Gothic
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gothic may mean:
As it relates to the Goths (Gothos, Getas), a Germanic tribe:
From a Renaissance perspective (originally Italian, gotico, with connotations of "rough, barbarous"), it conveyed the opposite of 'classical' or 'Roman', hence:
- High Medieval northern European art, especially architecture:
- Gothic art
- Gothic architecture
- International Gothic, a subset of Gothic art developed in Burgundy, Bohemia and northern Italy in the late 1300s and early 1400s
- Gothic Revival architecture originating in the 18th century
- Gothic (moth), a species of noctuid moth named after its patterns reminiscent of Gothic architecture
- Blackletter (Gothic script), a script developed in the Middle Ages
From the 18th century, the word came to mean Germanic in general (synonymously with Teutonic), with grim overtones:
- Gothic novel, a British literary genre from the late 18th and early 19th century, with a Victorian revival a hundred years later
From its use in Romanticism, the word in the 20th century came to refer to anything dark or gloomy:
- Gothic horror
- Goth subculture
- Gothic rock
- Gothic metal
- Gothic fashion
- Gothic (computer game), a roleplaying computer game
- Gothic (movie), a 1986 film by Ken Russell
- Gothic (album), a 1992 album by the heavy metal band Paradise Lost
More recent uses:
- Another name for sans-serif typefaces
- Japanese gothic typeface, a common printing style in Japanese printing
- Gothic chess, a chess variant
[edit] See also
a very wide generilization and label