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  2. English Gothic stained glass windows - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Gothic_stained...

    English Gothic stained glass windows were an important feature of English Gothic architecture, which appeared between the late 12th and late 16th centuries.They evolved from narrow windows filled with a mosaic of deeply-coloured pieces of glass into gigantic windows that filled entire walls, with a full range of colours and more naturalistic figures.

  3. French Gothic stained glass windows - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Gothic_stained...

    A few important examples of 12th-century windows are found at Chartres Cathedral on the inside of the western facade, in three lancet windows under the rose window. These windows survived a devastating fire in the Cathedral in 1194, and are considered some of the best examples of 12th-century work in France. [5]

  4. Stained glass windows of Chartres Cathedral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stained_glass_windows_of...

    Other windows referred to other rites under debate in the late 12th century - confession, the hierarchy of church power, marriage, extreme unction, finding relics and translating relics. [ 9 ] Some windows referred to political theology such as the status of princes and kings and the balance of temporal and spiritual power.

  5. Gothic cathedrals and churches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_cathedrals_and_churches

    Stained glass windows were a prominent feature of the Gothic church and cathedral from the beginning. Abbot Suger, who considered that light was a manifestation of the divine, installed colorful windows in the ambulatory of Basilica of Saint Denis, and they were featured in all the major cathedrals in France, England and the rest of Europe. In ...

  6. Construction of Gothic cathedrals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Construction_of_Gothic...

    The molten glass was colored with metal oxides, and then blown into a bubble, which was cut and flattened into small sheets. [22] The glass sheets were then transferred to the workshop of the window-maker, usually close to the cathedral site. There a full-size precise drawing of the window was made on a large table, with the colors indicated.

  7. English Gothic architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Gothic_architecture

    English Gothic is an architectural style that flourished from the late 12th until the mid-17th century. [1] [2] The style was most prominently used in the construction of cathedrals and churches. Gothic architecture's defining features are pointed arches, rib vaults, buttresses, and extensive use of stained glass. Combined, these features ...

  8. Sainte-Chapelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sainte-Chapelle

    The most famous features of the chapel, among the finest of their type in the world, are the fifteen great stained-glass windows in the nave and apse of the upper chapel, which date from the mid-13th century, as well as the later rose window (put in place in the 15th century). The stone wall surface is reduced to little more than a delicate ...

  9. Poitiers Cathedral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poitiers_Cathedral

    The facade, which is broad relative to its height, has unfinished side-towers 105 feet (32 m) and 110 feet (34 m) tall, begun in the 13th century. an Most of the windows of the choir and the transepts preserve their stained glass of the 12th and 13th centuries; the end window, the Crucifixion Window contains the figures of Henry II and Eleanor.