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Gothic architecture
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=== ''Rayonnant Gothic'' and ''Decorated Style'' === {{See also|Rayonnant|Decorated Gothic}} ''[[Rayonnant]] Gothic'' maximized the coverage of stained glass windows such that the walls are effectively entirely glazed; examples are the nave of Saint-Denis (1231β) and the royal chapel of [[Louis IX of France]] on the [[Γle de la CitΓ©]] in the [[Seine]] β the [[Sainte-Chapelle]] (''c''.1241β1248).<ref name=":1" /> The high and thin walls of French ''Rayonnant Gothic'' allowed by the flying buttresses enabled increasingly ambitious expanses of glass and decorated tracery, reinforced with ironwork.<ref name=":1" /> Shortly after Saint-Denis, in the 1250s, Louis IX commissioned the rebuilt transepts and enormous rose windows of [[Notre-Dame de Paris]] (1250s for the north transept, 1258 for the beginning of south transept).{{Sfn|Martindale|1993|p=89}} This first 'international style' was also used in the clerestory of [[Metz Cathedral]] (''c''. 1245β), then in the choir of [[Cologne]]'s cathedral (''c''. 1250β), and again in the nave of the cathedral at [[Strasbourg]] (''c''. 1250β).<ref name=":1" /> Masons elaborated a series of tracery patterns for windows β from the basic ''geometrical'' to the ''reticulated'' and the ''curvilinear β'' which had superseded the lancet window.<ref name=":04"/> Bar-tracery of the ''curvilinear, flowing'', and ''reticulated'' types distinguish ''Second Pointed'' style.<ref name=":04"/> ''Decorated Gothic'' similarly sought to emphasize the windows, but excelled in the ornamentation of their tracery. Churches with features of this style include Westminster Abbey (1245β), the cathedrals at [[Lichfield]] (after 1257β) and [[Exeter]] (1275β), [[Bath Abbey]] (1298β), and the retro choir at [[Wells Cathedral]] (''c''.1320β).<ref name=":1" /> The ''Rayonnant'' developed its second 'international style' with increasingly autonomous and sharp-edged tracery mouldings apparent in the cathedral at [[Clermont-Ferrand]] (1248β), the papal collegiate church at [[Troyes]], [[Basilique Saint-Urbain de Troyes|Saint-Urbain]] (1262β), and the west faΓ§ade of [[Strasbourg Cathedral]] (1276β1439)).<ref name=":1" /> By 1300, there were examples influenced by Strasbourg in the cathedrals of [[Limoges]] (1273β), [[Regensburg]] (''c''. 1275β), and in the cathedral nave at [[York]] (1292β).<ref name=":1" />[[File:Prag, Prager Burg, Veitsdom -- 2019 -- 6662.jpg|thumb|''Flamboyant Gothic'' east end,{{Break}}Prague Cathedral (1344β)]] [[File:Henry7Chapel 02.jpg|thumb|''Perpendicular Gothic'' east end, Henry VII Chapel ({{circa|1503}}β1512)]]
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