Medieval Architecture
Medieval architecture spans the Byzantine, Islamic, Romanesque, and Gothic traditions, developing new structural systems and religious building types between antiquity and the Renaissance.
Definition
The historical study of architecture in the period between antiquity and the Renaissance, including the Byzantine, Islamic, Romanesque, and Gothic traditions.
Scope
This area surveys building in the Middle Ages across the Mediterranean and Europe, from early Christian and Byzantine churches with their domes and mosaics, through the rise of Islamic architecture, to the masonry vaulting and pilgrimage churches of the Romanesque and the soaring ribbed vaults, pointed arches, and stained glass of the Gothic. It treats structural innovation, liturgical and devotional functions, and the social organization of building.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- How did Byzantine architecture develop the domed church?
- What structural innovations produced the Romanesque and Gothic styles?
- How did religion shape medieval building types and ornament?
- How were great cathedrals and mosques designed and built?
Key theories
- Structural rationalism of the Gothic
- The view, developed from Viollet-le-Duc onward and synthesized by Paul Frankl, that Gothic form follows from a rational structural system of ribbed vaults, pointed arches, and flying buttresses, though Frankl also stresses spatial and aesthetic dimensions.
- Continuity of Christian building
- Richard Krautheimer's account of the development of church architecture from early Christian basilicas through Byzantine domed forms, emphasizing liturgical function and the evolution of the Christian building type.
History
Late antiquity produced the basilica and the domed church, culminating in Byzantine masterpieces such as Hagia Sophia; Islam developed the mosque and its regional variants; Western Europe moved from Carolingian and Romanesque masonry to the Gothic cathedrals of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, whose structural and spatial achievements defined the high Middle Ages.
Debates
- Origins of the Gothic style
- Scholars debate whether the Gothic arose chiefly from structural problem-solving in vaulting, from theological and aesthetic aspirations toward light, or from the ambitions of patrons such as Abbot Suger at Saint-Denis.
Key figures
- Richard Krautheimer
- Paul Frankl
- Kenneth Conant
- Spiro Kostof
Related topics
Seminal works
- kostof1995
- conant1993
- frankl2000
- krautheimer1986
Frequently asked questions
- What distinguishes Romanesque from Gothic?
- Romanesque churches use rounded arches, thick walls, and barrel or groin vaults, while Gothic buildings use pointed arches, ribbed vaults, and flying buttresses to achieve greater height and larger windows.
- What is Hagia Sophia?
- Hagia Sophia in Constantinople is a sixth-century Byzantine church, later a mosque, celebrated for its enormous central dome on pendentives and its luminous interior.