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by hoseja
330 days ago
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"The most striking features of Gothic architecture are the narrow, vertical proportions and the pointed arches. Gothic-era writing mirrors these concepts." They didn't have printing press or some conscious aesthetic architecture-typecafe correspondence. That's just how the letters evolve if you want to quickly and densely copy them with a quill. It's like trying to draw meanings from connections between cuneiform and ziggurats. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackletter "Why do all of this? Because otherwise, the base of the building would look like it was sagging, and the columns would look like they were about to fall outwards." Or, you know, it would ACTUALLY sag. The columns would ACTUALLY fall outwards. |
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Despite that, during the "Gothic" time, the Gothic writing style preferred in Northern Europe (Textura quadrata, or Textura sine pedibus for the most expensive manuscripts) was clearly different from the Gothic writing style preferred in Southern Europe (Rotunda), the Northern one replacing all curved lines with broken segmented lines and having taller and narrower letters, while the Southern one preserved some of the curved lines and had wider less tall letters.
The same style differences could be seen in the architecture of expensive buildings, like churches, so there is little doubt that it was a difference in taste, not a difference caused by material constraints. The material constraints only caused both styles to use condensed bold letters, together with a lot of abbreviations.