Êàíä.
èñêóññòâ. Îðëîâ È. È.
Ëèïåöêèé
ãîñóäàðñòâåííûé òåõíè÷åñêèé óíèâåðñèòåò
A NEW CLASSIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS GOTHIC BUILDINGS OF
SOUTHERN FRANCE (LANGUEDOC) IN CONTEXT OF IDEOLOGICAL AND ARTISTIC PROGRAMS AS THEIR
BASIS / ÍÎÂÀß ÊËÀÑÑÈÔÈÊÀÖÈß ÊÓËÜÒÎÂÛÕ ÃÎÒÈ×ÅÑÊÈÕ ÑÎÎÐÓÆÅÍÈÉ ÞÃÀ ÔÐÀÍÖÈÈ (ËÀÍÃÅÄÎÊ)  ÊÎÍÒÅÊÑÒÅ ÈÄÅÉÍÎ-ÕÓÄÎÆÅÑÒÂÅÍÍÛÕ ÏÐÎÃÐÀÌÌ.
The Gothic art of Languedoc, which for a long time had been considered
in foreign and native medievalism as the art of “invaders from Northern
France”, is the manifestation of the creative genius of local architects and
customers. It was the masters from Southern France who could find their own
original “Gothic style” by way of creative revising the Parisian “radiant”
Gothic which was fashionable at that time in Europe and which they used as
their model. This style has been known in art studies as “eglise fortifiee”
(church-fortress, fortified church). The monks of the new orders (first of all
Dominicans and Franciscans) played the most important role in introducing the
new «Parisian style» (Gothic). As these orders had to struggle with the heresy
of Cathars (widespread in the region), so they were most interested in creating
a new type of cult architecture called “predicatory Church”, which would be
different from the classic Gothic of Île-de-France. Further, when the
struggle with heretics became repressive (with the introduction of
inquisitional tribunals), it was bishops from the Dominicans who initiated the
development of the concept of religious Gothic structures in the style of
“indestructible fortress of faith”; they were erected in the areas (Albi, towns
of the Toulouse diocese) where the struggle with the Cathars was at its peak.
And vice versa, where the heresy of the Cathars was completely extirpated
either by repressions (Béziers)
or by resettling the population infected by heresy from captured towns
(Carcassonne, Narbonne), cathedrals were built as a mere imitation of the
“Parisian Gothic”, which later caused such a dismissive attitude to the Gothic
of Languedoc. [3, p.227]
Another important factor which in a most
prominent way influenced the formation of peculiar ideological and artistic
programs of Languedoc's Gothic became
the heritage of Rome's ancient tradition, the latter achieving its further
development in a wealth of images in the Romanesque architectural school of Languedoc
and Provence. It is to this style of South that France and Europe owe the
appearance of Gothic sculpture plastic, the beautiful images of which are
exhibited nowadays in the Museum of Augustinians in Toulouse.
Besides, Lombard architectural school (partially
Tuscan) influenced greatly the formation of Languedoc's peculiar Gothic,
because the towns of Languedoc and Lombard were connected by both trade and
political, as well as religious ties (the Catars doctrine). The architectural
schools of Anjou (through its trade, political and dynastic ties), Burgundy and
Auvergne (connected with Occitania from early Christian times) also had a great
impact on the formation of Languedoc's Gothic.
On the whole, speaking about the religious
Gothic of Languedoc of that time, we can point out some regional features .The
architecture of cathedrals and churches is not so prevailing as of the “classic”
cathedrals of northern France, because the outer wall preserves its massiveness
and density specially accentuated by abutments adjoining tightly the wall. The
shell of the wall seems to hide the chapels, and as a rule there is no
transept. Thus, the wall plane gets back its rights despite the fact that it is
profiled with orbs, mashiculi or round skylights (under the influence of the
Lombard school). The volumes of buildings tend to greater cliquishness,
removing systematically all “extra” protrusive details; it is typical for the 14th
c. religious Gothic architecture of parish churches, influenced by mendicant
religious orders. Chapels occupy the space indoors between buttresses and are
an integral part of the whole. Sculpture tends to occupy the inner part of the
interior, moving there from the outer space of Gothic portals. “The Bible for
the illiterate” – church wall painting scenes devoted to Christ, Virgin and the
saints - plays an important role in the creation of the mystical mood of
parishioners along with traditional Gothic stained glass windows. [4, p.165]
The religious Languedoc Gothic has almost no example of the “classic” two-tower
scheme of the western façade, with the exception of “imitative
cathedrals” in Narbonne and Beziers. Western façades in the Languedoc
Gothic style have a restrained, even austere, interpretation, and single bell
towers similar to Italian campaniles directly adjoin the side of the building.
Thus, we can say that Languedoc’s Gothic was not of an
obviously imitative character, as it was considered earlier; its peculiarity
was conditioned by various ideological and artistic programs, the intersection
and combination of which created such a variety of forms of religious Gothic constructions in a
small enough region. It was the religious
Languedoc’s Gothic that later exerted a material effect on the formation of the
original Catalan Gothic of the Kingdom of Aragon and the peculiar Gothic of the
Kingdom of Palma-Mallorca.
In
his monographs “The religious
Gothic of Languedoc”( Moscow Stroganov Academy, NPO Orius, 2010) [1] and
“Anticatharistic fortresses of faith – the religious Gothic of Languedoc” ( Lambert Academic Publishing,
Gmbh,2012) [2] the author suggests the
following classification of the researched religious Gothic structures:
1. Monastic churches of mendicant orders (first of all those
orders, whose creation had fighting the Cathars’ heresy as their aim or the
reason of foundation). To these orders we should first of all pertain the order
of “mendicant preachers”, or the Dominican order, whose origination,
organization and activities were connected with the Cathari doctrine. A
wonderful model of Gothic “predicatory church” in a Dominican monastery in
Toulouse is an evidence of it. The
monographs contain a semantic analysis of the Gothic forms of the Jacobins
church in Toulouse as an “anticatharistic” preaching in the material, through
its architectural forms. [6, p.129]
Besides,
the author analyses the architectural forms, composite solutions and conceptual
iconographic programs of religious Gothic structures of the “predicatory” type.
Apart from the church of a Dominican monastery, the author investigates the
church of an Augustinian monastery (now the Augustin museum). The iconography
of this church was greatly influenced by the ideological and artistic programs
embodied in the Jacobins church. The Activities of the Augustinian missionary
order was brought to life (even if indirectly) by the necessity to cleanse the
Church through the promotion of the concept of «return to earlier simple life»
of early Church, which was determined by the speeches of Albigensian preachers
revealing the abuse of Catholic prelates of the South. Based on the above, the
church of the Augustinian monastery can also be considered as a “Predicatory
Church”.
2. Churches of urban and rural parishes located in those
regions, where the spread of the Cathar heresy, and therefore the intensity of
the struggle against them were especially great. We also suggest the division
of parish churches into two sub-groups according to the characteristics that
stand out in one group or another.
- The first subgroup includes churches, whose ideological
and artistic program was directly or indirectly influenced by the iconography
of the churches of Toulouse “mendicant orders” and partly by the lofty Gothic
of Northern France: Notre-Dame la Dalbade and Saint-Nicolaus in Toulouse,
Saint-Michel in Carcassonne. That kind of churches was built in the regions
where the anticatharistic preaching was carried out in word and deed (the
Tribunal of the Inquisition), and, as a result, “the Dominican component” of
the Jacobins church in Toulouse takes the leading place in the basis of
ideological and artistic programs of these religious buildings. There are
simple and strict external forms and a well thought-out semantic and
iconographic scheme of the epic building in general.
- The second subgroup comprises churches, whose iconography
reveals the typical features of Toulouse and Languedoc: Saint-Salvy in Albi and
parish churches with west facade being of a decorative character, a kind of
screen: Notre-Dame du Taur and Midi toulousain churches. The research of
ideological and artistic programs of these religious buildings reveals the
presence of a long-standing tradition of Romanesque Languedoc, i.e. the
construction of single-nave buildings (originally without the apse at times)
spanned with simple bars. Later, a special type of parish churches was formed
in connection with Albigensian wars and the necessity to conduct the
anticatharistic preaching and under the influence of ideological and artistic
programs of Dominican “predicatory” churches. Due
to the peculiarities of financing the construction of parish churches, their
western facades acquire an independent role of a front-screen, i.e. a
façade that doesn’t perform any constructive function (except, probably,
a few bells, which, however, are mounted later).
3. Cathedral churches (churches which were built where there
was an episcopal or archiepiscopal see) built in the towns where the spread of the
Cathars’ heresy and therefore their influence on city life and culture was so great
that the Catholic church was forced to found there constant tribunals of the
Holy Office for the extermination of heretics. So here the division into three
sub-groups is appropriate.
- In the first sub-group there should be churches which were
built “in accordance with the models of the French Kingdom”, as Narbonne’s
canons would write, and which were built directly under the influence of the
Parisian “radiant” style. Such are, first of all, the Saint-Nazaire cathedral church in Upper
Carcassonne (the capital of the possessions of viscounts Trencavel). The
reconstruction, while in fact the construction, of the church anew was caused
by a wide spread of the Cathars’ heresy in the region and, as a consequence, by
complete expulsion of the citizens to Lower City (Bastida) after seizing
Carcassonne. The new citizens (true Catholics) and the new regents (the king’s
seneschal) naturally aspired to confirm power of the King of France through
ideological and artistic programs of the “radiant” Gothic, which by that time
had become international. Taking into account the importance of strengthening
his power in Languedoc, Saint Louis the King personally took the initiative in
building the Saint-Nazaire cathedral. It is due to these reasons that the choir
and the transept of the Saint-Nazaire cathedral in their Gothic part virtually
reproduce the concept of the royal chapel of Sainte-Chapelle. The construction
of the cathedral performed under the control of French kings Saint Luis and
Phillip the Bold in 1269-1322, together with the double system of defensive
walls of Carcassonne, was undoubtedly a realization of “the royal concept of
the world” in Languedoc. That was why both specialists from the French kingdom
and local masters were invited for the erection of a symbol of that power.
Despite the fact that the building of the cathedral never finished, the
ideological and artistic programs and constructive solutions which were applied
during the erection of Saint-Nazaire had a big impact on the formation of the French-Occitan
Gothic alliance in Languedoc architecture. In particular, the “radiant” Gothic
of Carcassonne had an indubitable influence on religious Gothic constructions
in the cities of Beziers (the cathedral of Saint-Nazaire) and Narbonne (the
cathedral of Saint-Just-Saint-Pasteur).
- The second sub-group should include the cathedrals of the “transitional
type”; during their construction the new Gothic design of space and masses was
based on the rich inheritance of the Romanesque architecture of Languedoc. Among
them are, first of all, ”the majestic Toulouse” (the capital of the Toulouse county)
with the Saint-Etienne cathedral. The
features of iconography due to which this religious building can be related to
the “transitional” type first of all ride on the historical and cultural
features of the city itself as the heart of Quatari heresy and the main center
of the Occitan culture. It was in Toulouse, which until the final stages of the
Albigensian wars was loyal to
its suzerains (counts de Foix), that ideological and political resistance to
Catholic clergy and French barons (and later to the king) prohibited erecting
religious buildings in the classic Gothic style regarded as a symbol of the
“occupying” power. That was why bishop Fulk (1206 – 1231), who initiated the
reconstruction of the Saint-Etienne Cathedral, had to seek for the
“architectural compromise” between the rich Toulouse’s Roman tradition and the
new architectural outlook of the “French Kingdom”. Such was the original
concept of the Saint-Etienne Cathedral’s erection in Toulouse (since a tense
struggle with both Quataris and local clergy and patricians, partially
sympathizing with them, was carried on during the construction period). Later,
as this religious and political struggle was fading, the ideological and artistic
scheme began to change. The materials given in Igor Orlov’s monographs clearly
show that the Cathedral of a later (second) period (after 1272) was constructed
according to the “classic” plan (possibly under the influence of the Narbonne
Cathedral’s schemes). The bold attempt to combine the two ideological and
artistic programs into one conceptual building, unfortunately, met no success.
As a result, the construction of the Cathedral in Toulouse wasn’t completed
till the French Revolution, that is why nowadays it demonstrates a wonderful
phenomenon of mixing diverse ideological and artistic programs.
-
Finally, cathedrals which most completely demonstrated the ideological and
artistic programs of Languedoc’s religious Gothic and then influenced widely
Gothic architecture in other regions are to be gathered into the third group.
First of all, the Cathedral of Saint Cecilia in Albi should be referred to this
class. In researching this type of Gothic constructions the author primarily
notes the fact that the cathedrals which are considered to be classic examples
of Languedoc's Gothic were built in the cities where Catharists' heresy was
fought most heatedly and this contention lasted for a long time. Because of
this opposition Dominican inquisitors are appointed local bishops. Surprisingly,
it is to bishops-inquisitors that we owe the creation and the design of the ideological
and artistic features of a Gothic cathedral of the “indestructible fortress of
faith” type. The Cathedral of Saint Cecilia in Albi is the most typical example
of Languedoc's Gothic, which demonstrates the “sacramental hymn” in honor of
victory over heretics and a formidable “indestructible fortress of faith”. If
it comes to comparing this astonishing Languedoc's Gothic construction with
Carcassonne's, Bezier's or Narbonne's cathedrals (which were erected according
to the “classic” Gothic of Ile-de-France), it has to be noted that it has a
peculiar ascetic and exalted beauty in it in contrast with the fervent dynamic
of “radiant” style cathedrals. The oversimplification of configuration makes
the Cathedral of Saint Cecilia look like a citadel, which produces an impression
of sullen force, thus demonstrating the
inevitability of judgment on heretics already here, on the Earth. [5, ñ. 163]
Since
the period of time considered in our research is the 13th and 14th
centuries, the author regarded it necessary to apply in his monographs the
general scholastic scheme of designing medieval treatises of the researched
period (secundum ordinem disciplinae), so as to move step by step from one judgment
to another, constantly informing the reader on the development of this logical
process. Such methods, both simple and clear, applied to the classification of
religious Gothic structures made it possible to investigate the “Occitan”
Gothic knowing (or assuming) before the ideological and artistic programs which
were initially stipulated by the place of an erected church in the suggested
classification. As a proof to support the correctness of the suggested method,
which our investigation followed, it would be appropriate to quote E. Panofsky
as saying that “just as the scholastic movement prepared by the Benedictine
doctrine and founded by Lanfranc and Anselm of Bec was carried on
and perfected by Dominicans and Franciscans, the Gothic style prepared in
Benedictine monasteries and founded by Suger in Saint-Denis climaxes in city
churches. The main achievements in the Romanesque period were Benedictine
abbeys, in High Gothic – cathedrals, while in Late Gothic they were parish
churches” [7. C.
229]
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