Saturday, November 13, 2010

Our Introduction to Gothic History, Gothic Religion, and Gothic Styles

We are here to provide pure euphoria to our Gothic world. We have several different types of Gothic legal highs. Since many people have different tastes in euphoria we provide many different types of legal highs for different types of tastes. We have Ecstasy alternatives that will work just as good as MDMA, and the high will last even longer.We have several GHB Alternatives that feel as good as GHB. We have Valium alternatives,and Soma alternatives. We have legal amphetamines that will tweak  you out for hours. We have sexual enhancers that work just as well as Sildenifil and 1/3 the price. We have LSD,Peyote, Mescaline, and Acid alternatives. We have Love getting high and want to do it legally; we have all the products right here at our Gothic Legal High web site. We are all familiar with the various forms of  Herbal Highs, but some of the best stuff out there is a natural form of ecstacy. If you can get your hands on some Herbal Ecstasy, than you are in for a treat.


The word ‘gothic’ is very old, and was used from the Renaissance on to signify the Gothic art style of the middle Ages. It is clear that gothic is not only about music, it’s a lifestyle, a certain sensibility. It was named after the German tribe of the Goths, who once had invaded Italy and conquered and controlled much of Europe, thus responsible for breaking up the Roman Empire. The middle Ages were, in fact, quite gothic. There was a fascination, bordering obsession, with the contrast between good and evil, with death and with the struggle between purity and decadence. There was also a great deal of remarkable and striking Gothic Art and Gothic literature on these themes produced during this time (roughly 300-l300 C.E.) and all of this no doubt was a factor in the appreciation the Romantics developed for this period in history. Because the Italians blamed the Goths for destructing the Roman Empire, they called the art style of this period Gothic, by which they meant barbaric.

In the middle Ages, large and ominous Gothic Architecture cathedrals were built in the Ogive style. Baroque historians would later refer to the style as “gothic” to indicate that they found it unrefined and tasteless. However, the joke never got off the ground. Instead of changing popular perception of the architecture, they succeeded only in changing the popular definition of the word… People assumed “gothic” meant “dark and ominous” because that’s what the Ogive style evokes. However, during this period beautiful art was made too, such as the huge Gothic cathedrals, like the Notre-Dame. There was more than Gothic Architecture: Contrary to popular perception, Gothic style refers to more than Gothic Architecture cathedral structures and legal highs. The label applies to art, sculpture, glass works, decorative pieces and illuminated manuscripts from the mid 12th through the early 16th century. Gothic Religion played an important role in Gothic art, painters and sculptors for instance were less interested in depicting their subjects in a realistic way than in spreading a Gothic religious feel. It is clear, however, that the word gothic originally has negative connotations, invented by the people of the Renaissance, who wanted to distinguish themselves from it. Go to Gothic Cemeteries

In the early 19th century, an Gothic Art movement called Romanticism arose. Gothic Art was focused around fantastical themes, the ongoing struggle between good and evil, sensuality, and frequently death. From this movement arose a smaller movement, personified by writers like Mary Shelly, who wrote Frankenstein and Bram Stoker, who wrote Dracula that was increasingly morbid and decadent. This more morbid style came to be known as gothic, in part because of the appreciation of its leaders for the “Gothic” style of the Middle Ages, and because of its ominous imagery associated with the Gothic Architecture such as churches. Go to Gothic Clothes.

When a number of punk bands in the late 1970s and early 1980s began taking a starker, legal highs, somber, and ethereal direction, the British Gothic Music press extended the term to the music, again, because of the association with the architecture of the literature. Gothic music often deals with thought provoking topics, concentrating on societal evils, like racism, war, hatred of groups, etc. They tend to concentrate on the very bitter, unhappy topics that “North American culture” wants to “ignore and forget.” Many of their songs, band names and album titles have Christian names. Some of the popular music bands are the Bauhaus, Siouxsie and the Banshees, the Sisters of Mercy, Dead Can Dance, and many others. Go to Gothic Magazines Some factors that are commonly observed in Gothic Culture are: Its unique music, legal highs,art and literature; The use of extreme black gothic clothing of which black trench coats are a consistent theme in the Gothic subculture that has attracted many teenagers to the Gothic poetry, music and costumes of a scene that ranges from benign fantasy to violent reality, light colored makeup, unusual hair styles, body piercing, bondage items, etc. ; A fascination with medieval, Victorian and Edwardian history; Wearing of symbols such as a Christian cross or a Christian crucifix which many regard as a pre-Christian religious symbol, an Egyptian ankh or “Eye of Ra,” or “Eye of Horus;” Goths tend to be non-violent, pacifistic, passive, and tolerant. Many in the media have mistakenly associated Goth with extreme violence and hatred of minorities, white supremacy, etc.; Many Goths write about being depressed. Followers seem sullen and withdrawn, when in public. Gothic People are often much more “happy and carefree in the company of other Goths.” A lot of people turn to the Gothic subculture after having a hard time in school, feeling alienated, and looking for a way to express themselves that mirrors those feelings. Others find the scene through literature, still others want to be shocking, and some people just find black clothing slimming. American Gothic Although it’s been said that if Goth didn’t exist, somebody would have to invent it, the truth is, Gothic Culture has pretty much always existed in most cultures. It was just never identified or named as a separate movement before the mid-19th century. It is not a strictly western-European phenomenon (Russian culture, for example, has always been remarkably Goth),but the identifying factors and naming conventions have all pretty much come from western Europe.
We are here to provide pure euphoria to our Gothic world. We have several different types of Gothic legal highs. Since many people have different tastes in euphoria we provide many different types of legal highs for different types of tastes. We have Ecstasy alternatives that will work just as good as MDMA, and the high will last even longer.We have several GHB Alternatives that feel as good as GHB. We have Valium alternatives,and Soma alternatives. We have legal amphetamines that will tweak  you out for hours. We have sexual enhancers that work just as well as Sildenifil and 1/3 the price. We have LSD,Peyote, Mescaline, and Acid alternatives. We have Love getting high and want to do it legally; we have all the products right here at our Gothic Legal High web site. We are all familiar with the various forms of  Herbal Highs, but some of the best stuff out there is a natural form of ecstacy. If you can get your hands on some Herbal Ecstasy, than you are in for a treat.


The word ‘gothic’ is very old, and was used from the Renaissance on to signify the Gothic art style of the middle Ages. It is clear that gothic is not only about music, it’s a lifestyle, a certain sensibility. It was named after the German tribe of the Goths, who once had invaded Italy and conquered and controlled much of Europe, thus responsible for breaking up the Roman Empire. The middle Ages were, in fact, quite gothic. There was a fascination, bordering obsession, with the contrast between good and evil, with death and with the struggle between purity and decadence. There was also a great deal of remarkable and striking Gothic Art and Gothic literature on these themes produced during this time (roughly 300-l300 C.E.) and all of this no doubt was a factor in the appreciation the Romantics developed for this period in history. Because the Italians blamed the Goths for destructing the Roman Empire, they called the art style of this period Gothic, by which they meant barbaric.

In the middle Ages, large and ominous Gothic Architecture cathedrals were built in the Ogive style. Baroque historians would later refer to the style as “gothic” to indicate that they found it unrefined and tasteless. However, the joke never got off the ground. Instead of changing popular perception of the architecture, they succeeded only in changing the popular definition of the word… People assumed “gothic” meant “dark and ominous” because that’s what the Ogive style evokes. However, during this period beautiful art was made too, such as the huge Gothic cathedrals, like the Notre-Dame. There was more than Gothic Architecture: Contrary to popular perception, Gothic style refers to more than Gothic Architecture cathedral structures and legal highs. The label applies to art, sculpture, glass works, decorative pieces and illuminated manuscripts from the mid 12th through the early 16th century. Gothic Religion played an important role in Gothic art, painters and sculptors for instance were less interested in depicting their subjects in a realistic way than in spreading a Gothic religious feel. It is clear, however, that the word gothic originally has negative connotations, invented by the people of the Renaissance, who wanted to distinguish themselves from it. Go to Gothic Cemeteries

In the early 19th century, an Gothic Art movement called Romanticism arose. Gothic Art was focused around fantastical themes, the ongoing struggle between good and evil, sensuality, and frequently death. From this movement arose a smaller movement, personified by writers like Mary Shelly, who wrote Frankenstein and Bram Stoker, who wrote Dracula that was increasingly morbid and decadent. This more morbid style came to be known as gothic, in part because of the appreciation of its leaders for the “Gothic” style of the Middle Ages, and because of its ominous imagery associated with the Gothic Architecture such as churches. Go to Gothic Clothes.

When a number of punk bands in the late 1970s and early 1980s began taking a starker, legal highs, somber, and ethereal direction, the British Gothic Music press extended the term to the music, again, because of the association with the architecture of the literature. Gothic music often deals with thought provoking topics, concentrating on societal evils, like racism, war, hatred of groups, etc. They tend to concentrate on the very bitter, unhappy topics that “North American culture” wants to “ignore and forget.” Many of their songs, band names and album titles have Christian names. Some of the popular music bands are the Bauhaus, Siouxsie and the Banshees, the Sisters of Mercy, Dead Can Dance, and many others. Go to Gothic Magazines Some factors that are commonly observed in Gothic Culture are: Its unique music, legal highs,art and literature; The use of extreme black gothic clothing of which black trench coats are a consistent theme in the Gothic subculture that has attracted many teenagers to the Gothic poetry, music and costumes of a scene that ranges from benign fantasy to violent reality, light colored makeup, unusual hair styles, body piercing, bondage items, etc. ; A fascination with medieval, Victorian and Edwardian history; Wearing of symbols such as a Christian cross or a Christian crucifix which many regard as a pre-Christian religious symbol, an Egyptian ankh or “Eye of Ra,” or “Eye of Horus;” Goths tend to be non-violent, pacifistic, passive, and tolerant. Many in the media have mistakenly associated Goth with extreme violence and hatred of minorities, white supremacy, etc.; Many Goths write about being depressed. Followers seem sullen and withdrawn, when in public. Gothic People are often much more “happy and carefree in the company of other Goths.” A lot of people turn to the Gothic subculture after having a hard time in school, feeling alienated, and looking for a way to express themselves that mirrors those feelings. Others find the scene through literature, still others want to be shocking, and some people just find black clothing slimming. American Gothic Although it’s been said that if Goth didn’t exist, somebody would have to invent it, the truth is, Gothic Culture has pretty much always existed in most cultures. It was just never identified or named as a separate movement before the mid-19th century. It is not a strictly western-European phenomenon (Russian culture, for example, has always been remarkably Goth),but the identifying factors and naming conventions have all pretty much come from western Europe.

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