Gothic buildings
Gothic architecture was a historical building style in European art, which lasted from about 1200 to about 1500. Most of the buildings done in the style are churches or cathedrals. The style was also used for palaces, and buildings that had no association with the church. Many of the ideas and concepts used when building churches were also used for buildings, which had no relation to the church.
Castles and palaces
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Castel del Monte in Apulia, 1240–1250, Gothic and proto-renaissance - this palace did not have any military function
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Palace of the Popes in Avignon, former papal residence, 1334–1370
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Windsor Castle, from 1350
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Malbork palace, 1383–1393
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Ca' d'Oro in Venice, 1421–1442
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Meissen castle, late gothivc shortly before the change to Renaissance, 1471–1485
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Wing of Louis XII of Blois Caslre, 1498–1503, late gothic, flamboyant stle, shortly before the change to Renaissance
Town halls, hospitals, etc
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Tower of the town hall in Köln
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Historic town hall in Münster – made of sandstone
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town hall of Doesburg, Gelderland, Netherlands - this was a Hanseatic city.
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Loggia dei Militi (watchtower), Cremona, Italy
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Palazzo dei Priori in Perugia, 1293–1297
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Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, with bell tower, started 1299
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Siena: Town hall with Torre dell Mangia, 1338–1348
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Brussels, town hall, since 1402
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Bruges, market hall (for cloth trading), with bell tower, since 1282, upper floors since 1482
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Lübeck,. town hall, since 1230
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A dance hall in Cologne (Gürzenich), (1441–1447, rebuilt after 1945)
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Historic shopping mall, Freiburg im Breisgau, from 1520
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Heiligen-Geist-Hospital in Lübeck, since 1240
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Heilig-Geist-Spital, Nürnberg since 1332
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Hôtel-Dieu de Beaune, former hospital, in Beaune, since 1443