|
|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
|
Devon (Hardcover, 2 Rev Ed)
Bridget Cherry, Nikolaus Pevsner
|
R1,701
R1,613
Discovery Miles 16 130
Save R88 (5%)
|
Ships in 9 - 17 working days
|
Exeter Cathedral is but the crowning glory of Devon's wealth of
medieval churches, replete with sumptuous fittings and monuments.
The county's peak of prosperity from the late Middle Ages to the
seventeenth-century is reflected too in its castles, its secluded
manor houses, and its scores of sturdily built farmhouses. The
delights of Devon's well loved seaside and country towns are
explored from the distinctive merchants' houses of Totnes and
Topsham to the elegant Regency crescents of Teignmouth and
Sidmouth. The picture is completed by accounts of the creation of
the docks at Plymouth, industrial relics, and the substantial but
little known store of Devon's Victorian churches.
|
Surrey (Hardcover)
Charles O'Brien, Ian Nairn, Bridget Cherry
|
R1,692
R1,604
Discovery Miles 16 040
Save R88 (5%)
|
Ships in 9 - 17 working days
|
A newly expanded volume on England's preeminent "Home County,"
exploring its mix of rural and urban architecture as well as its
many major historic buildings Surrey, originally published in 1962,
was the first Buildings of England volume that Pevsner shared with
another author, and Ian Nairn's brilliant, provocative descriptions
have been treas ured by many ever since. For centuries Surrey has
been the playground for London, and home to thousands of its
commuters. Yet much of the county is still deeply wooded or
surprisingly bucolic. This fully revised and enhanced edition, the
first since 1971, is packed with new information on its major
historic buildings - Waverley Abbey, Farnham Castle, Sutton Place
and Loseley Park among others - and much-expanded accounts of its
Victorian set pieces - Royal Holloway College, Holloway Sanatorium
and Charterhouse School - alongside fresh appreciation of the
twentieth century, including its principal monument, Guildford's
cath edral. To the fore in Surrey is domestic architecture:
medieval farmhouses, seventeenth-century gentry houses in the
Artisan Classical style, eighteenth-century country houses,
Victorian and Edwardian businessmen's residences, designed most
famously by Norman Shaw, Lutyens and Voysey, and high-class
suburban estates. Into this small county is fitted architecture of
endless variety, ranging from Georgian designed landscapes to
military cemeteries, from seminaries to shooting clubs, and from
lime kilns to lunatic asylums.
|
Wiltshire (Hardcover)
Julian Orbach, Nikolaus Pevsner; Contributions by Bridget Cherry
|
R1,695
R1,606
Discovery Miles 16 060
Save R89 (5%)
|
Ships in 9 - 17 working days
|
The indispensable guide to the architectural heritage of Wiltshire
With hundreds of buildings added to the new gazetteer, this volume
offers a fully revised and updated guide to Wiltshire. From
prehistoric Stonehenge and thirteenth-century Salisbury Cathedral,
to Elizabethan Longleat, Palladian Wilton and landscaped gardens of
Stourhead, the buildings of Wiltshire represent the best of every
period of English architecture. Towns range from Marlborough with
its sweeping High Street to Bradford-on-Avon, rich in the
architectural legacy of clothiers' houses. Villages include the
exceptional Lacock in the shadow of its abbey's remains as well as
Avebury, where the houses sit within the famous stone circle. This
volume, covering structures as diverse as garden follies and
railway workers' housing is an essential reference for visitors and
residents alike.
Some of England's grandest country houses are to be found in this
prosperous rural county. The Elizabethan Renaissance Kirby Hall,
the Jacobean mansion at Apethorpe, the late 17th-century
French-inspired Boughton, Hawksmoor's stately Baroque Easton
Neston, and the interiors of Althorp provide a fascinating survey
of changing taste through the centuries. Complementing them are
smaller buildings of great character, supreme among them those of
Sir Thomas Tresham: the eccentric and ingenious Triangular Lodge at
Rushton and the evocative New Beild at Lyveden. Of no less interest
are the fine churches, from Anglo-Saxon Brixworth to the noble
Gothic of Warmington, Rushden and Finedon and from All Saints,
Northampton, one of the grandest 17th-century churches outside
London, to Comper's St. Mary's, Wellingborough. Chief among the
towns, Northampton has not only distinguished Victorian and
Edwardian public, commercial and industrial buildings but also the
principal work in England by Charles Rennie Mackintosh.
This volume on London architecture covers the boroughs of Barnet,
Camden, Enfield, Hackney, Haringey and Islington. It gives a view
of London's expansion northward from formal Georgian squares, to
the hill towns of Hampstead and Highgate.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Fuse
Everything But The Girl
CD
R417
Discovery Miles 4 170
|