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ENGLISH GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE ENGLISH GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE

ENGLISH GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2023-09-22

ENGLISH GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE - PPT Presentation

Origin Gothic architecture flourished in England from about 1180 until about 1520 It found its inception in France specifically in Burgundy and Provence as a development from earlier styles of Western Christian architecture ID: 1019499

cathedral architecture canterbury gothic architecture cathedral gothic canterbury arches england exterior vaults thomas romanesque elements interior attention windows important

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1. ENGLISH GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE

2. Origin Gothic architecture flourished in England from about 1180 until about 1520. It found its inception in France, specifically in Burgundy and Provence as a development from earlier styles of Western Christian architecture (labeled “Classical” or “Romanesque”). The term “Gothic” was applied to this architecture style and culture by those who invented it to mean barbarous due to its status as non-classical.

3. This architecture is defined by a lot of elements:pointed arches;vaulted roofs;flying buttresses;pinnacles;ribs;spires;large and lancet windows. Several of them had derived from Romanesque architecture.Characteristic elements

4. Fan vaults are vaults, peculiar to English Gothic architecture, in which the ribs are all of equal curvature and rotated at equal distances around a central axis, forming the fanned shape which gives them this characteristic name. They developed in Gloucester between 1351 and 1377.Fan vaults

5. Canterbury Cathedral Canterbury Cathedral in Canterbury, Kent, is the oldest and most famous Gothic cathedral in England. It is the seat of the Archbishop of Canterbury, leader of the Church of England and symbolic leader of the worldwide Anglican Communion. Founded in 597, the cathedral was completely rebuilt from 1070 to 1077; then it was enlarged at the beginning of the twelfth century and in 1174 following a fire it was rebuilt again in the Gothic style, with significant extensions to accommodate the flow of pilgrims visiting the shrine of St. Thomas à Becket.

6. The exterior of Canterbury Cathedral impresses by its size, but also rewards closer attention to its details. Viewed directly from the south, the abrupt change from Romanesque to Gothic is clearly evident: on the right part there are round arches, blind arcades and rough surfaces; on the left instead abundant are the pointed arches and the pinnacles. Decorating the Romanesque exterior are intertwined blind arches embellished with decoratively carved columns and figurative capitals.Exterior

7. The interior is characterized by a Latin cross plan of three naves. They terminate at a great Gothic choir screen (a.k.a. rood screen) at the top of a wide stairway. East of the choir there’s the large Trinity Chapel, a level higher than the rest of the interior and surrounded by an ambulatory; it is reached by stone stairs on either side while the floor, near the west end, has a set of interesting inlaid marble roundels. This chapel was built specifically for the shrine of St. Thomas à Becket. The massive crypt beneath the east end of the cathedral is one of the most fascinating parts.Interior

8. Stained glass windowsThe stained glass windows (or vitrails) enrich Canterbury Cathedral. They portray important moments about St. Thomas à Becket’s life but also biblical episodes. Their function in Medieval Times was to show the people, that didn’t know Latin and consequently didn’t understand religious celebrations, the most important elements of Christianity. Their extreme vivid and bright colors attracted people’s attention on the scenes they represented. These particular windows developed in the Roman Empire and evolved during the centuries arriving in England just between XII and XIII centuries.

9. Realized by: Samuele Bilello Antonino Provenzano Vito Speciale

10. Thank you for the attention