historian, classified as Gothic Art offers us images caught in time of a movement and energy that encapsulated the end of the middle ages.

Naumberg Cathedral Ekkehard and Uta StatueGothic art evokes the great cathedrals of France and Germany to the modern viewer, but Gothic sculpture, and particularly the forms explicit in the Gothic aesthetic, tell a lot about the time period’s aspirations and visions of itself.  If Gothic architecture was reflective of people’s Christian ideals, with spires reaching for the heavens and stained glass windows channeling God’s light through the chambers of the church, then Gothic sculpture was charged with the restlessness and flamboyance of the period.  Whereas the Romanesque aesthetic in sculpture that preceded it was marked by rigidity and stoic beauty, Gothic sculpture broke free literally and figuratively.

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Gothic sculptures seen decorating the facades of Gothic cathedrals were novel in that they were no longer set into the walls of the buildings but actually stood apart as three-dimensional entities in their own power. With this freedom from structure came also a freedom in style. The flow and draping of clothing on sculptured figures from this time period suddenly manifest a firmness combined with vibrancy that suggest something irrepressible. One has to imagine that this was true of the spirit of the time period, too. Towards the end of the 12th and during the 13th centuries, Europe was opening up and through pilgrimages, the crusades and burgeoning textile and commercial industries, with more
established trade routes, the world was becoming more accessible to the common villager. The vibrance of the period and the newfound luxury of textiles and adornment that would help establish the romance of the courtly lifestyle can be seen in Gothic sculptures, whether images of the Virgin Mary or images of contemporary historical figures. Gowns are shown in full, enveloping folds and charged with a new dimensionality that paid tribute to the mounting changes in medieval society and to the fantasy of courtly life.

IMAGES:
*Gothic Sculpture, French Virgin and Child c. 1330, Stone Notre-Dame, Paris
*Naumberg Cathedral; Margrave Ekkehard of Meissen and his wife Uta West Choir, Naumburg Cathedral, ca. 1249-1255

Tags: 12th century, 13th century clothing, Basic Sallet Helmet, Battle Bardiche, Classic Medieval Sword, gothic, Gothic aesthetic, Gothic Art, Gothic Sculpture, medieval, Medieval Breastplate Display, Medieval European trade, Medieval History, Medieval Store, middle ages, The Crusades, The Renaissance

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