The style of art known as Gothic developed in Europe during the Middle Ages. It was mainly a method of building: Gothic characteristics appeared first in architecture. Many of the world's great cathedrals and churches were built in the Gothic style between the 12th and 16th centuries.
Gothic cathedrals are tall, their arches soar heavenward, and rays of sunlight pour through high, stained-glass windows and bathe the wood, masonry, and marble. Walls, columns, entrances, and doors are carved with figures and scenes from the Bible. Not only great cathedrals and abbeys but hundreds of smaller churches were built in the style. The Gothic style became popular throughout Europe. It spread to houses and castles and then to painting, sculpture, and the decorative arts.
Although it had a spirit of its own, Gothic architecture was in many ways based on the earlier style known as Romanesque. Romanesque architecture had preserved much of the style of Roman times. Little by little the plans of Roman public buildings were changed to suit the needs of the Christian religion. The result of these changes was Romanesque architecture.
The people who made Gothic art did not call it by that name. To them the work they did was simply the new fashion--the only possible style that could be used for buildings and objects, paintings and carvings, lettering and goldsmith's work. The term "Gothic" was first used during the Renaissance period, which followed the Middle Ages. For some time the Gothic style was described as modern, in contrast to the classical Roman, which was called antique. But to provide it with a name of its own, people of the Renaissance took the word "Gothic" from the Goths, the people who had overrun the Roman Empire. Renaissance people thought, quite wrongly, that the Goths had brought this style with them.