One of the most typical elements
of Gothic architecture is the tracery found in windows, on walls, and in
many other places in Gothic churches. What is mathematical about it?
Tracery is exclusively constructed from circular arcs and straight
line segments! It is the most mathematical kind of art known to me.
In many of the thousands of Gothic churches and other buildings of that
time surviving in Europe you can find nice examples, take photos and
analyze them geometrically at home.
Traceries appear some 60 years
after the first examples of Gothic churches in the 1200's in Reims.
There their construction is, like that of the typical pointed Gothic
window, based on the equilateral triangle. In the course of stylistic
development, the constructions became more and more elaborate and less
determined by geometry until we find whole windows covered by wavy ornaments
in the flamboyant late Gothic of about 1500.
Much more than the usual geometric
designs of traceries can be found in the cloisters of the Cistercian monastery
of Hauterive near Fribourg, Switzerland. Here the theme of the windows
is geometry itself. Regular n-gons are shown for n = 3,4,5,6 and 8.
Variations of the pentagon show the pentagram and a delicately constructed rose.
The whole cloisters seems to be a commentary to Euclid's book IV on the regular
n-gons carved in stone.