Gothicarchitecture is a style of architecture that flourished during the high and late Middle ... . Originating in 12th century France and lasting into the 16th century, Gothicarchitecture ... pointed arch , the ribbed vault and the flying buttress . Gothicarchitecture is most familiar ... with UNESCO as World Heritage Site s. For this reason a study of Gothicarchitecture is largely ... Gothicarchitecture does not imply the architecture of the historical Goths . It has a much wider ... that the term Gothic as applied to pointed styles of ecclesiastical architecture was used at first ... century, the new gothicarchitecture born in France. Historic relationships between the two ... Gothicarchitecture to Cyprus . Throughout Europe at this time there was a rapid growth in trade ... windows which typify Gothic ecclesiastical architecture. ref name BF Possible Eastern influence ... http books.google.com books?id k7ytJ gXonMC&printsec frontcover&dq french gothicarchitecture ... Cathedral . Characteristics of Gothic churches and cathedrals In Gothicarchitecture, a unique ... arcading at Canterbury Cathedral . One of the defining characteristics of Gothicarchitecture is the pointed ... form, it also gave Gothicarchitecture a very different visual character to Romanesque, the verticality suggesting an aspiration to Heaven. In GothicArchitecture the pointed arch is used in every location ..., windows, arcades and galleries have pointed arches. Gothic Vault architecture vaulting above .... Height A characteristic of Gothic church architecture is its height, both absolute and in proportion ... variables in Gothicarchitecture. In Italy, the tower, if present, is almost always detached ... Gothicarchitecture , the treatment of vertical elements in gallery and window tracery creates ... distinctive characteristics of Gothicarchitecture is the expansive area of the windows as at Sainte ... at Chartres Cathedral Chartres and Laon Cathedral s and are used extensively in Gothicarchitecture ... more details
Gothicarchitecture. The High Gothic arrives with all its strength through the pilgimage route, the Way of Saint James , in the thirteenth century. Some of the most pure Gothic cathedrals in Spain, with German ... Maria del Mar of Barcelona Flamboyant Late Gothic Cathedral of Oviedo Cathedral of Sevilla Cathedral of Segovia Isabelline Gothic Saint John of The Kings in Toledo, Spain Toledo Royal Chapel of Granada See also Gothicarchitecture Romanesque architecture Cathedral architecture of Western Europe gothicmed Gothicarchitecture by country Architecture of Spain DEFAULTSORT Spanish GothicArchitecture Category Gothicarchitecture in Spain Category Spanish architecture Category Spanish Revival architecture ...File Gothic cathedrals spain.png thumb 200px Gothic cathedrals in Spain File Catedral de Barcelona 03.JPG thumb 200px Barcelona Cathedral Spanish Gothicarchitecture is the style of architecture prevalent in Spain in the Late Medieval period. The Gothic style started in Spain as a result of Central European ... Gothic styles in Spain are the Levantino, characterized by its structural achievements and the unification of space, and Isabelline Gothic, made under the Catholic Monarchs , that supposed a transition to Renaissance. The Gothic style was sometimes adopted by the Mud jar architects, who created an hybrid style, employing with European techniques and Spanish Arab decorations. Sequence of Gothic styles in Spain The designations of styles in Spanish Gothicarchitecture are as follows. Dates are approximate. Early Gothic twelfth century High Gothic thirteenth century Mud jar Gothic from the thirteenth to the fifteenth centuries Levantino Gothic fourteenth century Flamboyant Late Gothic fifteenth century Isabelline Gothic fifteenth century Examples Early Gothic Cathedral of vila Cathedral of Cuenca High Gothic Cathedral of Burgos Cathedral of Le n Cathedral of Toledo Mud jar Gothic Cathedral of San Salvador Zaragoza Cathedral of San Salvador , in Zaragoza Levantino Gothic La Seu cathedral ... more details
difficult to declare one building as a member of a certain era of Gothicarchitecture. It is more ... In addition to these Gothic styles, there is another style called Gothique M ridional or Southern Gothic, opposed to Gothique Septentrional or Northern Gothic . This style is characterised by a large nave and has no transept. Examples of this Gothicarchitecture would be Notre Dame de Lamouguier in Narbonne Sainte Marie in Saint Bertrand de Comminges See also Gothicarchitecture Romanesque architecture Cathedral architecture of Western Europe Gothicmed Gothicarchitecture by country DEFAULTSORT French GothicArchitecture Category Gothicarchitecture in France Category French architectureGothic ...Image Chartres cathedral.jpg thumb 300px Notre Dame de Chartres , High Gothic, 1194 1260 . French Gothicarchitecture is a style of architecture prevalent in France from 1140 until about 1500. Sequence of Gothic styles France The designations of styles in French Gothicarchitecture are as follows Early Gothic High Gothic Rayonnant Late Gothic or Flamboyant style These divisions are effective, but still set grounds for debate. Because the lengthy construction of Gothic cathedrals could span multiple ... them to the building as a whole. Gothic styles Early Gothic Image Interieur2 kathedraal Laon.JPG thumb ... architecture . To heighten the wall, builders divided it into four tiers Arcade architecture ... invented the flying buttresses , which reached maturity only at High Gothic during the 13th century. The vault architecture vaults were six ribbed sexpartite vault s. High Gothic This 13th century style canonized proportions and shapes from early Gothic and developed them further to achieve light, yet .... Notable structures Early Gothic The east end of the Abbey Church of St Denis Sens Cathedral Notre ... Toul Cathedral High Gothic The main body of Chartres Cathedral 1194 1260 Amiens Cathedral Notre Dame ... Chapelle Late Gothic The north tower of Chartres Cathedral The rose window of Amiens Cathedral The west ... more details
thumb 150px Doge s Palace, Venice Doge s Palace in Venice The Gothicarchitecture appeared in Italy in the 12th century. Italian Gothic always maintained peculiar characteristic which differentiated ... timeline of Gothicarchitecture in Italy can comprise an initial development of the Cistercian architecture an early Gothic phase c. 1228 1290 the mature Gothic of 1290 1385 a late Gothic phase from 1385 to the 16th century, with the completion of the great Gothic edifices begun previously, as the Milan Cathedral and San Petronio Basilica in Bologna . Beginnings of Gothicarchitecture in Italy Gothicarchitecture was imported in Italy, just as it was in many other European countries. The Benedictine ..., the realization of Filippo Brunelleschi See also Gothic art Romanesque architecture Renaissance ... wikipedia article it Gotico italiano it.wikipedia.org wiki Gotico italiano Gothicarchitecture by country DEFAULTSORT Italian GothicArchitecture Category Gothicarchitecture in Italy Category Italian ...Architecture of Italy Image Milan Cathedral from Piazza del Duomo.jpg 250px thumb Milan Cathedral Domm .... In particular, the architectural ardite solutions and technical innovations of the French Gothic cathedrals ... area, over the rest of Western Europe. This kind of architecture had in fact already included most of the novelties which characterized the Gothic cathedrals of le de France province Ile de France ... accurate as well. The result is a quasi modern cleanness, lacking embellishments. The Cistercian architecture ... Gothic edifices were Cistercian abbeys. They spread in the whole Italian territory, often adapting ... were influenced by the Gothic style, though still presenting important Romanesque features, are the Parma ... Gothic buildings for the Mendicant Orders. The most important ones include Basilica of San Francesco ... important Gothic or Gothic like edifices were begun, which were to be completed in the following ... 14th century two major Italian late Gothic edifices were begun, the Duomo di Milano and the Basilica ... more details
date March 2010 exceed the number of authentic GothicarchitectureGothic structures that had been ... pre industrial medieval society as a golden age. To Pugin, Gothicarchitecture was infused with the Christian ... tower in Moscow Kremlin . Designed from 1625 by architect Christopher Galloway Gothicarchitecture ... 16th century. However, Gothicarchitecture did not die out completely in 1520 but instead lingered ... the Gothic order as one of the primary systems of architecture and made use of it in his practice. Similarly, Gothicarchitecture survived in an urban setting during the later 17th century, as shown ... architecture, the tomb monuments of royal and noble personages, stained glass, and late Gothic illuminated ... proportions. A younger generation who took Gothicarchitecture more seriously provided the readership ... he used were Norman architecture Norman , Early English Period Early English , English Gothicarchitecture Decorated Gothic Decorated and Perpendicular Period Perpendicular . It went through ... was not limited to architecture. Whimsical Gothic detailing in English furniture is traceable as far ... scholar Alexandre de Laborde said Gothicarchitecture has beauties of its own , Citation needed date ... Gothicarchitecture, however, rather than to initiate a craze for neo Gothic in contemporary ... a German return of Gothicarchitecture. ref The importance of the Cologne completion project in German ..., French and English all claimed the original Gothicarchitecture of the 12th century as originating ... Gothicarchitecture was an English creation. In his 1832 edition of Notre Dame de Paris Victor ... architecture. Other major completions of Gothic cathedrals were of Regensburger Dom with twin spire ... and Gustave Eiffel was consecrated in 1891. Gothic as a moral force Pugin and truth in architecture ... a series of volumes of architectural drawing s, the first two entitled, Specimens of GothicArchitecture , and the following three, Examples of GothicArchitecture , that were to remain both in print ... more details
from Moorish Spain and early Gothic forms from mainland Italy. The official name of the typical venetian architecture is gothicarchitecturegothic commercialism . Some buildings like Santa Maria ... . ref Yet another important example of Venetian Gothicarchitecture is Santa Maria dei Frari, a Franciscan ... Cavalli Franchetti is an example of Venetian Gothicarchitecture alongside the Grand Canal Venice ... Gothicarchitecture Byzantine architecture Moorish architecture External links http www.gutenberg.org ... Architecture Category Neo Venetian Gothic buildings Category Gothic Revival architecture Category Gothic Revival architecture in the United States Venetian Gothic Category Victorian architectural ...Unreferenced date October 2006 Venetian Gothic is a term given to an architectural style combining use of the GothicarchitectureGothic lancet window lancet arch with Byzantine architecture Byzantine and the Moorish architecture influences of the contemporary Moorish Revival style. The style originates .... History The Gothic Period erupted in Venice during a time of great affluence, when the upper ... time, monks were beginning to bring the Gothic style to Venice s churches from mainland Italy ... in palace construction, that Venetian Gothic became a distinct style in itself. Influenced by the Doge s Palace, the creators of this new style meshed Gothic, Byzantine, and Oriental themes to produce a totally unique approach to architecture. This Venetian Gothic style lasted well into the 15th century because of the city s love of ornate decoration and pointed arches. ref Venetian Gothic. RIBA ... Unique to the Venetian Gothic architectural style is the desire for lightness and grace in structure ... Gothic, while far more intricate in style and design that previous construction types in Venice ... concept because of the fact that while the window traceries in Northern Gothic construction only supported stained glass, the traceries in Venetian Gothic supported the weight of the entire building ... more details
Portuguese Gothicarchitecture is the Architecture architectural Architectural style style prevalent in Portugal in the Late Middle Ages . As in other parts of Europe, Gothic style slowly replaced Romanesque architecture in the period between the late 12th and the 13th century. Between the late 15th and early 16th century, Gothic was replaced by Renaissance architecture through an intermediate style ... Monastery 12th 13th century . Churches and monasteries Gothicarchitecture was brought to Portugal by the Cistercian Order . The first fully Gothic building in Portugal is the church of the Monastery ... supported by flying buttress es, typical features of Gothicarchitecture and a novelty at the time in Portugal. After the foundation of Alcoba a, the Gothic style was chiefly disseminated by mendicant ... architecture Portuguese architecture Romanesque architecture Manueline gothicmed Gothicarchitecture by country Architecture of Portugal Category Gothicarchitecture in Portugal Category Portuguese ... places. Mendicant Gothic churches usually had a three aisled nave covered with wooden roof and an apse ... devoid of architectural decoration, in tone with mendicant ideals. Mendicant Gothic was also adopted ... , Lowrinqueh and Lal . Image BattlehaFacade1.jpg thumb left 220px Flamboyant Gothic in the Monastery ... modernised with Gothic elements. Thus, the Romanesque nave of Oporto Cathedral is supported by flying ... was totally remodelled in the first half of the 14th century, when it gained a Gothic ambulatory illuminated ..., vaults are already Gothic. Many Gothic churches maintained the fortress like appearance of Romanesque ... do Castelo, Portugal Viana do Castelo . Several Gothic cloisters were built and can still be found in the Cathedrals ... of Portuguese Gothic. After 1402, the works were trusted to Master Huguet , of unknown origin, who introduced the Flamboyant Gothic style to the project. The whole building is decorated with Gothic pinnacles ... architecture tympanum has a relief showing Christ and the Evangelists. The Founder s Chapel and the Chapter ... more details
of Toronto designed by Henry Sproatt Gothic Revival architecture in Canada is an historically influential style, with many prominent examples. The Gothic Revival was imported to Canada from Britain and the United ... Georgian and neo classical styles. GothicArchitecture is a name given in retrospect to many of the major ... University Cambridge , and this extended to embracing the Gothicarchitecture used in their construction ... in Toronto and Bishop s University in Quebec.The gothic revival architecture became very popular ... Gothic Revival architecture became the dominant style for major Canadian buildings. As the style became ... from Medieval models by integrating a variety of eras and styles of Gothicarchitecture, including elements of Gothicarchitecture from Britain, France, the Low Countries, and Italy all in one building ... Gothic Revival became the dominant style of Canadian civic architecture largely as a matter of timing ... and monarchist. Gothicarchitecture was seen as symbolic of this. In the late nineteenth century as Canada ... embraced Gothic Revival architecture as emblematic of Canada s identity as a homeland for the northern ... Arts architecture Beaux Arts building with Gothic Revival elements was the tallest building in Canada ... in Canada. Gothic Revival architecture continued to be one of the most important building styles ... 75px See also Gothic Revival architecture Canadian architecture List of Gothic Revival architecture ... Gothic Revival in Canadian Architecture, by Mathilde Brosseau. Occasional Papers in Archaeology ... Parliament Hill, Ottawa at Library and Archives Canada Category Gothic Revival architecture in Canada ... projects throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The Gothic Revival period ... prominent religious, civic, and scholastic institutions are housed in Gothic Revival style buildings. In the 1960s and 1970s several scholars, most notably Alan Gowans, embraced Canadian Gothic Revival architecture as one of the nation s signature styles and as an integral part of Canadian nationalism ... more details
Late Gothic Revival architecture is a subtype of Gothic Revival architecture . It has been used frequently ... 32 photos from 1988 captions pages 60 62 of text document ref Gothicarchitecture has had multiple ... Church, Leeds It is a good example of Late Gothic Revival church architecture , and it was built in the first ... New Haven, Connecticut It s a Late Gothic Revival building. References Gothic Revival architecture in Connecticut ... Avenue Historic District is Late Gothic Revival . ref name nrhpinv3 cite web url http pdfhost.focus.nps.gov ... feet 163 m, the 42 story Late Gothic Revival Cathedral is the tallest educational building in the Western hemisphere. pre Neoclassical architecture redirect from Neoclassical Revival architectural formulas as an outgrowth of some classicizing features of Late Baroque . ... to Romanticism or Gothic ... s The church was designed in the late Gothic Revival, also termed Neo Gothic, style by J.J. McCarthy ... The late Gothic Revival style building replaced a home that had also been used as a dormitory. This structure ... the Apostle New York City The Late Gothic Revival style church was built between 1876 1884 with Tarrytown ... Hotel Fontenelle Designed by noted architect Thomas Rogers Kimball in the Late Gothic Revival style ... Archdiocese of Detroit Heart Major Seminary Classical Revival, Late Gothic Revival Donaldson and Meier ... Methodist Church Monroe, Wisconsin Green County, Wisconsin , is a Gothic revival edifice designed by the former ... tower, the church exemplifies the late Gothic revival style. ... 3 KB 474 words ... story, H shaped structure competed in 1930 in the late Gothic Revival style. The earliest ... Gothic Revival style, it was designated an Omaha Landmark and listed on the National Register ... by architect Guy J. Vinton in the Late Gothic Revival style. On August 3, 1982, it was added ... Gothic Revival style Episcopal church ... 3 KB 359 words 08 41, 5 May 2010 Simpson Memorial United Methodist Church Charleston, West Virginia It is of late Gothic Revival styling with features common ... more details
from about 1180 until about 1520. Introduction As with the Gothicarchitecture of other parts of Europe , English Gothic is defined by its pointed arch es, Vault architecture vaulted roof s, buttress ... large scale applications of Gothicarchitecture in England are at Canterbury Cathedral and Westminster Abbey . Many features of Gothicarchitecture had evolved naturally from Romanesque architecture ... at the Norman Durham Cathedral which has the earliest pointed ribbed high vault known. Gothicarchitecture ... periods, which may be further subdivided to accurately define different styles. Gothicarchitecture ... and had great popularity as Gothic Revival architecture throughout the 19th century. Many of the largest ... Gothicarchitecture The Designation of styles in English Gothicarchitecture follow conventional labels ... monarchs. In the late 12th century the Early English Gothic style superseded the Romanesque architecture ... Early English Gothic is sometimes known as the Lancet style. Although arches of Gothicarchitecture ... Period in architecture also known as the Decorated Gothic , or simply Decorated is a name given specifically to a division of English Gothicarchitecture . Traditionally, this period is broken ... Gothicarchitecture Equilateral arch equilateral , and the molding decorative mouldings bolder than ... Gothic period or simply Perpendicular is the third historical division of English Gothicarchitecture ... 1275, is a superb example of Early English Gothicarchitecture apart from its 14th century tower and spire ... Durham castle gallery See also Portal Anglicanism GothicArchitecture Romanesque architecture ... www.britainexpress.com architecture decorated.htm BritainExpress Decorated Gothicarchitecture http ... architecture.com node 112 GothicArchitecture Periods and Styles Gothicarchitecture by country Architecture of England DEFAULTSORT English GothicArchitecture Category English Gothicarchitecture Category Gothicarchitecture in England Category Architectural styles cs Gotick architektura v Anglii ... more details
Switzerland Basel M nster Bern Munster See also Gothicmed List of Brick Gothic buildings List of Gothic Revival buildings Category Medieval architecture Category Gothicarchitecture es Anexo Arquitectura ... Abbey Choir ILN 1848.jpg thumb 200px The Choir architecture choir of Westminster Abbey in London ..., Oxford Architecture .26 Gardens New College, Oxford Peterborough Cathedral Ripon Cathedral Salisbury ... Cathedral Pontigny Abbey Rodez Cathedral Saint Denis Basilica considered by many, the first Gothic ... First gothic cathedral in Germany Marburg Elisabethkirche the earliest Gothic church in Germany ... St. Mary church in Trier St. Thomas Church, Leipzig , late Gothic with later additions Strasbourg ... thumb 200px Matthias Church, Budapest, Hungary Castle of Di sgy r , Miskolc Gothic Protestant Church ... della Spina Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari , Venice Santa Maria sopra Minerva only Gothic church ... Basilica of St. Peter and St. Paul, Pozna City Hall in Toru Gniezno Cathedral Gothic House in Stargard ... Gothic influence Laslea M l ncrav Prejmer, Bra ov Rug ne ti Sibiu Lutheran Cathedral in Sibiu Sighi oara ... . With the widest gothic nave in the world. Cathedral of Le n , in Le n, Le n Le n . 13th ... of San Salvador , in Zaragoza . In Gothic Mud jar style. Cathedral of Santa Eulalia , in Barcelona Cathedral of Seville , 15th and 16th centuries, the largest Gothic temple in the world. Cathedral ... more details
Catedral S o Jo o Batista , Santa Cruz do Sul , 1928 1932 Canada Main Gothic Revival architecture ... , the second largest example of Gothic Revival architecture in the British Isles , 1870 Kelvinside ... College , 1908 Harkness Tower at Yale University , New Haven, Connecticut , 1917 21 ref Neo Gothic also called Scholastic Gothic or Collegiate Gothic is the characteristic architecture of the University ... Episcopal Church Pasadena, California , church 1926, rectory 1931. ref http www.usc.edu dept architecture greeneandgreene 103.html 5 30 2010 ref References references DEFAULTSORT List Of Gothic Revival Architecture Category Gothic Revival architecture Category Architecture lists Gothic Revival ...The following is a list of buildings in the Gothic Revival style . Asia Region File St. Andrew s Wiki 2009.jpg St. Andrew s Cathedral, Singapore thumb Saint Andrew s Cathedral, Singapore St Andrew s Cathedral on North Bridge Road , Singapore St. Anthony s Cathedral , Lahore , Pakistan Sacred Heart Cathedral of Guangzhou Sacred Heart Cathedral , Guangzhou Canton , China, 1863 1888 San Sebastian Church ..., Sydney thumb Scots Church, Melbourne Vaucluse House Sydney Regency Gothic. Sydney Conservatorium ..., Former Stock Exchange, Gothic Bank, Goode House and Olderfleet buildings and Safe Deposit Building ... Trinity Anglican Church , 1843, Toronto , Ontario Tudor Gothic revival Church of the Holy Trinity ... Vergara Hall Venetian Gothic , Vi a del Mar , 1910 Croatia Castle Trako an , 1886 Hermann Boll ... Loggia.jpg thumb New Town Hall in Munich, Germany Nauener Tor , Potsdam , 1755 Gothic House, Dessau ... , Padua , mixed parts of gothic and classical styles. Castello Aselmeyer , Naples . Borgo ... houses the Museum of Romanticism . Gothic House in Pu awy , 1800 1809 Potocki mausoleum located ... , 1911 1914 Russia Gothic Chapel Peterhof Gothic Chapel , Petergof Peterhof Image StAndyThis2.JPG ... Israel , a rare example of a Gothic revival synagogue PPG Place , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania , 1984 ... more details
Wiktionary Gothic Goth goth Gothic may refer to tocright Germanic people Goths or Gothic people, the ethnonym of a group of East Germanic tribes Gothic language , an extinct East Germanic language, spoken by the Goths Crimean Gothic , the Gothic language spoken by the Crimean Goths Gothic alphabet , one of the alphabets used to write the Gothic language Gothic term , a term used to describe things pertaining to the Gothic people Medieval culture Gothic art , a Medieval art movement Gothicarchitecture Romanticism Gothic fiction or Gothic Romanticism, a British literary genre Gothic Revival architecture Modern culture Goth subculture Gothic rock , a type of rock music Gothic fashion Gothic metal Typography Blackletter or Gothic script Sans serif or Gothic typefaces Other uses Gothic film Gothic film , a film by Ken Russell Gothic series Gothic series , a video game series originally developed by Piranha Bytes Gothic moth , a species of nocturnal moth Gothic album , an album by the band Paradise Lost Gothic Line , a World War II defensive line Gothics , one of the Adirondack High Peaks in New York Gothic F.C. , a football club in Norwich, England SS Gothic SS Gothic , a Corinthic class passenger and cargo liner New Gothic Art SS Gothic 1893 SS Gothic 1893 , a list of White Star Line ships White Star Line ship Batman Gothic , a 1990 comic book story arc See also Goth disambiguation Geats Gothika lookfrom Gothic intitle Gothic disambig ca G tic cy Gothig da Gotisk de Gothic es G tico desambiguaci n eo Gotiko eu Gotiko fa fr Gothique gl G tico ko hr Gotika razdvojba id Gothik is Gotneskur it Gotico disambigua he ka nl Gotisch ja no Gotisk uz Gotika ma nolari pl Gothic pt G tico ru sl Gotika razlo itev sr sv Gotisk th vi Gothic zh ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Image Krak w St. Mary Church 01.JPG thumb right St. Mary s Basilica, Krak w St. Mary s church , Krak w . The Gothic architecture Gothic style arrived in Poland in the 13th century. In the north and west of the country, there are some scarce Romanesque architecture Romanesque predecessors see Brick Romanesque Poland here . Most Gothic buildings in Poland are made of brick , and belong to the Baltic region Baltic Brick Gothic , especially in northern Poland see List of Brick Gothic buildings Poland Significant Brick Gothic buildings in Poland . Nonetheless, not all Gothic buildings in Poland are made of brick. For example, the Wawel Cathedral in Krak w is mostly stone built. Poland also has some Gothic fieldstone church es, mostly of relatively small size. The centers of Polish Gothic are Krak w , Gda sk , Toru , Wroc aw . See also Culture of medieval Poland Gothicmed Gothic architecture by country Category Gothic architecture in Poland Category History of Poland 966 1385 Category Polish art Art history stub Poland hist stub pl Architektura gotycka w Polsce ... more details
unreferenced date December 2010 Image Mechelen Sint Rombouts.JPG thumb right Mechelen cathedral with its unfinished tower Brabantine Gothic is a variant of Gothic architecture found in the former territory of Brabant in north Belgium and the southern Netherlands . Brabantine gothic developed from French gothic. Characteristics As in France, the quire of a Brabantine church is surrounded by an ambulatory and terminated with a chevet . What distinguishes Brabantine gothic from French gothic is the presence of a single western tower and sometimes the omission of transept s. Where a transept is present it will often have a Flemish gable and omit the rose window found on French transepts. Examples St. John s Cathedral, s Hertogenbosch St. Rumbold s Cathedral , Mechelen Cathedral of Our Lady Antwerp Brussels Town Hall St. Michael and St. Gudula Cathedral , Brussels Category Architectural styles Category Gothic architecture ... more details
Split Goths Etymology Gothic disambiguation date March 2010 Wiktionary GothicGothic is the term originally used to describe things pertaining to the Gothic people and then reused in a variety of contexts. The Goths were traditionally thought to have originated in northern Europe and moved south towards the borders of the Roman Empire in the 2nd century. Eventually they occupied territories in modern Germany, Spain and Italy. The Goths became a byword for northern barbarism and from the sixteenth century their name was given to the dominant architectural and artistic style of the late medieval period, which had originated in France in the twelfth century, Gothicarchitecture . The style became idealised in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries within Romanticism , leading to the architectural Gothic revival , beginning in Britain but spreading to continental Europe and North America, by which medieval buildings were restored and large numbers of civil, ecclesiastical and educational buildings built in a medieval style. The creation of literary works that employed such late medieval backdrops to explore dark aspects of human nature and the supernatural led to the creation of Gothic fiction , which was the origin of the modern horror genre in books, film, T.V. and more recently video games. From the 1980s these works provided the visual and atmospheric inspiration for the Gothic subculture , producing Gothic music , as well as fashions, fiction and events. Notes reflist 2 Gothic DEFAULTSORT Gothic Term Category Goth subculture Category Goths Category Gothicarchitecture Category Gothic art Category Gothic fashion Category Gothic fiction Category Horror genres Category Late Antiquity Category Migration Period ... more details
Dissenting Gothic is a distinctive style of neo Gothicarchitecture in its own right that emerged primarily in Britain, its colonies and North America, during the nineteenth century Gothic Revival . ref ... adopted by some of the leading British ecclesiologists during the early Gothic Revival period, architects who were willing to respond to the demand for Dissenting Gothic enlarged their portfolio, drawing on mainland European Gothicarchitecture as well as English forms ref Reference idRosman2003 ... were portraying it as high church architecture. Equally, there was a refusal by some Gothic Revival ... Architecture ref . As the nineteenth century wore on, Dissenting Gothic became widespread not only as old ... Category Gothic Revival architecture Category Revival architectural styles Category Victorian ... mediaeval Gothic that was being advocated and promoted by some influential ecclesiologists during the early Gothic Revival period in Britain, most particularly by Augustus Welby Pugin and to an extent ... , 1841 68 , Dissenting Gothic provided a less Anglo centric interpretation of the Gothic style, and purposefully introduced modernising elements to meet clients needs. In Dissenting Gothic the interests ... a design solution, rather than promoting specific Gothic forms as a cause celebre in pursuit of an idealised ..., seeking novel but appriopriate ways to introduce elements not found in mediaeval Gothic churches ... use confined city plots in efficient ways by varying from strict gothic floorplans and orientations ... buildings. The Early Gothic Revival Period Although the earliest examples of Dissenting Gothic ... of the purist AngloCatholic dominated Gothic Revival movement namely during the second quarter of the nineteenth century the latter so profoundly dominated and led this early period of Gothic Revival that there were relatively few examples in Britain or elsewhere of Dissenting Gothic before the third quarter of the nineteenth century. This limited use of Dissenting Gothic in the early ... more details
File Porta ap stols maigb.jpg thumb right Porta dels Ap stols of the Cathedral of Valencia , a great example of Levantino Gothic. File Santdomenec claustre1.jpg thumb right Convent of Sant Dom nec, in the city of Valencia. It is called the Levantino Gothic to the developed in the Mediterranean area of Spain, the architecture characterized by its halls and churches of great horizontal extent with emphasis on the structural part supported by buttresses and minimal and austere decorations. The main differences with Kingdom of Castile Castilian Gothic are Single nave instead of three, in case that there are, has the same height and the wider central. Chapels between the buttresses. Thinner supports. Low figurative decoration, dominated by the geometric type. Minor surface of openings, resulting in a low light penetration. Almost all the important buildings are in capitals of former Medieval mediterranean kingdoms, where cathedrals were erected in the 13th and 14th centuries, as in the countryside abounded the Moors, predominantly the Christian in this cities. Many buildings of this architectural style are located around all Valencian Community, surroundings, and Balearic Islands. References Valdearcos, Enrique http clio.rediris.es n33 n33 arte 12Gotico.pdf El arte g tico Clio n. 33 2007 ISSN 1139 6237 Architecture of Spain Category Gothic architecture in Spain Category Gothic art es G tico levantino ... more details
Cracker Gothic is a term most often used to describe some historical homes in Florida that are otherwise considered under the Florida cracker architecture style. ref Photograph and description. Manatee County Public Library Historic Photograph Collection. Source University of South Florida Tampa Library M01 08709 A http kong.lib.usf.edu 8881 R MS6E5LTFINVS8B1E4TQ2M96VMYBH269SFI8Q3TNFIUIIYDFXCS 00766?func dbin jump full&object id 129061&local base GEN01&pds handle GUEST Close view of walls and windows in old Cracker Gothic home. ref ref Photograph and description. Manatee County Public Library Historic Photograph Collection. Source University of South Florida Tampa Library M01 08706 A http kong.lib.usf.edu 8881 R ECAP5T7NR821YDR58TV7JF9D58S63IDG37PPASDJ4T4HJKADVQ 03502?func dbin jump full&object id 129058&local base GEN01&pds handle GUEST Cracker Gothic style of settler s house. ref Outside of this relationship to architectural terminologies, the words Cracker Gothic have not been associated together to anything else in common mainstream English language until recently, when a group of theatrical performers started to spread the term. After analyzing the etymology of both words cracker and Gothic term gothic separately, when used together the context and meaning get very close to the general accepted definition of the term Southern Gothic , and even may be used interchangeably. However Cracker Gothic appears to adjudicate more specific elements in its definition content that separates it from its original Southern Gothic root. Architectural Definition Empty section date July 2010 Theatrical Definition Empty section date July 2010 References References Category Gothic Revival architecture in Florida ... more details
century, Brick Gothic was superseded by Brick Renaissance architecture. Brick Gothic is characterised by the lack of figural architectural sculpture , widespread in other styles of Gothicarchitecture and by its creative subdivision and structuring of walls, using built Ornament architecture ornament ... the area of Brick Gothic, half timbered architecture remained typical for smaller buildings, especially ... regarding Brick Gothic in Brandenburg. Characteristics of Brick Gothic Romanesque brick architecture ... architecture External links Commons category Brick Gothic http www.eurob.org index.php5 European ... 12 X Translation Ref de Backsteingotik oldid 38807510 Category Gothicarchitecture Category Hanseatic ...File L beck Holstentor.jpg thumb L beck , the mother of Brick Gothic Holstentor with two of the city ... Nogat in former Pommerania now Poland the world s largest brick Gothic castle File Bazylika ... the largest brick church in the world Brick Gothic lang de Backsteingotik is a specific style of Gothicarchitecture common in Northern Europe , especially in Northern Germany and the regions around the Baltic ... s. Brick Gothic buildings are found in the Baltic countries of Denmark , Finland , Germany , Poland , Lithuania , Latvia , Estonia , Belarus , Russia and Sweden . Brick gothicarchitecture in northern Italy is called Santa Maria del Carmine, Pavia Lombard Gothic , and it s different from the Nothern Europe s Brick Gothic. Brick Gothicarchitecture of the Iberian Peninsula is different in nature it is discussed under Mud jar Mud jar Gothic . As the use of baked red brick in Northern Europe dates ... town centres dominated by Brick Gothic, as well as some individual structures, have been listed as UNESCO World Heritage sites. Distribution Brick architecture is found primarily in areas that lack ... Gothic has become a symbol of that powerful alliance of cities. Along with the Low German Low German ... Gothic structure in Germany is the Bergkirche mountain church of Altenburg in Thuringia . Other national ... more details
the transition between late GothicarchitectureGothic and early Renaissance, with original features ... French Gothic. Therefore, in the Peninsula, whose tradition of classical architecture ... the presence of Roman buildings was much more abundant and the Gothic had received a very adapted to the local ... architecture. The use of these terms are concerned, in the intention of those who used, to things ... or purist, while the Modern was for them the late Gothic and the Platereque decorative vocabulary ... of the interiors, the Gothic provides a proven structural systems. And it is the Gothic style in the Peninsula ... original style, but building efficiently the Gothic construction system. On the other hand, most likely Spanish architects accustomed to Gothic, looked with some contempt the visible metal braces that Italian architects were forced to put on the arches to resist the horizontal thrust, when the Gothic building system had methods avoided the trap . After the Gothic inheritance begins to take shape ... de San Juan de los Reyes, Toledo Monastery of San Juan de los Reyes in Toledo, the Gothic idea ... rationality, the Gothic system that evolves over time in the decoration of buildings , corresponding ... , while keeping intact many Gothic elements, especially how to bear the burdens of the vaults ... volumes. Diputaci n de vila, 2001. ISBN 84 923918 7 1 External links commonscat Isabelline GothicArchitecture of Spain Category Spanish architecture Category Gothicarchitecture Category Gothicarchitecture in Spain Category Architectural styles Category Roman Catholic Church architecture arch ... more details
1149 1159 and Poitiers 1162 are examples of a primitive Gothic art, more austere and less well lit. Originating in France, Gothicarchitecture then spread to the British Isles, notably in Canterbury ... and, thenceforth, the Baptism. The edifice mixes romanesque architecture Romanesque and Lombard GothicarchitectureGothic styles, the latter evident in the preference for bare brickwork walls ... Paderborn Archhistory Category Gothicarchitecture Category Architectural styles nl Romanogotiek ..., but not the constructional principles. The diverend Gothic building styles Early Gothic also named romano gothic ca. 1140 to 1200 High Gothic also named rayonnent 1200 to 1300 Late Gothic also named ... province Groningen It was also influential in the German Holy Roman Empire , where the Romano Gothic ... Groningen province Groningen , are build many churches in this style. The Romano Gothic style ... property of Romano Gothic churches. A later variant of Romano Gothicism features pointed arches, like ... of the Rhineland has often been called Romano Gothic as well. This can particularly be seen in the cathedral of Limburg an der Lahn which combines the round Roman arch and the Gothic ribbed vault. The cathedral Limburger Dom is one of the most complete creations of Late Romanesque architecture ... Ald1 fg03.jpg Inside of the Limburger Dom gallery Other examples of a mix between Romanesque and Gothic ... of one completed in 1270 in a transitional Romanesque Gothic style. It is covered with a greenish ... The Cistercian abbey in Ko bacz includes a Romanesque Gothic church 1210 1347 . Its one of the oldest ... more details
Infobox nrhp name The Gothic House nrhp type image TheGothicHousePortland.JPG caption The Gothic House in December 2010. location 387 Spring Street, Portland, Maine lat degrees lat minutes lat seconds lat direction long degrees long minutes long seconds long direction locmapin Maine area built 1845 architect Henry Rowe architectureGothic Revival added 1974 governing body Private refnum 72001539 ref name nris NRISref 2010 10 25 ref The Gothic House also known as the John J. Brown House is an historic house in Portland, Maine . Located in the West End Portland, Maine West End , it was built in 1845 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. ref http www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com ME Cumberland state2.html National Register of Historic Places in Cumberland County, Maine ref The house was originally located approximately a mile to the east of the present location. Faced with demolition in 1971, it was moved further down Spring Street and a Holiday Inn hotel was constructed in the former location. It is the finest example of Gothic Revival architecture in Maine. ref name Guide http portlandlandmarks.org Images events tours Self Guided Western.php sg westend.pdf Guide to the Western Promenade Portland Landmarks ref References reflist National Register of Historic Places Category 1845 architecture Category Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Maine Category Houses in Portland, Maine Category Gothic Revival architecture in Maine Maine NRHP stub ... more details
refimprove date July 2010 Infobox musical artist Name The Gothic Archies Img Img capt Background group or band Origin Genre Indie pop , gothic rock Years active 1996 present Label Nonesuch Records Nonesuch Elektra Records Associated acts The Magnetic Fields URL http www.houseoftomorrow.com gothicarchies.php Official website Current members Stephin Merritt br Daniel Handler Past members The Gothic Archies are a self described goth rock goth bubblegum pop bubblegum band created and largely performed by Stephin Merritt , more famously of The Magnetic Fields . In 1997, Merritt released The New Despair . The EP featured the song Your Long White Fingers , which appeared frequently in the cult Nickelodeon TV channel Nickelodeon series The Adventures of Pete & Pete . The band s name is apparently a pun on the term GothicarchitectureGothic Arch and the Archies . The band later became more prominent as Merritt would write, perform and record songs for the audiobook versions of Lemony Snicket s A Series of Unfortunate Events . A collection of all thirteen songs was released as The Tragic Treasury Songs from A Series of Unfortunate Events The Tragic Treasury on October 10, 2006, to coincide with the release of the final book in the series. The Gothic Archies briefly toured to promote the album featuring Merritt on ukulele and Daniel Handler as Lemony Snicket on accordion . In 2002, The Gothic Archies composed original music for the audio book version of Neil Gaiman s Coraline . Discography Looming in the Gloom 1996 ref cite web url http www.iheartny.com yourenotthere looming.html title Stephin Merritt Album Gallery Looming in the Gloom EP publisher Iheartny.com date accessdate 2010 07 07 ref The New Despair 1997 The Tragic Treasury Songs from A Series of Unfortunate Events 2006 References ... of Tomorrow Myspace gothicarchies Stephin Merritt Daniel Handler DEFAULTSORT Gothic Archies Category Lemony Snicket Category Daniel Handler Category Gothic rock groups Category Nonesuch Records ... more details