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   Book Info

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Britain: A Guide to Architectural Styles from 1066 to Present Day  
Author: Hubert Pragnell
ISBN: 1841660027
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


Book Description
This book presents a broad outline of the development of architectural styles and movements in Britain. Designed to encourage readers to go out and explore, a concise but extremely readable text provides the cultural and historical contexts necessary to understand the place of a building in architectural development, with the author's own line drawings illustrating important examples. Chapters cover the Anglo-Norman Romanesque style and the transition to Gothic, medieval parish churches, castles and houses, Tudor architecture, Jacobean domestic building, and two seminal figures in architectural history, Inigo Jones and Christopher Wren. The story continues with Mannerism, the Baroque, Palladianism, early examples of town planning, including Bath, Cheltenham and Edinburgh New Town, neo-Classicism and the Gothic revival, and finishes with the movements and styles that have characterized this century. Both a pocket guidebook and a compact history of architecture, Britain, A Guide To Architectural Styles will enable anyone interested in our built heritage to see it with more knowledgeable eyes.


About the Author
Hubert Pragnell teaches art at the King's School, Canterbury. He is the author of The Styles of English Architecture (Batsford).




Britain: A Guide to Architectural Styles from 1066 to Present Day

FROM THE PUBLISHER

This book presents a broad outline of the development of architectural styles and movements in Britain. Designed to encourage readers to go out and explore, a concise but extremely readable text provides the cultural and historical contexts necessary to understand the place of a building in architectural development, with the author's own line drawings illustrating important examples. Chapters cover the Anglo-Norman Romanesque style and the transition to Gothic, medieval parish churches, castles and houses, Tudor architecture, Jacobean domestic building, and two seminal figures in architectural history, Inigo Jones and Christopher Wren. The story continues with Mannerism, the Baroque, Palladianism, early examples of town planning, including Bath, Cheltenham and Edinburgh New Town, neo-Classicism and the Gothic revival, and finishes with the movements and styles that have characterized this century. Both a pocket guidebook and a compact history of architecture, Britain, A Guide To Architectural Styles will enable anyone interested in our built heritage to see it with more knowledgeable eyes.

     



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