An introduction to some of the most astonishing architectural monuments the world has ever known—Gothic cathedrals. We shall study the art, literature, intellectual life, economics, and new social arrangements that arose in the shadow of the cathedrals and that were such an important part of the revival of cities in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The goal of the course is a better appreciation of the High Middle Ages, a world that is still recognizably our own.
An introduction to the history of Paris in the centuries of chaos following the death of Charlemagne in 814 and the building of the first Gothic cathedral at Saint-Denis, just north of Paris. The old abbey church, where the kings of France were buried, was inadequate, and so a new building project was undertaken by Abbot Suger, who financed the new building through efficient land management and the commercial Fair of Lendit along a trade route between northern and southern Europe.
What's included
7 videos1 reading
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7 videos•Total 36 minutes
1.1 Introduction•3 minutes
1.2 Paris•4 minutes
1.3 Notre Dame de Paris and the Wave of Cathedral Building•7 minutes
1.4 What We'll Study•5 minutes
2.1 The Old Church•6 minutes
2.2 Royalty Reposed•6 minutes
2.3 The Fair of Lendit•4 minutes
1 reading•Total 10 minutes
Disclaimer•10 minutes
Saint-Denis
Module 2•3 hours to complete
Module details
Here we encounter the portrait of Abbot Suger via his account of how and why he built Saint-Denis, what is portrayed on the West façade of the cathedral, and how the doctrine of God as light, encountered in a book which had come from Byzantium to the abbey centuries earlier, was translated into architectural form. We see some of the objects that are part of the treasury of Saint-Denis and discuss the Abbot’s notion of “anagogical uplift” as a way of moving—via stained glass—between the Old and New Testaments and from the material to the spiritual plane.
What's included
8 videos3 readings2 assignments
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 57 minutes
3.1 Suger, the Producer•9 minutes
3.2 Reasons, Spiritual and Worldly•8 minutes
4.1 The Central Portal, Saint-Denis•10 minutes
4.2 The North and South Portals, Saint-Denis•5 minutes
5.1 God is Light•8 minutes
5.2 Saint-Denis, a Storehouse of Treasure•7 minutes
5.3 The Uplifting Church•5 minutes
5.4 The Anagogical and Moses Windows•6 minutes
3 readings•Total 50 minutes
On What was Done in his Administration by Abbot Suger•30 minutes
Life of Saint Denis by James of Voragine•10 minutes
The Celestial Hierarchy by The Pseudo-Dionysius•10 minutes
2 assignments•Total 90 minutes
Saint-Denis•30 minutes
Study of the past/Promise of the future.•60 minutes
Architectural Innovation
Module 3•2 hours to complete
Module details
Filling in the background of Romanesque churches that preceded Gothic buildings, we discuss the origins and engineering innovations of the new style of religious architecture. These include ribbed vaults, reinforced pillars, pointed arches, flying buttresses, and a modular system of bay construction; all of which permits the construction of higher and lighter, thinner walls filled with stained glass.
What's included
4 videos1 assignment
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4 videos•Total 32 minutes
6.1 Romanesque•7 minutes
6.2 Gothic Origins•4 minutes
6.3 Gothic•8 minutes
7.1 Architectural Innovations•13 minutes
1 assignment•Total 60 minutes
Gothic vs. Romanesque•60 minutes
Notre Dame de Paris
Module 4•3 hours to complete
Module details
Moving to the heart of Paris, we explore the initial construction of Notre-Dame and the innovations that were undertaken almost as soon as the building began. We discuss the sculptural programs of Notre-Dame’s West façade, including the portal which depicts the life of Saint Anne, Christ’s grandmother, and Mary, his mother and the central portal of the Last Judgment. Along the south side, we discover the story of the stoning of Saint Stephen; and, along the North, the miracle of Theophilus and the Virgin. Moving inside the cathedral, we encounter the stunning rose windows of Notre-Dame.
What's included
10 videos3 readings1 assignment
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10 videos•Total 67 minutes
8.1 The Role and Initial Construction of Notre Dame•8 minutes
8.2 Renovations•7 minutes
9.1 Influences and Innovations•4 minutes
9.2 St. Anne’s Portal•11 minutes
9.3 Coronation Portal•7 minutes
10.1 Central Portal: The Last Judgment•6 minutes
10.2 Notre Dame’s Roses•7 minutes
11.1 St. Stephen’s Portal•4 minutes
11.2 Theophilus and the Virgin•3 minutes
11.3 Truth Set in Stone•8 minutes
3 readings•Total 90 minutes
The Nativity of Mary by James of Voragine•30 minutes
The Assumption of Mary by James of Voragine•30 minutes
The Miracle of Theophilus by Rutebeuf•30 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Notre Dame de Paris•30 minutes
Intellectual and Everyday Life
Module 5•2 hours to complete
Module details
Here we examine the cathedral in terms of surrounding intellectual and everyday life. A reading of Peter Abelard’s autobiography, The Story of my Misfortunes, testifies to the growth of the scholastic method in the context of the earliest university culture; and two verse comic tales, “The Crucified Priest” and “The Peekaboo Priest” introduce the new mentality of the inhabitant of towns with emphasis on cleverness, quick thinking, and timing along with an anti-clerical spirit.
What's included
5 videos3 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
5 videos•Total 32 minutes
12.1 From Mars to Minerva•7 minutes
12.2 Introducing Faith into Reason•7 minutes
12.3 The Story of Abelard’s Misfortunes•5 minutes
14.1 “The Crucified Priest”•9 minutes
14.2 “The Peekaboo Priest”•4 minutes
3 readings•Total 50 minutes
Historia calamitatum (The Story of My Misfortunes) by Peter Abelard•30 minutes
The Crucified Priest•10 minutes
The Peekaboo Priest•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 60 minutes
Urban Phenomena•60 minutes
Our Lady of Chartres
Module 6•2 hours to complete
Module details
In Module 6 we move West of Paris to the cathedral of Chartres where Gothic architecture hits its stride. We explore the history of Chartres, its unique and mysterious architectural features, and its miraculous relic—the Holy Tunic. We discuss the financing of Chartres as seen in the windows donated by merchant which depict the various urban trades alongside the sculpture of the West façade, the rose and lancet stained glass windows, and the secular Zodiac and Charlemagne windows, the latter of which is linked to important literary works of the period.
What's included
10 videos1 reading1 assignment
Show info about module content
10 videos•Total 76 minutes
15.1 Dizzying Heights•7 minutes
15.2 The History of Chartres•5 minutes
15.3 The Holy Tunic•5 minutes
16.1 Merchant Donors•7 minutes
16.2 The West Façade•10 minutes
16.3 The North and South Transepts•3 minutes
17.1 Chartres’ Lancets•7 minutes
17.2 Chartres’ Roses•9 minutes
18.1 The Zodiac Window•5 minutes
18.2 Charlemagne in Glass•17 minutes
1 reading•Total 10 minutes
Miracles of Our Lady of Chartres by Jehan le Marchant•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 12 minutes
Daily Life and Chartres•12 minutes
Cathedrals and Crusades
Module 7•2 hours to complete
Module details
In Module 7 we examine in some detail The Song of Roland, portions of which are depicted in the stained glass of Chartres, and we explore the relationship of relics from the Middle East to cathedral building.
What's included
7 videos1 reading1 assignment
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 53 minutes
19.1 Lords and Vassals•9 minutes
19.2 Plunder•5 minutes
19.3 Roland’s Reliquary Sword•5 minutes
19.4 Vengeance or Treason?•7 minutes
20.1 Church and State•9 minutes
20.2 Amassing of Relics•12 minutes
20.3 A New Holy Land•6 minutes
1 reading•Total 30 minutes
The Song of Roland•30 minutes
1 assignment•Total 60 minutes
The Bible of the Poor•60 minutes
Saints and Kings
Module 8•2 hours to complete
Module details
In Module 8 we explore Saint Louis’s building of the Sainte-Chapelle in Paris as a house of glass, a new Ark of the Covenant, to house the relics he had amassed. Using Jean de Joinville’s Life of Saint-Louis as our source, we encounter the Saint King’s life as a crusader, his death, canonization, and the miracles performed by his body on his way to sainthood.
What's included
12 videos1 reading1 assignment
Show info about module content
12 videos•Total 82 minutes
21.1 A Radiating Chapel•12 minutes
21.2 Total Work of Art•5 minutes
22.1 The House of Glass•7 minutes
22.2 Apse•5 minutes
22.3 North Program•4 minutes
22.4 South Program•5 minutes
23.1 Building a Case for Canonization•7 minutes
23.2 Confessor or Martyr?•3 minutes
23.3 Louis’ Virtues•10 minutes
24.1 Louis the Crusader•11 minutes
24.2 The Almost Martyr•4 minutes
24.3 The King Becomes a Relic•9 minutes
1 reading•Total 30 minutes
The Memories of the Lord of Joinville (The Life of Saint-Louis) by Joinville•30 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Saints, Kings and Crusades•30 minutes
Conclusion
Module 9•16 minutes to complete
Module details
By way of conclusion, we explore the history of Gothic cathedrals from the Middle Ages to the present.
What's included
1 video
Show info about module content
1 video•Total 16 minutes
25.1 Cathedrals from the Middle Ages to the Present•16 minutes
Instructor
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3 stars
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SM
4·
Reviewed on Jan 27, 2021
A good course! I was hoping for more in-depth information on the actual design and construction of the cathedrals, but a lot was covered in the course and it was well worth it.
M
MB
5·
Reviewed on Jan 8, 2020
An excellent and very inspiring introduction to medieval architecture, history and literature. Makes you want to study more and in-depth.
C
CS
4·
Reviewed on Apr 15, 2018
A little heavy on French history, but very interesting. I’m not a fan of peer reviews, and this has plenty of them, but at least the grades were a combination of quizzes and peer reviews.
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