Gothic Revival

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Gothic Revival is an architectural movement that revived and adapted medieval Gothic forms—such as pointed arches, ribbed vaults, and ornate tracery—primarily in the 19th and early 20th centuries.


Statements (94)
Predicate Object
instanceOf architectural movement
architectural style
hasCharacteristic arched interior openings
asymmetrical compositions
blind tracery panels
buttressed apse forms
buttressed bell towers
buttressed boundary walls
buttressed corner turrets
buttressed corners
buttressed entrance porches
buttressed facades
buttressed nave and chancel forms
buttressed towers
buttressed transepts
buttresses
carved wooden details
cloister-like corridors
clustered columns
complex rooflines
crenellations
crocketed gables
cusped arches
decorated bargeboards
ecclesiastical floor plans
ecclesiastical imagery
emphasis on verticality
flying buttresses
foliated capitals
gargoyles and grotesques
hammerbeam roofs
heraldic motifs
hood moulds over openings
label stops
lancet windows
medieval-inspired door hardware
medieval-inspired furniture
medieval-inspired garden structures
medieval-inspired interiors
medieval-inspired lighting fixtures
medieval-inspired stair newels
medieval-style door surrounds
medieval-style fireplaces
medieval-style paneling
ogee arches
ornamental battlements
ornamental bosses
ornamental corbels
ornamental cresting
ornamental gatehouses
ornamental ironwork
ornamental spires
ornamental stone carving
ornamental tracery screens
ornate tracery
pictorial stone reliefs
picturesque massing
picturesque silhouettes
pinnacles and finials
pointed arches
pointed-arch arcades
pointed-arch doorways
pointed-arch niches
polychrome stonework
religious iconography
ribbed plaster ceilings
ribbed vaults
rich sculptural ornament
romantic medievalism
rose windows
stained glass heraldry
stained glass religious narratives
stained glass windows
steeply pitched roofs
string courses
tall chimneys
traceried balcony railings
traceried choir screens
traceried clerestory windows
traceried gables
traceried overmantels
traceried parapets
traceried window heads
tracery patterns
trefoils and quatrefoils
use of brick and stone
vaulted ceilings
vaulted chapels
vaulted crypt-like spaces
vaulted entrance halls
vaulted porches
vaulted stair halls
inspiredBy Gothic architecture
otherName Neo-Gothic

Referenced by (171)
Subject (surface form when different) Predicate
Allerdale Hall ("Victorian Gothic")
American Gothic Revival movement
Atlanta City Hall
Belvedere Castle, Central Park
Belvoir Castle
Berkeley College
Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue
Bigelow Chapel
Biltmore Village buildings near Biltmore Estate
Bombay High Court ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Bridge of Sighs, Cambridge
Cabot Tower
Cadet Chapel, United States Military Academy at West Point
Casa Loma
Cathedral of Saint John the Divine
Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Central Tower
Centre Block (historical) ("Victorian High Gothic")
Chapultepec Castle ("Neo-Gothic architecture")
Charles Barry
Charles Barry Jr. ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Charles Lanyon ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Charles Trubshaw ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Chennai Central railway station ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus ("Victorian Gothic Revival")
Chicago Water Tower
Chicago waterworks
Christ Church Cathedral ("Victorian Gothic Revival (restoration)")
Connecticut State Capitol ("High Victorian Gothic")
Cram, Goodhue & Ferguson
Cyfarthfa Castle ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Fisher Building (Chicago)
Frere Hall ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Girton College, Cambridge ("Victorian Gothic")
Green-Wood Cemetery
Harkness Tower
Hart House
Healy Hall ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Historic Water Tower
Hohenschwangau Castle ("Neo-Gothic")
Hotel Chelsea ("Victorian Gothic")
House of Commons chamber ("Perpendicular Gothic Revival")
Isaac G. Perry
James Gamble Rogers
James Renwick Jr.
Keble College, Oxford ("Victorian Gothic")
Keble College, Oxford ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Loretto Chapel ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Manchester Town Hall ("Victorian Gothic")
Mark Twain House and Museum
McGraw Hall ("Victorian Gothic")
New Court ("Gothic Revival architecture")
New Haven City Hall ("High Victorian Gothic")
New Haven City Hall ("Gothic Revival architecture")
New York State Inebriate Asylum ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Newstead Abbey
Notre-Dame Cathedral, Luxembourg City ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Old Quebec ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Old South Church
Old St. Mary’s Cathedral
Oscarshall ("Neo-Gothic")
Oxford University Museum of Natural History ("Victorian Gothic")
Oxford University Museum of Natural History ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Palace of Westminster ("Perpendicular Gothic Revival")
Palace of Westminster
Parliament Hill
Patrick Charles Keely
Peel Monument
Point of Rocks station ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Poznań Cathedral ("Neo-Gothic architecture")
Queen's College, Cork ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Ralph Adams Cram (architectural partnership)
Riddarholmen Church
Sagrada Família
Saint Peter’s Church, Edensor, Derbyshire, England ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Scott Monument
Sheffield Town Hall
Smallpox Hospital Ruins
Smithsonian Visitor Center
St Augustine’s Church, Pendlebury
St Ninian’s Cathedral, Perth
St Swithin's Church, Lincoln ("Victorian Gothic Revival")
St. Paul’s Cathedral, Kolkata
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church (Selma, Alabama) ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Strawberry Hill House
Sunnyside, Tarrytown, New York
São Paulo Cathedral ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Thayer Hotel
The Refuge Assurance Building ("Victorian Gothic")
The Thayer Hotel at West Point
Thomas Fuller
Virginia Military Institute ("Gothic Revival (main barracks and central buildings)")
Washington Irving's Sunnyside
William W. Boyington ("Gothic Revival architecture")
architecturalStyle
Alexander Jackson Davis
Alfred Waterhouse ("Victorian Gothic")
Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin
Charles Barry ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Eugène Viollet-le-Duc
George Gilbert Scott
Jacob Wrey Mould ("High Victorian Gothic")
James Gamble Rogers
James Renwick Jr.
John Ruskin
Karl Friedrich Schinkel
Leopold Eidlitz ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Patrick Charles Keely
Pierre Cuypers ("Neo-Gothic architecture")
Ralph Adams Cram ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Ralph Adams Cram
William Butterfield
William Butterfield ("High Victorian Gothic")
movement
Alfred Waterhouse ("Victorian Gothic")
Alfred Waterhouse
Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Edward Blore
Edward Middleton Barry
Edward Middleton Barry ("Victorian Gothic")
Giles Gilbert Scott ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Jacob Wrey Mould
Westminster Bridge
William Butterfield ("High Victorian Gothic")
style
Arts and Crafts movement
Frank Furness ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Morris & Co.
Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Co.
Pre-Raphaelite art
Princeton University campus plan ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Richard Norman Shaw ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Thomas Fuller ("Victorian Gothic architecture")
Urban Gothic ("Victorian Gothic")
influencedBy
Abyssinian Baptist Church
General Theological Seminary
Graceland Cemetery
Great Malvern
Kensal Green Cemetery ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Newbattle Abbey
Shamian Island ("Gothic Revival architecture")
West Norwood Cemetery
hasArchitecturalStyle
Church Building: A Study of the Principles of Architecture in Their Relation to the Church ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Strawberry Hill Press
The Substance of Gothic ("Gothic Revival movement")
Victorian era ("Gothic Revival architecture")
associatedWith
Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin ("Victorian church architecture")
Charles Barry ("Victorian Gothic Revival architecture")
Eugène Viollet-le-Duc ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Opus Francigenum ("Gothic Revival architecture")
influenced
James Renwick Jr. ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Leopold Eidlitz
Thomas Fuller ("Gothic Revival architecture")
genre
Italianate architecture ("Gothic Revival architecture")
Jacobean Revival
Richardsonian Romanesque
relatedStyle
Gothic literature
Romanticism
relatedMovement
Ludwig II of Bavaria ("Gothic Revival architecture")
architecturalStylePromoted
Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta, Georgia
architectureStyle
Victorian aesthetics
associatedWithMovement
Indiana limestone ("Gothic Revival architecture")
commonlyAssociatedWith
Moorish Revival ("Gothic Revival architecture")
contrastsWith
Queen’s Robing Room ("Victorian Gothic")
decorativeStyle
Leopold Eidlitz ("Gothic Revival architecture")
fieldOfWork
Diocese of Truro
hasCathedralStyle
Victorian era
hasCulturalMovement
Victorian architecture ("Gothic Revival architecture")
hasPart
Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin ("Gothic Revival architecture")
knownFor
University of Glasgow ("Gothic Revival architecture")
mainBuildingStyle
William Butterfield ("High Victorian Gothic architecture")
notableFor
Gothic Revival ("Neo-Gothic")
otherName
Byzantine Revival
relatedTo
Wilhelminian style ("Neo-Gothic")
usesStyle

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