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Pointed arch

A pointed arch, ogival arch, or Gothic arch is an arch with a pointed crown, whose two curving sides meet at a relatively sharp angle at the top of the arch.[1] This architectural element was particularly important in Gothic architecture. The earliest use of a pointed arch dates back to bronze-age Nippur. As a structural feature, it was first used in eastern Christian architecture, Byzantine architecture and Sasanian architecture, but in the 12th century it began to be used in France and England as an important structural element, in combination with other elements, such as the rib vault and later the flying buttress. These allowed the construction of cathedrals, palaces and other buildings with dramatically greater height and larger windows which filled them with light.[2]

Pointed arches form the rib vaults of Worcester Cathedral (1084–1504)

Early arches edit

Crude arches pointed in shape have been discovered from the Bronze Age site of Nippur dated earlier than 2700 BC. The palace of Nineveh also has pointed arched drains but they have no true keystone.[3] There are many other late Roman and Sassanian examples, mostly evidenced in early church building in Syria and Mesopotamia, but also in engineering works such as the Byzantine Karamagara Bridge, with a pointed arch of 17 m span, making "the pre-Muslim origins of pointed architecture an unassailable contention".[4]

The clearest surviving example of pre-islamic pointed archs are the two pointed archs of Chytroi-Constantia Aqueduct in Cyprus dating back to the 7th century CE.[5]

 
7th century byzantine pointed archs from Chytroi-Constantia Aqueduct, Cyprus

Pointed arches – Islamic architecture edit

The pointed arch became an early feature of architecture in the Islamic world. It appeared in early Islamic architecture, including in both Umayyad architecture and Abbasid architecture (late 7th to 9th centuries).[6][7] The most advanced form of pointed arch in Islamic architecture was the four-centred arch, which appeared in the architecture of the Abbasids. Early examples include the portals of the Qubbat al-Sulaiybiyya, an octagonal pavilion, and the Qasr al-'Ashiq palace, both at Samarra, built by the Abbasid caliphs in the 9th century for their new capital.[7] It later appeared in Fatimid architecture in Egypt[8] and became characteristic of the architecture of Persianate cultures, including Persian architecture,[9] the architecture of the Timurid Empire,[10] and Indo-Islamic architecture.[11][12][13]

Gothic architecture – pointed arches and rib vaulting edit

Rib vaults edit

In the 12th century, architects in England and France discovered a new use for the pointed arch. They began using the pointed arch to create the rib vault, which they used to cover the naves of abbeys and cathedrals. The first Gothic rib vault was built at Durham Cathedral in England in 1135.[2] Others appeared in the deambulatory of the Abbey of Saint Denis in Paris (1140–1144), Lessay Abbey in Normandy (1064–1178), Cefalù Cathedral in Sicily, (1131–1240). and the Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris.

The rib vault quickly replaced the Romanesque barrel vault in the construction of cathedrals, palaces, and other large structures. In a barrel vault, the rounded arch over the nave pressed down directly onto the walls, which had to be very thick, with few windows, to support the weight. In the rib vault, the thin stone ribs of the pointed arches distributed the weight outwards and downwards to the rows of pillars below. The result was that the walls could be thinner and higher, and they could have large windows between the columns. With the addition of the flying buttress, the weight could be supported by curving columns outside the building, which meant that the Cathedrals could be even taller, with immense stained glass windows. [14]

In the earliest type of Gothic rib vault, the sexpartite vault, the vault had a transversal pointed arch, and was divided by the ribs into six compartments. It could only cross a limited amount of space, and required a system of alternating columns and pillars. This type was used in Sens Cathedral and Notre-Dame de Paris. A new version was soon introduced, which reduced the number of compartments from six to four, distributed the weight equally to four pillars, eliminating the need for alternating columns and pillars, and allowed the vault to span a wider space. This quadripartite vault was used at Amiens Cathedral, Chartres Cathedral, and Reims Cathedral, and gave these structures unprecedented height. [15]

Portals edit

Portals of Cathedrals in the Gothic period were usually in the form of a pointed arch, surrounded by sculpture, often symbolizing the entrance to heaven.

Windows edit

The window in the form of a pointed arch is a common characteristic of the Gothic style. Windows sometimes were constructed in the classical form of a pointed arch, which is denominated an "equilateral arch", while others had more imaginative forms that combined various geometric forms. One common form was the lancet window, a tall and slender window with a pointed arch, which took its name from the lance. Lancet windows were often grouped into sets, with two, three or four adjacent windows.

The late Gothic, also known as the Flamboyant Gothic, had windows with pointed arches that occupied nearly all the space of the walls. Notable examples are the windows of Sainte-Chapelle de Vincennes (1379–1480)

Forms edit

The form of the Gothic pointed arch in windows and arches was typically based upon an equilateral triangle, in which the three sides have an equal length. This had the great advantage of simplicity. Stone cutters, or hewers, could precisely draw the arc on the stone with a cord and a marker. This allowed arch stones to be cut at the quarry in quantity with great precision, then delivered and assembled at the site, where the layers put them together, with the assurance that they would fit. The use of the equilateral triangle was given a theological explanation – the three sides represented the Holy Trinity. [16]

In the later years of the flamboyant Gothic the arches and windows often took on more elaborate forms, with tracery circles and multiple forms within forms. Some used a modification of the horseshoe arch, borrowed from Islamic architecture.

The Tudor Arch of the Late Gothic style was a variation of the Islamic four-centred arch. A four-centred arch is a low, wide type of arch with a pointed apex. Its structure is achieved by drafting two arcs that rise steeply from each springing point on a small radius, and then turning into two arches with a wide radius and much lower springing point. It is a pointed sub-type of the general flattened depressed arch. Two of the most notable types are known as the Persian arch, which is moderately "depressed".[7]

The Tudor arch, which is flatter than the Persian arch, was widely used in English architecture, particularly during the Tudor dynasty (1485–1603),[17]

Revival of pointed arch edit

Though the Gothic pointed arch was largely abandoned during the Renaissance, replaced by more classical forms, it reappeared in the 18th and 19th century, Gothic Revival architecture. It was used in Strawberry Hill House, the residence in Twickenham, London built by Horace Walpole (1717–1797) from 1749 onward. It was usually used in churches and chapels, and later in the British Houses of Parliament in London, (1840–1876) rebuilt after the earlier building was destroyed by a fire. In the 19th century, pointed arches appeared in varied structures, including the Gothic train station in Peterhof, Russia (1857).

Notes and citations edit

  1. ^ Bechmann (2017), p. 322.
  2. ^ a b Mignon (2015), p. 10.
  3. ^ "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Mesopotamian Archæology, by Percy S. P. Handcock". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 2020-07-30.
  4. ^ Warren 1991, pp. 61–63
  5. ^ Stewart, Charles Anthony (2014). "Architectural Innovation in Early Byzantine Cyprus". Architectural History. 57: 1–29. ISSN 0066-622X.
  6. ^ Herzefeld, Ernst (2016) [1910]. "The Genesis of Islamic Art and the Problem of Mshatta". In Bloom, Jonathan M. (ed.). Early Islamic Art and Architecture. Translated by Hillenbrand, Fritz; Bloom, Jonathan M. Routledge. pp. 35–36. ISBN 9781351942584.
  7. ^ a b c Petersen (2002), pp. 25, 250–251.
  8. ^ M. Bloom, Jonathan; S. Blair, Sheila, eds. (2009). "Architecture". The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. p. 109. ISBN 9780195309911.
  9. ^ M. Bloom, Jonathan; S. Blair, Sheila, eds. (2009). "Architecture". The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. p. 100. ISBN 9780195309911.
  10. ^ Petersen (2002), pp. 283.
  11. ^ Burton-Page, John (2008). Indian Islamic Architecture: Forms and Typologies, Sites and Monuments. Brill. p. 20. ISBN 978-90-04-16339-3.
  12. ^ Mehrdad, Shokoohy; Shokoohy, Natalie E. (2020). Bayana: The Sources of Mughal Architecture. Edinburgh University Press. p. 479. ISBN 978-1-4744-6075-0.
  13. ^ Bandyopadhyay, Soumyen; Chauhan, Sagar (2019). "Herbert Baker, New Delhi and the reception of the classical tradition". In Temple, Nicholas; Piotrowski, Andrzej; Heredia, Juan Manuel (eds.). The Routledge Handbook on the Reception of Classical Architecture. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-69385-1.
  14. ^ Renault & Lazé (2005), p. 34-35.
  15. ^ Renault & Lazé (2005), p. 34–35.
  16. ^ Bechmann (2017), pp. 207–215.
  17. ^ Pugin, Augustus (1821). Specimens of Gothic Architecture: Selected from Various Ancient Edifices in England. Vol. 1–2. p. 3.

Bibliography edit

  • Bechmann, Roland (2017). Les Racines des Cathédrales (in French). Payot. ISBN 978-2-228-90651-7.
  • Bony, Jean (1983). French Gothic Architecture of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-02831-9.
  • Ducher, Robert (1988). Caractéristique des Styles (in French). Flammarion. ISBN 978-2-08-011539-3.
  • Mignon, Olivier (2015). Architecture des Cathédrales Gothiques (in French). Éditions Ouest-France. ISBN 978-2-7373-6535-5.
  • Petersen, Andrew (2002). Dictionary of Islamic Architecture. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780203203873.
  • Renault, Christophe; Lazé, Christophe (2005). Mémento Gisserot de l'architecture. Mémento Gisserot : histoire de l'art (in French). ISBN 9782877477635. OCLC 470449422.
  • Warren, John (1991), "Creswell's Use of the Theory of Dating by the Acuteness of the Pointed Arches in Early Muslim Architecture", Muqarnas, Brill, vol. 8, pp. 59–65, doi:10.2307/1523154, JSTOR 1523154

Further reading edit

  • Viollet-Le-Duc, Eugene. Dictionnaire raisonné de l'architecture française du XIe au XVIe siècle (in French). (in nine volumes)

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See also Gothic architecture and Islamic architecture A pointed arch ogival arch or Gothic arch is an arch with a pointed crown whose two curving sides meet at a relatively sharp angle at the top of the arch 1 This architectural element was particularly important in Gothic architecture The earliest use of a pointed arch dates back to bronze age Nippur As a structural feature it was first used in eastern Christian architecture Byzantine architecture and Sasanian architecture but in the 12th century it began to be used in France and England as an important structural element in combination with other elements such as the rib vault and later the flying buttress These allowed the construction of cathedrals palaces and other buildings with dramatically greater height and larger windows which filled them with light 2 Pointed arches form the rib vaults of Worcester Cathedral 1084 1504 Contents 1 Early arches 2 Pointed arches Islamic architecture 3 Gothic architecture pointed arches and rib vaulting 3 1 Rib vaults 3 2 Portals 3 3 Windows 3 4 Forms 4 Revival of pointed arch 5 Notes and citations 6 Bibliography 6 1 Further readingEarly arches editCrude arches pointed in shape have been discovered from the Bronze Age site of Nippur dated earlier than 2700 BC The palace of Nineveh also has pointed arched drains but they have no true keystone 3 There are many other late Roman and Sassanian examples mostly evidenced in early church building in Syria and Mesopotamia but also in engineering works such as the Byzantine Karamagara Bridge with a pointed arch of 17 m span making the pre Muslim origins of pointed architecture an unassailable contention 4 The clearest surviving example of pre islamic pointed archs are the two pointed archs of Chytroi Constantia Aqueduct in Cyprus dating back to the 7th century CE 5 nbsp 7th century byzantine pointed archs from Chytroi Constantia Aqueduct CyprusPointed arches Islamic architecture edit nbsp Restored Abbasid architecture arches of the city gates of Samarra 9th century nbsp Central prayer niche in the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo 876 879 CE nbsp The 11th 12th century Baghdad Gate Raqqa nbsp Zumurrud Khatun Mosque and Mausoleum Baghdad Iraq 12th century nbsp Bibi Khanym Mosque Samarkand Uzbekistan 1399 1404 nbsp The Eurymedon Bridge in Turkey originally built by the Romans and rebuilt with a pointed arch in the 13th century by the Seljuk Turkish Sultan nbsp The arched doorway from the vestibule to the interior of Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque 1603 1619 nbsp Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque Isfahan Iran 1603 1619 The pointed arch became an early feature of architecture in the Islamic world It appeared in early Islamic architecture including in both Umayyad architecture and Abbasid architecture late 7th to 9th centuries 6 7 The most advanced form of pointed arch in Islamic architecture was the four centred arch which appeared in the architecture of the Abbasids Early examples include the portals of the Qubbat al Sulaiybiyya an octagonal pavilion and the Qasr al Ashiq palace both at Samarra built by the Abbasid caliphs in the 9th century for their new capital 7 It later appeared in Fatimid architecture in Egypt 8 and became characteristic of the architecture of Persianate cultures including Persian architecture 9 the architecture of the Timurid Empire 10 and Indo Islamic architecture 11 12 13 Gothic architecture pointed arches and rib vaulting edit nbsp Thirteenth century illustration by Villard de Honnecourt of how different pointed arches can be made from a single curve of the compass From Eugene Viollet le Duc Dictionnaire raisonne de l architecture francaise du XIe au XVIe siecle nbsp Gothic pointed windows colonnades and vaults at the Abbey of Saint Denis Paris drawn by Eugene Viollet le Duc nbsp The dynamics of a rib vault with outward and downward pressure from ribs balanced by columns and buttresses The pieces can stand by themselves without cement National Museum of French Monuments Paris nbsp An early sexpartite rib vault drawn by Eugene Viollet le Duc nbsp Rib vaults of Durham Cathedral with alternating columns and pillars completed in 1135 nbsp Choir of Lessay Abbey in Normandy 1064 1178 nbsp Vaulted ceiling of Cefalu Cathedral in Sicily 1131 1240 nbsp Chapel of Saint Firmin in Basilica of Saint Denis 1140 1144 nbsp Lady Chapel of Salisbury Cathedral 1220 1258 nbsp Choir of Beauvais Cathedral begun 1225 48 5 meters 159 ft highRib vaults edit In the 12th century architects in England and France discovered a new use for the pointed arch They began using the pointed arch to create the rib vault which they used to cover the naves of abbeys and cathedrals The first Gothic rib vault was built at Durham Cathedral in England in 1135 2 Others appeared in the deambulatory of the Abbey of Saint Denis in Paris 1140 1144 Lessay Abbey in Normandy 1064 1178 Cefalu Cathedral in Sicily 1131 1240 and the Cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris The rib vault quickly replaced the Romanesque barrel vault in the construction of cathedrals palaces and other large structures In a barrel vault the rounded arch over the nave pressed down directly onto the walls which had to be very thick with few windows to support the weight In the rib vault the thin stone ribs of the pointed arches distributed the weight outwards and downwards to the rows of pillars below The result was that the walls could be thinner and higher and they could have large windows between the columns With the addition of the flying buttress the weight could be supported by curving columns outside the building which meant that the Cathedrals could be even taller with immense stained glass windows 14 In the earliest type of Gothic rib vault the sexpartite vault the vault had a transversal pointed arch and was divided by the ribs into six compartments It could only cross a limited amount of space and required a system of alternating columns and pillars This type was used in Sens Cathedral and Notre Dame de Paris A new version was soon introduced which reduced the number of compartments from six to four distributed the weight equally to four pillars eliminating the need for alternating columns and pillars and allowed the vault to span a wider space This quadripartite vault was used at Amiens Cathedral Chartres Cathedral and Reims Cathedral and gave these structures unprecedented height 15 Portals edit nbsp Portal of Toledo Cathedral the Door of the Lions 1226 1493 nbsp West portal of Reims Cathedral 1211 1345 nbsp Central portal of Chartres Cathedral 1194 1220 Portals of Cathedrals in the Gothic period were usually in the form of a pointed arch surrounded by sculpture often symbolizing the entrance to heaven Windows edit nbsp Ruin of Aulne Abbey in Belgium 1214 1247 nbsp Lancet windows nbsp A Double Lancet Window about 1330 Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp Pointed windows of the nave of Sainte Chapelle de Vincennes occupy near all the walls 1379 1480 The window in the form of a pointed arch is a common characteristic of the Gothic style Windows sometimes were constructed in the classical form of a pointed arch which is denominated an equilateral arch while others had more imaginative forms that combined various geometric forms One common form was the lancet window a tall and slender window with a pointed arch which took its name from the lance Lancet windows were often grouped into sets with two three or four adjacent windows The late Gothic also known as the Flamboyant Gothic had windows with pointed arches that occupied nearly all the space of the walls Notable examples are the windows of Sainte Chapelle de Vincennes 1379 1480 nbsp Multiple arches of the Flamboyant Gothic at Sainte Chapelle de Vincennes nbsp Varieties of Gothic pointed arches nbsp The Great Gate of Trinity College Cambridge an example of a Tudor Arch or Four centred archForms edit The form of the Gothic pointed arch in windows and arches was typically based upon an equilateral triangle in which the three sides have an equal length This had the great advantage of simplicity Stone cutters or hewers could precisely draw the arc on the stone with a cord and a marker This allowed arch stones to be cut at the quarry in quantity with great precision then delivered and assembled at the site where the layers put them together with the assurance that they would fit The use of the equilateral triangle was given a theological explanation the three sides represented the Holy Trinity 16 In the later years of the flamboyant Gothic the arches and windows often took on more elaborate forms with tracery circles and multiple forms within forms Some used a modification of the horseshoe arch borrowed from Islamic architecture The Tudor Arch of the Late Gothic style was a variation of the Islamic four centred arch A four centred arch is a low wide type of arch with a pointed apex Its structure is achieved by drafting two arcs that rise steeply from each springing point on a small radius and then turning into two arches with a wide radius and much lower springing point It is a pointed sub type of the general flattened depressed arch Two of the most notable types are known as the Persian arch which is moderately depressed 7 The Tudor arch which is flatter than the Persian arch was widely used in English architecture particularly during the Tudor dynasty 1485 1603 17 Revival of pointed arch edit nbsp Strawberry Hill House residence of Horace Walpole 1749 onward nbsp Entrance to Victoria s Tower of the Houses of Parliament London 1840 1876 nbsp Peterhof Railway station Peterhof Russia 1857 nbsp Interior of Grace Cathedral in San Francisco 1910 1964 Though the Gothic pointed arch was largely abandoned during the Renaissance replaced by more classical forms it reappeared in the 18th and 19th century Gothic Revival architecture It was used in Strawberry Hill House the residence in Twickenham London built by Horace Walpole 1717 1797 from 1749 onward It was usually used in churches and chapels and later in the British Houses of Parliament in London 1840 1876 rebuilt after the earlier building was destroyed by a fire In the 19th century pointed arches appeared in varied structures including the Gothic train station in Peterhof Russia 1857 Notes and citations edit Bechmann 2017 p 322 a b Mignon 2015 p 10 The Project Gutenberg eBook of Mesopotamian Archaeology by Percy S P Handcock www gutenberg org Retrieved 2020 07 30 Warren 1991 pp 61 63 Stewart Charles Anthony 2014 Architectural Innovation in Early Byzantine Cyprus Architectural History 57 1 29 ISSN 0066 622X Herzefeld Ernst 2016 1910 The Genesis of Islamic Art and the Problem of Mshatta In Bloom Jonathan M ed Early Islamic Art and Architecture Translated by Hillenbrand Fritz Bloom Jonathan M Routledge pp 35 36 ISBN 9781351942584 a b c Petersen 2002 pp 25 250 251 M Bloom Jonathan S Blair Sheila eds 2009 Architecture The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture Vol 1 Oxford University Press p 109 ISBN 9780195309911 M Bloom Jonathan S Blair Sheila eds 2009 Architecture The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture Vol 1 Oxford University Press p 100 ISBN 9780195309911 Petersen 2002 pp 283 Burton Page John 2008 Indian Islamic Architecture Forms and Typologies Sites and Monuments Brill p 20 ISBN 978 90 04 16339 3 Mehrdad Shokoohy Shokoohy Natalie E 2020 Bayana The Sources of Mughal Architecture Edinburgh University Press p 479 ISBN 978 1 4744 6075 0 Bandyopadhyay Soumyen Chauhan Sagar 2019 Herbert Baker New Delhi and the reception of the classical tradition In Temple Nicholas Piotrowski Andrzej Heredia Juan Manuel eds The Routledge Handbook on the Reception of Classical Architecture Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 69385 1 Renault amp Laze 2005 p 34 35 Renault amp Laze 2005 p 34 35 Bechmann 2017 pp 207 215 Pugin Augustus 1821 Specimens of Gothic Architecture Selected from Various Ancient Edifices in England Vol 1 2 p 3 Bibliography editBechmann Roland 2017 Les Racines des Cathedrales in French Payot ISBN 978 2 228 90651 7 Bony Jean 1983 French Gothic Architecture of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02831 9 Ducher Robert 1988 Caracteristique des Styles in French Flammarion ISBN 978 2 08 011539 3 Mignon Olivier 2015 Architecture des Cathedrales Gothiques in French Editions Ouest France ISBN 978 2 7373 6535 5 Petersen Andrew 2002 Dictionary of Islamic Architecture London Routledge ISBN 9780203203873 Renault Christophe Laze Christophe 2005 Memento Gisserot de l architecture Memento Gisserot histoire de l art in French ISBN 9782877477635 OCLC 470449422 Warren John 1991 Creswell s Use of the Theory of Dating by the Acuteness of the Pointed Arches in Early Muslim Architecture Muqarnas Brill vol 8 pp 59 65 doi 10 2307 1523154 JSTOR 1523154 Further reading edit Viollet Le Duc Eugene Dictionnaire raisonne de l architecture francaise du XIe au XVIe siecle in French in nine volumes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pointed arch amp oldid 1187635869, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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