Gardners Art through the Ages A Global History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
MAP18-1Europe around 1200.

Bourges

Moissac

ParisSt.-Denis

Reims

Cologne
Bamberg
Schwäbisch Gmund

Rome

London
Salisbury

Gloucester
Hereford

Durham

Carcassonne

León Avignon

Autun

Bruges
Honnecourt
CaenRouen

BeauvaisAmiens Laon

Chartres

Verdun

Naumburg
Marburg

Meissen
Prague

Vienna

Klosterneuburg

Speyer Wimpfen-im-Tal
Strasbourg

Pisa Florence

Venice
Milan

Carcassonne

ATLANTIC
OCEAN

ATLANTIC
OCEAN

North
Sea

North
Sea

Baltic SeaBaltic Sea

Mediterranean SeaMediterranean Sea

Tyrrhenian
Sea

Tyrrhenian
Sea
Ionian
Sea

Ionian
Sea

Ad
riat
ic
Sea

Ad
riat
ic
Sea

English Channel

Rhin
eR

Sei
ne
R.

Elbe
R.

Da
nu
be
R.

Me
seu
.R

Aude R.

Sicily

Alps

SPAIN

ITALY

ENGLAND

IRELAND

GERMANY

KINGDOM
OF PORTUGAL

KINGDOM
OF LEÓN

KINGDOM
OF CASTILE

KINGDOM
OF NAVARRE

KINGDOM
OF ARAGON

PAPAL
STATES

UMAYYAD
CALIPHATE

HOLY ROMAN
EMPIRE

KINGDOM
OF THE
TWO SICILIES

KINGDOM
OF
FRANCE

LAN

GU
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OC

BU
RG
UN
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NORMANDY

AQUITAINE

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462 Chapter 18 GOTHIC EUROPE

18-2Plan of the east end, abbey church, Saint-Denis, France,
1140–1144 (after Sumner Crosby).
The innovative plan of the east end of Saint-Denis dates to Abbot
Suger’s lifetime. By using lightweight rib vaults, the builders were
able to eliminate the walls between the radiating chapels.

N

0 10 20 30 40 50 feet
0 105 1 5 meters

Radiating Ambulatory
chapels

French Gothic


The Gothic style first appeared in northern France around 1140, and
some late medieval writers called Gothic art in general opus franci-
genum (“French work”). By the 13th century, the opus modernum of
the region around Paris had spread throughout western Europe, and
in the next century it expanded still farther. Saint Vitus Cathedral in
Prague (Czech Republic), for example, begun in 1344, closely emu-
lates French Gothic architecture. Today, Gothic architecture lives on
in the chapels, academic buildings, and dormitories of college cam-
puses throughout North America. But although the Gothic style
achieved international acclaim, it was a regional phenomenon. To
the east and south of Europe, the Byzantine and Islamic styles still
held sway. And many regional variants existed within European
Gothic, just as distinct regional styles characterized the Romanesque
period.


Architecture and
Architectural Decoration

Art historians generally agree that the birthplace of Gothic architec-
ture was at Saint-Denis, a few miles north of Paris. Saint Dionysius
(Denis in French) was the apostle who brought Christianity to Gaul
and who died a martyr’s death there in the third century. The Bene-
dictine order founded the abbey at Saint-Denis in the seventh cen-
tury on the site of the saint’s burial. In the ninth century, the monks
constructed a basilica at Saint-Denis, which housed the saint’s tomb
and those of almost all of the French kings dating back to the sixth
century, as well as the crimson military banner said to have belonged
to Charlemagne. The Carolingian basilica became France’s royal
church, the very symbol of the monarchy (just as Speyer Cathedral,
FIG. 17-19,was the burial place of the German rulers of the Holy Ro-
man Empire).


SUGER AND SAINT-DENIS By 1122, when a monk named
Suger became abbot of Saint-Denis, the old church was in disrepair
and had become too small to accommodate the growing number of
pilgrims. Suger also believed the basilica was of insufficient grandeur
to serve as the official church of the French kings (see “Abbot Suger
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