Plantagenet style
The Plantagenet style or Angevine Gothic is an architectural style of western France, mainly of the second half of 12th and the 13th century. By Eugène Viollet-le-Duc it was called "Style ogivale Plantagenêt", something like "Plantagenet Ribs Style". It is named by the House of Anjou-Plantagenet.
It is characterized by cross-ribbed vaults and extremely curved relatively domelike vaults.
Conditions
Preceding modes of vaulting
In the 11th and early 12th century, in southwestern France, barrel vaults were preferred for church ceilings, as well of architectural basilicas as of the quite numerous hall churches. In the 12th century those barrels could have pointed arch reliefs. Very few, but important churches, Périgueux Cathedral, Angoulême Cathedral and Fontevraud Abbey, were vaulted in another way; not only their crossings but also naves and in two of them transepts and choirs were covered with compound domes, possibly after Byzantine examples.Political conditions
In 1128, the wedding of the Norman princess, Roman-German-Emperor's widow and heir of the English Throne Matilda with Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, laid the base of the rule of the House of Anjou-Plantagenet in England and parts of France. Their son Henry marrying Eleanor of Aquitaine in 1152 gained the rule over the southwest of France. But after the Battle of Bouvines in 1214, the Duchy of Anjou north of Loire River was controlled by the French crown.Under the rule of Louis VII, since 1131 and allone since 1137 King of France, Eleanor's divorced first husband, about 1140 the Gothic architecture was initiated in the surroundings of Paris, the Île-de-France, in those days the French Crown land and some adjacent territories. It is characterized by peaked arches and by cross-ribbed vaults, derived from groined vaults.
Vaults
In Angevine Western France, the principle of rib vaults was acquired, as it allowed to build vaults lighter than before. But here rather reliefs derived from dome were preferred. Eventually the stiffening consisted of four ribs, but more often, eight ribs were applied, four parietal ribs in addition to the four diagonal ribs. Angers Cathedral, incepted in 1148, has a footplan similar to the domed buildings of Angoulême, Périgueux and Fontevrauld, but rib vaults instead of the domes.For hall churches, the application of domical rib vaults instead of barrel vaults provided an aesthetic improvement, this way the halls became as transparent in transversal direction as in longitudinal direction. The most prominent example is Poitiers Cathedral, incepted in 1162. Only few of the older hall churches have groined vaults, though crypts had been constructed as halls of groined cross vaults since long ago.
In some single Angevine buildings, ribs were used for barrel vaults and upon chapels and choirs with ceilings consisting of a barrel and half a dome, resulting in early kinds of net-vaulting.
Though Angevine Gothic mainly is a kind of Early Gothic, in the region where it had been established, the mode of eight rib vaults was maintained up to the end of Gothic style, but curving and steepness decreased. A good example is Church of Our Lady FR in Niort, built from 1491 to 1550 in Flamboyant Style.