When people talk about "Gothic architecture" we tend to think of cathedrals and churches.

But the Middle Ages were also full of beautiful town halls, universities, hospitals, and bridges.

So here is a journey through the world of secular Gothic architecture... Leuven Town Hall, built between 1448 and 1469
The word "Gothic" wasn't how people during the Middle Ages referred to their buildings.

It was Renaissance scholars who, with their interest in the architecture of Antiquity, called the Medieval style "Gothic" as a pejorative reference to the Goths who had sacked Rome: The Sack of Rome by the Barbarians in 410 by Joseph-Noël Sy
Even "Middle Ages" is a strange term, defining Europe from 500-1500 as existing between the classical world and its revival during the Renaissance, like a centuries-long, unenlightened mistake.

Perhaps secular Gothic buildings can tell a different story...
So the best place to start is with town halls.

By their very nature they speak to a time when power was shifting, new classes were emerging, and politics were changing.

Like the Palazzo Vecchio, built in the 1300s for the council that governed the Republic of Florence:
Or, on the other side of Europe, the town hall of Tallin, completed in 1404.

Tallinn was part of the Hanseatic League, an economic and diplomatic alliance of merchant cities, and so the town hall represents Tallinn's legislative independence from foreign, imperial rulers.
Perhaps the greatest of all Gothic town halls were built in the Low Countries, as cities in modern-day Belgium and Netherlands became booming mercantile centres who needed large legislative and administrative buildings.

Like Leuven's extraordinary Town Hall, completed in 1469:
Beyond legislative centres, towns in the Low Countries also built great bell towers to mark the hours of the day, to celebrate festivities, to sound the alarm; to regulate the city's burgeoning civic life.

Such as the huge Belfry of Bruges (13th-15th centuries):
And the exchanges: for with the rise of commerce trading centres were needed.

Like the Cloth Hall of Ypres, a warehouse and marketplace.

When completed in the 1304 it was the largest commercial building in Europe; after being destroyed during WW1 it was rebuilt in 1967.
And then there's the extraordinary Llotja de la Seda (Silk Exchange) in Valencia, started in 1482 and finished in 1533 in an unusual Late Gothic style.

Though it may look like a church, this hall was a place where merchants signed contracts and did their business.
But, moving beyond commerce and trade, there were plenty of other civic Gothic buildings.

Including Medieval hospitals, like that of St. John in Bruges (1200s) or that of Santa Creu, built by the Council of One Hundred in Barcelona in 1402:
And, of course, universities started appearing around Europe, first in Bologna in 1088 and then all around Italy, France, and Britain in the 12th century: the Dark Ages were over.

From 13th century quadrangles in Oxford to late Gothic plateresque stonework in Salamanca:
And from the 14th century cloisters of the Jagiellonian University in Krakow to the windows of the Karolinum (a dormitory) in Charles University, Prague, first built around the year 1400:
Gothic castles need to no introduction.

They varied in style from Bellver Castle in Mallorca (1311) through to Mir Castle in Belarus, built in the late "Brick Gothic" style in 1568 and a veritable monument of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Or Belém Tower in Lisbon, from 1519, in the glorious Manueline Style.

This was an incredibly specific strand of Late Gothic which incorporated the motifs of Portugal's seafaring identity - ropes, sea creatues, navigation instruments - into its sculptures and design.
And, beyond castles, many cities had defensive fortifications such as walls and towers.

Like the instantly recognisable Holsten Gate in Lübeck, the de facto capital of the Hanseatic League, built in the 1400s and another soaring achievement of late Gothic architecture:
Nor can we forgotten the many Gothic palaces.

In Venice a unique offshoot of the Gothic style had arisen, influenced by both Byzantine and Islamic architecture. This palace was built in the 1340s for the Doge - a ruler elected for life by the Venetian nobility.
And then there's something like Vladislav Hall, built inside Prague Castle in 1502 as a vast chamber for royal events.

The unusually cursive vaulting is a feature of the "Sondergotik" style unique to parts of modern-day Austria, Germany, and the Czech Republic.
There are many other examples of secular Gothic architecture, such as large stone bridges to replace older wooden ones, representing huge leaps forward in engineering.

Like the Pont Valentré in France, completed in 1350:
Or private houses, like that of Jacques Coeur (1395-1456) a French merchant whose wealth was quasi-mythical.

His home in Bourges is basically a palace, and a testament to how much Medieval society had changed, now that private citizens could amass such riches.
To end, it's worth briefly noting the Gothic Revival in the 19th and early 20th centuries for use in secular architecture.

Like the Palace of Westminster in London, home of the Houses of Parliament, built between the 1850s and 70s.
While Neo-Gothic was also popular in the USA, whether for great train stations, universities, or even skyscrapers - like the Woolworth Building, from 1912:
And that's a brief overview of secular Gothic architecture.

The Middle Ages may have been dominated by religion, but part of their story is also about commerce, urbanisation, and scholarship: architecture lent itself to those needs, too.
The town hall of Leuven, the Silk Exchange in Valencia, the home of Jacques Coeur in Bourges, the Holstentor in Lübeck, the Belfry in Bruges, the Jagiellonian University in Krakow - these great Gothic buildings tell a different story of the Middle Ages.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with The Cultural Tutor

The Cultural Tutor Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @culturaltutor

Dec 1
Language isn't just made up of letters and sounds - it's a living story of human history.

The words you use every day are hundreds or even thousands of years old, and come from the most surprising of places.

So here are 12 common words whose origins tell fascinating stories... Image
1. "Left Wing" and "Right Wing"

Two words, technically, or even four. They are used every day, all over the world, to describe political alignments.

But their initial meaning was literal rather than ideological, and comes from the French Revolution in 1789...
The king had been overthrown, but in the early days of the republic his supporters were still around.

In the National Assembly the supporters of monarchy sat to the *right* of the President, and the revolutionaries on his *left*.

After which their respective connotations arose. Opening of the Estates-Gene...
Read 25 tweets
Nov 29
Girl with a Pearl Earring, painted by Vermeer in 1665, might just be the most famous and beloved portrait in the world.

But who is the girl?

Well, that's the thing. There was no girl, because this isn't a portrait... Image
Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675) is one of the greatest painters who ever lived, though in his lifetime he wasn't known beyond his hometown.

He was born in Delft during the Dutch Golden Age, a period of extraordinary cultural, political, and economic flourishing in the Netherlands.
Vermeer, like many of his contemporaries - and unlike artists in Catholic parts of Europe - generally stuck to so-called "genre paintings."

This means a scene from everyday life rather than a religious topic, which had been the dominant theme of art in Europe for centuries: The Stuppach Madonna by Mat...
Read 26 tweets
Nov 27
On the 30th January 1889, a man called Joseph Hoyos arrived in Vienna with an urgent message for Emperor Franz-Josef of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

He brought shocking news of a tragedy which would shape the course of the 20th century...
Franz-Josef ascended to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1848, aged just 18.

He would rule right up until WW1, living through one of the most turbulent eras in history.

Politics, technology, warfare, economics; these were all revolutionised during his reign. Portrait of Emperor Franz Josef by Miklós Barabás (1853)
Indeed, Franz-Josef is the sixth-longest reigning monarch in history.

His reign was defined by political trouble: as the idea of the nation state began to spread, the provinces & principalities of the Austro-Hungarian Empire wanted to break free from imperial rule.
Read 24 tweets
Nov 26
When Théodore Géricault painted The Derby at Epsom in 1821, that's genuinely how people thought horses looked when galloping.

It wasn't until 1878 that photography proved otherwise.

But people didn't like the "correct" way; it looked wrong to them... ImageImage
Eadweard Muybridge (1830-1904) was an English photographer who moved to San Francisco in 1867 and starting selling photographs of the Yosemite Valley.

He was a pioneer of photography: Muybridge had successfully registered two patents in England before his move to America. Image
In 1872 he was employed by the founder of Stanford University, Leland Stanford, to photograph his favourite horse.

The next five years were spent on photographic experiments... and standing trial for the murder of his wife's lover - for which he was acquitted.
Read 21 tweets
Nov 26
Thread of the most beautiful paintings of storms at sea:

The Great Wave off the Coast of Kanagawa by Hokusai (1833)
The Ninth Wave by Ivan Aivazovsky (1857)
Shipwreck in Stormy Seas by Joseph Vernet (1773)
Read 17 tweets
Nov 24
Why does Art Nouveau design look like that?

(Wisteria Lamp by Clara Driscoll for Tiffany's, 1902) Image
The first reference to Art Nouveau - "New Art" - was in Belgium in 1884.

It became an international phenomenon by the 1890s and was finished by WW1.

But, despite its brief lifespan, Art Nouveau is one of the most enduringly popular styles - so where did it come from? Dawn and Dusk Bed by Émile ...
There are two distinct trends that influenced Art Nouveau.

The first was a growing discomfort with the overly historical state of architecture and art in the 19th century.

Consider the Impressionists, who were reacting to the historical principles of the "Academic" style: The Holy Family by William ...Boating by Edouard Manet (1...
Read 25 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(