Flamboyant (style level)
As Flamboyant (French for "flaming".) The final stage of the style is late Gothic in France , Belgium ( Flanders ) and England called; it is characterized by the elongation of certain forms of the tracery that are reminiscent of flames.
At the same time of the Flamboyant style there was the special Gothic in Germany , the Manueline style in Portugal and the Isabelline style in Spain.
Examples
Examples of the flamboyant Gothic are:
- a partial facade of the town hall of the Flemish city of Ghent ,
- the church La Trinité in Vendôme in France with its facade, the eyelash above the portal and the tracery in the flamboyant style,
- the portal of the cathedral of Senlis ,
- the town hall and the portal of the Holy Blood Basilica of Bruges ,
- the town hall of Leuven in Belgium,
- the choir of the monastery church on Mont-Saint-Michel ,
- the west facade of Saint-Étienne de Toul .
- the St. Anne's Church in Vilnius in Lithuania
literature
- Georg Germann: Flamboyant. In: Real Lexicon on German Art History . Vol. 9, 1992, col. 638-641.