Gloucester Cathedral

Gloucester Cathedral

Author: Susan Hamilton

Publisher: Scala Arts Publishers Incorporated

Published: 2011

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781857596670

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A comprehensive souvenir of Gloucester Cathedral describing a unique place with an extraordinary and rich history and exquisite architecture.


The Architectural History of King's College Chapel

The Architectural History of King's College Chapel

Author: Francis Woodman

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2023-01-27

Total Pages: 277

ISBN-13: 1000817458

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First Published in 1986 The Architectural History of King's College Chapel provides a complete picture of how and why King’s College Chapel came to be built. Francis Woodman uses the evidence both of structure and style and finance and patronage to present the organisation and mechanics of the structural campaigns spread over more than seventy years. He proposes a completely new sequence of constructions from that hitherto accepted, together with clear evidence of changes in policy concerning the intention to vault the Chapel part-way through construction. The book also contains the first complete analysis of the remarkable Tudor building accounts and their significance for the study of mediaeval architectural history. King’s College Chapel is placed within the context of the contemporary architecture in both England and France and, for the first time, English late mediaeval architecture is considered and presented as one part of a wider European movement. This book is a must read for scholars and researchers of British architecture and architectural history.


The Secret Lives of Buildings

The Secret Lives of Buildings

Author: Edward Hollis

Publisher: Macmillan + ORM

Published: 2009-11-10

Total Pages: 352

ISBN-13: 1429982101

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A strikingly original, beautifully narrated history of Western architecture and the cultural transformations that it represents Concrete, marble, steel, brick: little else made by human hands seems as stable, as immutable, as a building. Yet the life of any structure is neither fixed nor timeless. Outliving their original contexts and purposes, buildings are forced to adapt to each succeeding age. To survive, they must become shape-shifters. In an inspired refashioning of architectural history, Edward Hollis recounts more than a dozen stories of such metamorphosis, highlighting the way in which even the most familiar structures all change over time into "something rich and strange." The Parthenon, that epitome of a ruined temple, was for centuries a working church and then a mosque; the cathedral of Notre Dame was "restored" to a design that none of its original makers would have recognized. Remains of the Berlin Wall, meanwhile, which was once gleefully smashed and bulldozed, are now treated as precious relics. With The Secret Lives of Buildings, Edward Hollis recounts the most enthralling of these metamorphoses and shows how buildings have come to embody the history of Western culture.