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Gothic architecture
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===Columns and piers=== {{See also|Column|Pier (architecture)}} In early French Gothic architecture, the capitals of the columns were modeled after Roman columns of the [[Corinthian order]], with finely-sculpted leaves. They were used in the ambulatory of the Abbey church of Saint-Denis. According to its builder, the Abbot Suger, they were inspired by the columns he had seen in the ancient baths in Rome.{{Sfn|Watkin|1986|p=127}} They were used later at Sens, at Notre-Dame de Paris and at Canterbury in England. In early Gothic churches with six-part rib vaults, the columns in the nave alternated with more massive piers to provide support for the vaults. With the introduction of the four-part rib vault, all of the piers or columns in the nave could have the same design. In the High Gothic period, a new form was introduced, composed of a central core surrounded several attached slender columns, or colonettes, going up to the vaults.{{Sfn|McNamara|2017|p=97}} These clustered columns were used at Chartres, Amiens, Reims and Bourges, Westminster Abbey and Salisbury Cathedral.{{Sfn|Ducher|2014|p=40}} Another variation was a quadrilobe column, shaped like a clover, formed of four attached columns.{{Sfn|Ducher|2014|p=40}} In England, the clustered columns were often ornamented with stone rings, as well as columns with carved leaves.{{Sfn|McNamara|2017|p=97}} Later styles added further variations. Sometimes the piers were rectangular and fluted, as at Seville Cathedral, In England, parts of columns sometimes had contrasting colours, using combining white stone with dark [[Purbeck marble]]. In place of the Corinthian capital, some columns used a stiff-leaf design. In later Gothic, the piers became much taller, reaching up more than half of the nave. Another variation, particularly popular in eastern France, was a column without a capital, which continued upward without capitals or other interruption, all the way to the vaults, giving a dramatic display of verticality.{{Sfn|Ducher|2014|p=40}} <gallery widths="150" heights="200" perrow="5"> File:Intérieur cath de Sens.jpg|Early Gothic – Alternating columns and piers, [[Sens Cathedral]] (12th century) File:ReimsCattedraleInternoPareteNavataCentrale.jpg|High Gothic – Clustered columns of [[Reims Cathedral]] (13th century) File:Salisbury Cathedral Nave, Wiltshire, UK - Diliff.jpg|Early English Gothic – Clustered columns in [[Salisbury Cathedral]] (13th century) File:Canterbury Cathedral Nave 1, Kent, UK - Diliff.jpg|Perpendicular Gothic – Columns without interruption from floor to the vaults. [[Canterbury Cathedral]] nave (late 14th century). File:Navata certosa pavia.jpg|Late Gothic - Clustered columns in [[Certosa di Pavia]] (15th century). File:Bueckeburg Stadtkirche n O1.JPG|Post-Gothic - Columns with Renaissance capitals in the city church in [[Bückeburg]] (17th century) </gallery>
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