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Wiltshire (Hardcover)
Julian Orbach, Nikolaus Pevsner; Contributions by Bridget Cherry
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R1,767
R1,616
Discovery Miles 16 160
Save R151 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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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.
This expertly revised and enlarged survey is the perfect
architectural companion to one of England's most beautiful regions.
From the misty Levels to the heights of Exmoor and the Mendips, the
Somerset landscape is enriched by buildings of outstanding quality
and interest. The early medieval ruins of Glastonbury Abbey and the
Elizabethan great house of Montacute are among the finest works of
their time. Also famous are the lavishly decorated church towers of
the Perpendicular period, such as those at Taunton, Evercreech, and
Huish Episcopi. Many of these churches serve towns and villages of
exceptional charm, marked by an unusual diversity of building
stones and materials. From Porlock to Burnham-on-Sea, the ports and
resorts of the long coastline all have their own distinctive
architectural inheritance. Well-kept vernacular houses and other
rural buildings complete the inland picture.
This authoritative guide to the southwest corner of Wales by three
local experts encompasses a wide sweep of history, from the rugged
prehistoric remains that stud the distinctive windswept landscape
overlooking the Atlantic to distinguished recent buildings that
respond imaginatively to their natural setting. The comprehensive
gazetteer encompasses the great cathedral of St David's and its
Bishop's Palace, the numerous churches, and the magnificent Norman
castles that reflect the turbulent medieval past. It gives
attention also to the lesser-known delights of Welsh chapels--both
simple rural and sophisticated Victorian examples--in all their
wayward variety and provides detailed accounts of a rewarding range
of towns, including the county town, Haverfordwest, the
attractively unspoilt Regency resort of Tenby, and Milford Haven
and Pembroke Dock, with their important naval history. An
introduction with valuable specialist contributions sets the
buildings in context.
This sixth volume of the Buildings of Wales series covers two
counties, Carmarthenshire and Ceredigion (formerly Cardiganshire)
in the South-west of Wales. Like the same authors' Pembrokeshire,
the volume covers an architecture still little known, but
encompassing a sweep from prehistoric chambered tombs to the high
technology of the world's largest single-span glasshouse. The two
counties have deeply rural hinterlands shading into wild and empty
upland, bare of settlements but rich in the relics of lost
industry. The isolated churches and nonconformist chapels are given
knowledgeable attention in the comprehensive gazetteer, which gives
full coverage to the magnificent castles of Carmarthenshire. There
are detailed accounts of the varied small towns of the two
counties, from formal late-Georgian Aberaeron to the quiet charm of
Laugharne, winding down to its estuary. Aberystwyth with its
promenade, university and National Library, joins industrial
Llanelli and county-town Carmarthen in the wealth and variety of
its late Victorian chapels. An introduction with valuable
specialist contributions sets the buildings in context.
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Gwynedd (Hardcover)
Richard Haslam, Julian Orbach, Adam Voelcker
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R1,690
Discovery Miles 16 900
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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No area of Wales is more rewarding to the architectural traveler
than Gwynedd--the historic counties of Anglesey, Caernarfon and
Merioneth, which are the setting for many of Wales's greatest
buildings. This book examines the buildings of the region, from
Beaumaris, Caernafon, Conwy, and Harlech castles and atmospheric
medieval churches to Nonconformist chapels and houses in
distinctive vernacular traditions.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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