Gothic style - traducción al griego
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Gothic style - traducción al griego

STYLE OF ARCHITECTURE
Gothic style; Gothic Cathedrals; Gothical; Gothic (architecture); Gothic Architecture; Late-Gothic; Florid Gothic; Late-Gothic style; Lancet arch; Opus Francigenum; Gothic architectures; Gothic design; Gothic church; Acte arch; Late Gothic (architecture); Late Gothic style; Late Gothic architecture; Opus francigenum; Pointed architecture; Gothic mansion
  • ''High Gothic'' flying buttresses{{Break}}Metz Cathedral (1220–)
  • Monastery of Batalha]] in [[Portugal]]
  • [[Beauvais Cathedral]], south transept (consecrated 1272)
  • Grote Kerk (Breda)
  • Plan of a Gothic cathedral
  • [[Rouen Cathedral]] from the south west – façade towers 12th–15th century, the flamboyant tower to the 15th century, spire rebuilt in 16th century
  • Donjon of the [[Château de Vincennes]], (1337–)
  • Crossing vault, [[Seville Cathedral]]
  • St. John's Cathedral ('s-Hertogenbosch)
  • ''High Gothic'' west front, [[Reims Cathedral]] (1211–)
  • [[Plateresque]] façade, [[University of Salamanca]] (late 15th century)
  • [[Grotesque]] of [[Selby Abbey]] (14th century)
  • ''Perpendicular Gothic'' east end, Henry VII Chapel (c. 1503–12)
  • ''Plate tracery'', [[Lincoln Cathedral]] "Dean's Eye" rose window (c.1225)
  • [[Medieval Louvre]] in early 15th century
  • Notre-Dame de Paris – deep portals, a rose window, balance of horizontal and vertical elements. Early Gothic.
  • Structure of an early six-part Gothic rib vault. (Drawing by [[Eugène Viollet-le-Duc]])
  • [[Sainte-Chapelle de Vincennes]] (1370s)
  • ''Flamboyant Gothic'' east end,{{Break}}Prague Cathedral (1344–)
  • Windows of [[Sainte-Chapelle]] (13th century)
  • ''Early Gothic'' triple elevation{{Break}}Sens Cathedral (1135–1164)
  • [[Thistle Chapel]] at [[Edinburgh's High Kirk]] (completed 1910)
  • ''Rayonnant Gothic'' west front{{Break}}Strasbourg Cathedral (1276–)
  • Oxen sculpture in High Gothic towers of [[Laon Cathedral]] (13th century)
  • Pointed arches in the [[Tower of the church of San Salvador]], [[Teruel]]

Gothic style         
γοτθικό
gothic revival         
  • Sir Walter Scott]] whose novels popularised the [[Medieval]] period from which the Gothic Revival drew its inspiration
  • Basilica of Sainte Clotilde Sanctuary, Paris, France
  • [[Trinity College, Hartford]]: Burges's revised, three-quadrangle, masterplan
  • [[Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus]] in [[Mumbai]], India
  • The Canadian Parliament Buildings from the Ottawa River, including Gothic Revival library at rear]], built between 1859 and 1876
  • [[Cologne Cathedral]], finally completed in 1880 although construction began in 1248
  • [[Exeter College, Oxford]] Chapel
  • Cast-iron Gothic tracery supports a bridge by [[Calvert Vaux]], in [[Central Park]], New York City
  • Venetian Gothic in [[Baku]], [[Azerbaijan]].
  • [[Carcassonne]] – Viollet-le-Duc restored the citadel from 1853.
  • [[Liverpool Cathedral]], whose construction ran from 1903 to 1978
  • Construction of [[Washington National Cathedral]] began in 1907 and was completed in 1990.
  • [[Saint Clotilde Basilica]] completed 1857, Paris
  • The [[Palace of Westminster]] (1840–1876), designed by [[Charles Barry]] & [[Augustus Pugin]]
  • Gothic façade of the [[Parlement de Rouen]] in France, built between 1499 and 1508, which later inspired neo-Gothic revival in the 19th century
  • Church of St Avila, Bodega, California
  • Georgia]], United States)
  • p=7}}
  • Sir Christopher Wren]] 1681–82, to match the Tudor surroundings
  • [[Pilgrimage Church of Saint John of Nepomuk]] by [[Jan Santini Aichel]] (around 1720)
ARCHITECTURAL MOVEMENT
Neo-Gothic architecture; Neo-Gothic; Victorian Gothic; Gothic Revival; Neo-gothic architecture; Neogothic; Neo Gothic; Gothic Revival style architecture; Gothic Revival style; Gothic revival style; Gothic-revival; Neo-gothic; Gothic revival; Gothic revival architecture; Gothic Revival Style architecture; Gothic Revival in the decorative arts; Gothic survival; Neo-Gothicism; Goth revival; Neo-Gothic style; Gothick; Pointed style; Victorian Gothic architecture; Late Gothic Revival architecture; Gothic Revival Architecture; Late Gothic Revival style; Late Gothic Revival; German gothic; Gothic Revivalist; Jigsaw Gothic; High victorian gothic; Neogothic architecture
νεογοτθικός ρυθμός
modern style         
  • [[Everard's Printing Works]]
  • [[Glasgow School of Art]]
BRITISH ART NOUVEAU STYLE
Modern Style; Modern style
μοντέρν

Definición

lancet arch
¦ noun a narrow arch with a pointed crown.

Wikipedia

Gothic architecture

Gothic architecture is an architectural style that was prevalent in Europe from the late 12th to the 16th century, during the High and Late Middle Ages, surviving into the 17th and 18th centuries in some areas. It evolved from Romanesque architecture and was succeeded by Renaissance architecture. It originated in the Île-de-France and Picardy regions of northern France. The style at the time was sometimes known as opus Francigenum (lit.'French work'); the term Gothic was first applied contemptuously during the later Renaissance, by those ambitious to revive the architecture of classical antiquity.

The defining design element of Gothic architecture is the pointed or ogival arch. The use of the pointed arch in turn led to the development of the pointed rib vault and flying buttresses, combined with elaborate tracery and stained glass windows.

At the Abbey of Saint-Denis, near Paris, the choir was reconstructed between 1140 and 1144, drawing together for the first time the developing Gothic architectural features. In doing so, a new architectural style emerged that emphasized verticality and the effect created by the transmission of light through stained glass windows.

Common examples are found in Christian ecclesiastical architecture, and Gothic cathedrals and churches, as well as abbeys, and parish churches. It is also the architecture of many castles, palaces, town halls, guildhalls, universities and, less prominently today, private dwellings. Many of the finest examples of medieval Gothic architecture are listed with UNESCO as World Heritage Sites.

With the development of Renaissance architecture in Italy during the mid 15th century, the Gothic style was supplanted by the new style, but in some regions, notably England and Belgium, Gothic continued to flourish and develop into the 16th century. A series of Gothic revivals began in mid-18th century England, spread through 19th-century Europe and continued, largely for churches and university buildings, into the 20th century.

Ejemplos de uso de Gothic style
1. When he came to design his home, he created his own gothic–style masterpiece.
2. She believes she was targeted because of her gothic–style black top and trousers.
3. The reception was held in a white marquee built off the Gothic–style central chapel.
4. Even before he chained the doors at Norris and began his rampage, Cho had reconnoitered the Gothic–style building.
5. Built in 1'54, the Gothic–style, 28–story Leningradskaya closed for renovation last November as the hotel‘s owner, Sadko Hotel, sought an international brand to take over operations.