Product Details
The Cathedral Builders

The Cathedral Builders
By Jean Gimpel

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Product Description

This elegantly illustrated, finely detailed account of how the magnificent Gothic cathedrals were erected also provides illuminating information on medieval society and the financial, political and spiritual roles of the men who inspired these splendid buildings. 94 photographs.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #474217 in Books
  • Published on: 1983-06
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 127 pages

Editorial Reviews

Language Notes
Text: English, French (translation)

From the Publisher
An extravagantly illustrated and finely detailed account of how the magnificent Gothic cathedrals were erected.


Customer Reviews

a fascinating and full meal on the gothic era5
This is the best book I read on the mysterious movement known as the gothic era, which has long fascinated me. It is written by an independent scholar with a quirky, yet erudite, point of view who writes very well, with the Cartesian clarity that we expect of French intellectuals.

I found it absolutely fascinating, as he explained the politics that gave rise to the astonishing building projects that involved entire communities for centuries and whose artisans are, with the exception of Villard, wholly unkown. Gimpel then goes through the crytic notebook of Villard - the only true record of the era's methods besides the works themselves - deciphering it for non-specialists like myself. In his view, built during a late-medieval economic boom, the cathedrals used a new kind of geometry and practical experimentation that foreshadowed the discoveries of the Renaissance. Some would even argue that the gothic cathedral architects and builders presaged the scientific method that emerged during the Enlightenment. Gimpel provides plenty of fodder for that interpretation.

Warmly recommended.

An Easy Read4
The fellow up above is being a bit severe. Gimple does go on a rant in a chapter at the end of the book saying things such as-America has reached its peak and will start to decline- and- France is on its way up-. Amazing statements considering he is French and this book was written in the seventies.
Obviously Mr. Gimpel should stick to writing about the past and stop predicting the future (He should have learned from Marx, but hey it was the seventies, the Soviet Union still looked like it would do more than kill a lot of people).
I found the book pleasant reading and it is a must read for an entry level History of Technology buff.
Gimple was one of the firsts in the field, so we must give him respect no matter how off some of his thought turned out to be.

pidgeon english3
The translation of this fascinating book is as bad as any translation of any book translated from any language into English. It could easily be the product of a French high-school student, after two years of study of English, with the aid of an abridged dictionary. If there is another translation of it, look for that one: it could not be worse.