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1 | CALEB W SCHERER | 206 |
2 | BENJAMIN NIKOLICH | 182 |
3 | AUSTIN COLLINS | 175 |
4 | JONATHAN ROSUM | 154 |
5 | BRENNAN M DECANDIO | 145 |
6 | ZAN SYED | 142 |
7 | TODD STEVENS | 138 |
8 | PAUL MULLER | 133 |
9 | JIM I DAVIS | 126 |
10 | ROSS MERRIAM | 123 |
11 | JULIAN JOHN | 122 |
12 | TANNON GRACE | 118 |
13 | DYLAN DONEGAN | 117 |
14 | JOHN WHETSTONE | 115 |
15 | DRAKE SASSER | 113 |
16 | DYLAN HAND | 109 |
The range of styles available to the Victorian architect helped underline the separateness and individuality of the larger Victorian house. From the 1830s, Gothic emerged as the greatest challenge to the dominance of Classical styles. Through the influence of Pugin whose ‘True Principles of Gothic Architecture’ was published in 1841, a more serious and analytical approach to the use of medieval Gothic architecture emerged. Then in 1851-3, the art critic, John Ruskin, published ‘The Stones of Venice’. This became a key text for the High Victorian Gothic of the middle decades of the century and through Ruskin’s influence elements of the Italian Gothic including pointed arched window surrounds, elaborate polychrome brickwork and carved stone decoration, was brought into the leafy suburbs of Victorian Britain. Italian architecture of the sixteenth century was another style which was widely used for large suburban houses in the middle of the century. It had its roots in Regency architecture when Nash had experimented with a semi rustic Italianate villa style and was further developed and popularised in the 1830s by Sir Charles Barry who drew heavily on the buildings of the Italian Renaissance. Osborne House, on the Isle of Wight, designed by Cubitt, for Queen Victoria and Prince Albert and completed in 1851 was the grandest example and provided the inspiration for many large villas built in the 1850s and 1860s. Typical features included a square, ‘belvedere’ tower, deep projecting eaves, roof balustrades and round arched windows. Other styles found included the Northern European – typified by the use of the curved or Dutch gable – the French Baroque – which contributed the mansard roof - and Elizabethan and Jacobean which contributed features borrowed from the typical ‘Jacobethan’ large house, including towering chimneys, mullioned windows and four pointed arched front door ways. |
Comments: | 21 pages, standard LaTeX file. 11 Figures (not included) available upon request (hard copy or Postscript (10 Mb)) by e-mail to: pettini@sc2a.unige.ch or pettini@fi.infn.it |
Subjects: | High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph) |
Journal nbsp;reference: | Physics Letters B 369, 23 (1996) |
DOI: | 10.1016/0370-2693(95)01521-3 |
Report nbsp;number: | UGVA-DPT 1995/07-898 |
Cite nbsp;as: | arXiv:hep-ph/9507390 |
nbsp; | (or arXiv:hep-ph/9507390v1 for this version) |
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