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We're in Beverley Minster in Beverley, England,
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and we wanted to talk about the basic elements of a Gothic church. And probably
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the most basic element that identifies the Gothic style is the use of a pointed,
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not a round, a pointed arch.
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The pointed arch was a Gothic innovation that allowed Gothic
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architects to do what they really wanted to do,
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which was to build larger and
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brighter churches. Light was associated with God, with the divine.
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It's a perfect metaphor.
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Light has an almost magical quality in that it can pass through a solid,
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it can pass through glass. Romanesque churches,
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just before the Gothic period, required large thick
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expanses of wall to hold up the ceiling,
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usually a barrel-vaulted ceiling.
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So from the rounded barrel vault,
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the architects moved on to the groin vault.
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The weight of a round arch pushes outward and requires
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a lot of buttressing, a big solid wall underneath. The
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pointed arch redirects its weight more directly downward so that
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the supports can be thinner and can be more delicate.
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And the Gothic architects brilliantly realized that that innovation would allow
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them to be able to have less wall and more window.
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The weight of the vault didn't need to come down onto
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continuous walls but could come down onto four columns,
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opening up not just the walls to windows,
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but opening up the very space of the church itself.
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We might ask them, how is the stone vaulting held up?
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And the answer can be found in two places.
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First, if you look in between the glass,
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you can see a major structural element which comes down to the nave
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in the form of a pier.
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Now,
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Gothic architects camouflaged the massiveness of their piers
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by ornamenting them with delicate thin colonettes.
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But this was a massive object that helps to support the stone vaulting above.
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But there's another structural system that's at work.
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Even with the pointed arch,
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the vaulting of these churches still created lateral thrust that pushed outward.
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And so the building had to be
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contained, it had to be supported from the outside, it had to be buttressed.
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And that's where we see one of the great features of Gothic architecture,
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the flying buttress,
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essentially a bracing in between the windows on the outside of the church.
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And because they are relatively delicate and pierced,
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they allow light to get to the windows to flood the interior with brightness.
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When we look up along the wall
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of a typical Gothic church, we usually see three parts. We see the pointed
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arches that form the nave
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arcade, we see above that the triforium,
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and then above that, the clerestory, the level with windows. When we look at the
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triforium, even there, we see the wall is pierced. Here in Beverley Minster, we see trefoil-
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shaped arches and within that
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trefoil arch, we see
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a
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quatrefoil,
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and then below that yet another level of opening of
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these short, pointed arches that are separated by columns.
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So this layering that allows the wall to have a sense of depth.
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All of this brings our eye upward.
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It emphasizes the heavenly.
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The intent of the Gothic church is to create a sense of the heavenly on earth.
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If you imagine a typical person's home
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in the 13th century, we imagine something rather dark and without a lot of windows.
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And so coming into a space like this must have seemed truly miraculous.
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It's even difficult, I think for us in the 21st century to imagine the workmanship,
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the decades of labor and the enormous costs that
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went into these buildings as places of worship,
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of places of connection to the divine.