Definition of Gothic Architecture
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Florencia Ucha, in Nov. 2014
Thanks to the development and app of the architecture Since ancient times it has been possible for humanity to design and build all kinds of buildings. Undoubtedly this art is closely linked with the evolution of the man who at a certain moment of his existence needed to have closed and comfortable spaces to be able to live and develop accordingly.
Just as the history of man is divided into different stages, architecture is also divided and therefore depending on of the historical period in question we can find a particular type of architecture that characterizes that weather. That is, the traditions, the uses and the situation of an era set trends and defined various types of architecture.
In the case that concerns us today, Gothic architecture goes hand in hand with the so-called Gothic art, a style that flowed during the fullness and also during the fall of the Middle AgesThis is why it is certainly a convulsed art.
We must say that at this time that goes from the twelfth century to the fifteenth century there is a great break in which urban life prevails over life
rural that had dominated until that moment, then, architecture, as it could not be otherwise, had to accompany that change and civil constructions proliferated for the bourgeoisie nascent and powerful, universities and religious constructions undergo a radical differentiation with previous art (Romanesque) by putting light above all things in this type of buildings.Universities, cathedrals, houses, hospitals were the main constructions of this historical time.
It should be noted that Gothic architecture is characterized by the presence of two recurring elements, on the one hand the ogival arch, which consists of an arch that is made up of two segments of arches that converge at a point central. The first impression it generates is the verticality of the work of building.
And on the other hand we find the ribbed vault, the other hyper-defining element of this architecture and which consists of the crossing of two vaults.
Topics in Gothic Architecture