Decorated Gothic Vaulted Ceiling,
with Central Bosses, in Exeter Cathedral.
Photo: 3 August 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Wanner-Laufer
(Wikimedia Commons)
unless stated otherwise.
Further development included the repetition of Curvilinear, or Flame-Like Forms, that occur in a great number of Windows around 1320, notably in the Retro-Choir at Wells Cathedral and the Nave of Exeter Cathedral.
This type of Tracery is often seen in combination with Vaulting Ribs of extreme projection and very rich moulding, as is seen in the Chapter House at Wells, and the Vault at Exeter, which stretches, uninterrupted by a Central Tower, for ninety-one metres (300 ft) and is the longest Mediæval Vault in the World.[4]
The last stage of Curvilinear or Flowing Decorated Gothic, is expressed in Tracery of very varied and highly complex forms. Many of the largest and most famous Windows of England date from 1320 to 1330 and are in this style.
The Lierne Vault of the Crossing at Bristol Cathedral.
Photo: 5 August 2019.
Source: Own work.
Author: Kognos
(Wikimedia Commons)
They include the South Transept Rose Window, known as the “Bishop’s Eye” at Lincoln, the “Heart of Yorkshire” Window in the West End of York, and the famous Nine-Light East Window of Carlisle.[2][4]
There are many smaller architectural works within Cathedrals which have the Curvilinear Tracery. These include the Arcading in The Lady Chapel at Ely, which also has the widest Vault in England, the Pulpitum Screen at Lincoln, and richly-decorated doorways at Ely and Rochester.
The “Bishop’s Eye” Rose Window at Lincoln Cathedral.
Photo: 9 June 2013.
Source: Own work.
Author: Jonathan Cardy
(Wikimedia Commons)
In the 1330s, when the architects of Europe were embracing the Flamboyant style, English architecture moved away from the Flowing Decorated style in an entirely different, and much more sober, direction, with the reconstruction, in highly modular form, of the Choir of the Norman Abbey, now Cathedral, at Gloucester.
The Perpendicular style, which relies on a network of intersecting Mullions and Transoms, rather than on a diversity of richly carved forms for effect, gives an overall impression of great unity, in which the structure of the vast Windows of both Clerestory and East End are integrated with the Arcades, below, and the Vault, above.
The style proved very adaptable and continued with variations in the Naves of Canterbury and Winchester, and in the Choir of York.
PART SIXTEEN FOLLOWS.
Fascinating detail and fascinating series on the English Cathedrals: thank you Zephyrinus.
ReplyDeleteNote this: "Further development included the repetition of Curvilinear, or Flame-Like Forms, that occur in a great number of Windows around 1320, notably in the Retro-Choir at Wells Cathedral and the Nave of Exeter Cathedral. This type of Tracery is often seen in combination with Vaulting Ribs of extreme projection and very rich moulding, as is seen in the Chapter House at Wells Cathedral, etc...:
No doubt this complicated "tracery" also structurally reinforced to a greater degree these vaults and apses, and extraordinary engineering development long, long before the development of laser measurement devices, engineering calculus equations to estimate weight and strength, and certainly computerized analysis. Just amazing. --Note by Dante Peregrinus.
Thank you, Dante P, for your erudite and welcome Comment.
DeleteYour learned observations are quite correct, of course. The whole subject of Mediæval architecture and its construction is totally above Zephyrinus’s Pay Grade; it is a subject that is beyond his comprehension and understanding.
When Zephyrinus looks at such wonderful architecture, he is lost for words. Not knowing how such beauty could have been made in Mediæval times, when there was no modern tools, no power sources (other than human), and limited education within the populace, he is left with the belief that he is looking at something beyond Earthly terms.
Certainly, the overall effect is to inculcate the discerning observer with the thought that he is seeing a foretaste of Heaven.
Indeed, this is the only reason why such edifices were constructed.