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Kevin J. Benoy Social Studies Department

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Sutherland Open House February, 2014 Body Building – The Human Cathedral (Architecture from Romanesque to Gothic). Kevin J. Benoy Social Studies Department. The Plan. First we will look at a few Medieval architectural developments. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Sutherland Open House February, 2014 Body Building – The Human Cathedral (Architecture from Romanesque to Gothic) Kevin J. Benoy Social Studies Department
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Page 1: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Sutherland Open HouseFebruary, 2014

Body Building – The Human Cathedral(Architecture from Romanesque to Gothic)

Kevin J. BenoySocial Studies Department

Page 2: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

The Plan

• First we will look at a few Medieval architectural developments.

• Then we will demonstrate those principles using people as building blocks.

Page 3: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

From Darkness to Light

Autun CathedralRomanesque interiors were heavy and dark

Chartres CathedralGothic interiors were light

and airy.

Page 4: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New Style

• At St. Denis (Paris), Bishop Suger wanted to bring “the light of God” into his Church.

• The engineering techniques were not new, but were never employed together to this effect before.

Page 5: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New Style -Pointed Arches

• Gothic pointed arches directed weight downward in a more focused way – the result was that vertical supports could be spaced more widely apart than the old rounded arches allowed.

• Walls no longer need bear so much weight.

Romanesque (Norman) Arches at Gloucester

Gothic Arches at St. Denis

Page 6: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New Style – Ribbed Vaults• Romanesque design

took the rounded arch, extending it through space to form a barrel vault where the weight was supported by thick walls.

• The Gothic style added a stone skeleton of ribbed vaults to focus overhead weight onto supporting piers. Walls that no longer bore loads could be filled with glass.

Page 7: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New style – Flying Buttresses

• Builders have long known that adding outside supports to a wall gave additional strength. Thick Romanesque walls were bolstered by frequent buttressing.

• The flying buttress allowed weight to be transferred to supports pushed outside the building.

Romanesque Buttresses, Autun

Flying Buttresses transferring Weight – Notre Dame, Paris

Page 8: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New Style - Gothic

• Pointed Arches• Ribbed Vaults• Flying Buttresses• Together, these features

allowed for a new, light, airy, larger, open-plan space that awed medieval viewers and continues to awe people today.


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