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Brick Gothic

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Image:Lübeck Holstentor.jpg Image:Greifswald St.-Marien-Ostfassade.jpg Image:Lübeck Heiligen-Geist-Hospital.jpg Brick Gothic is a reduced style of Gothic architecture in Northern Europe, especially in the regions around the Baltic Sea without natural rock resources. The buildings are built more or less using only bricks. The resultant style is called Backsteingotik in Germany and Poland. Brick Gothic buildings therefore are to be found in the Baltic countries Denmark, Finland, Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Russia and Sweden. Some of them are World Heritage Sites.

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[edit] Brick Gothic in Denmark

The most famous example in Denmark is the large Roskilde Cathedral.

[edit] Brick Gothic in Sweden

Most Swedish cathedrals are built in a Brick Gothic architecture. The cathedrals in Uppsala, Västerås and Strängnäs are good examples of Brick Gothic buildings in Sweden.

Also in Skåne in southern Sweden, which was a part of Denmark until 1658, there are Brick Gothic churches. Examples of that is the early 14th century Saint Petri Church in Malmö, the Saint Mary Church in Helsingborg and a Saint Mary Church in Ystad.

[edit] Brick Gothic in Estonia

Image:Turku cathedral 26-Dec-2004.jpg

[edit] Tartu

  • St. John's church
  • Dome Cathedral

[edit] Brick Gothic in Finland

[edit] Brick Gothic in Germany

Image:Église Sainte-Marie de Lübeck.jpg Mainly the cities of the Hanseatic league at the Baltic Sea like Lübeck, Greifswald, Rostock, Stralsund and Wismar preserved Brick Gothic from the Middle Ages.

[edit] Hamburg

  • St. Petri (St. Peter’s church)
  • St. Jakobi (St. Jacob’s church)
  • St. Katharinen (St. Catherine’s church)

[edit] Lübeck

[edit] Lüneburg

[edit] Hannover

  • Marktkirche

[edit] Rostock

  • St. Marien (St. Mary's church)

[edit] Schwerin

  • Dom (cathedral)

[edit] Wismar

  • St. Nikolai (St. Nikolaì`s church)
  • St. Georg (St. Georg's church)
  • St. Marien (St. Mary's church) (nave destroyed in WW II.)

[edit] Stralsund

  • St. Marien (St. Mary's church)
  • St. Nikolai (St. Nicolas church)

[edit] Greifswald

  • St. Marien (St. Mary's church)

[edit] Bad Doberan

  • Klosterkirche

[edit] Prenzlau

[edit] Gransee

[edit] Neubrandenburg

  • St. Marien (St. Mary's church)

[edit] Friedland

  • St. Marien (St. Mary's church)

[edit] Brick Gothic in Latvia

[edit] Riga

  • Doma Cathedral
  • St. Peter's Church
  • St. Jacob's Church
  • St. John's Church
  • The House of Black Heads Society

[edit] Turaida

[edit] Brick Gothic in Lithuania

Image:Trakai-Troki.jpgImage:Wilno 036.JPG

[edit] Vilnius

[edit] Kaunas

[edit] Trakai

[edit] Zapyškis

  • Zapyškis' Church

[edit] Brick Gothic in Poland

In Poland also known as Polish Gothic.

[edit] Chełmno

  • St. Mary's church
  • Church of S.S. Peter and Paul
  • Church of S.S. Jacob and Nicholas
  • City defense walls

[edit] Gdańsk

[edit] Kraków

[edit] Malbork

[edit] Szczecin

  • The cathedral St. Jacob

[edit] Toruń

  • City Hall in Toruń
  • The cathedral of S.S. John Evangelist and John Baptist
  • St. Mary's church
  • St. Jacob's church
  • City walls

[edit] Wrocław

  • City Hall
  • St. Mary's church
  • The cathedral of St. John
  • Holy Cross church

[edit] Brick Gothic in Russia

Image:Kaliningrad cathedral.JPG

[edit] References

  • Gottlob, Fritz (1907) Formenlehre der Norddeutschen Backsteingotik: Ein Beitrag zur Neogotik um 1900. Reprint of 2nd edition (1999), Verlag Ludwig. ISBN 3-9805480-8-2 (German)
  • Busjan, B.; Kiesow, G. (2002) Wismar: Bauten der Macht – Eine Kirchenbaustelle im Mittelalter. Monumente Publikationen der Deutschen Stiftung Denkmalschutz. ISBN 3-935208-14-6 (in German; Vol. 2 of Wege zur Backsteingotik, ISBN 3-935208-12-X)

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

it:Gotico baltico pl:Architektura gotycka w Skandynawii i Niderlandach

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