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  2. Gothic Revival architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_Revival_architecture

    Sint-Petrus-en-Pauluskerk in Ostend (Belgium), built between 1899 and 1908. Gothic Revival (also referred to as Victorian Gothic or neo-Gothic) is an architectural movement that after a gradual build-up beginning in the second half of the 17th century became a widespread movement in the first half of the 19th century, mostly in England.

  3. Victorian house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_house

    Victorian Gothic House Style: An Architectural and Interior Design Source Book for Home Owners. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-1438-8 (originally published: 1991). Yorke, Trevor (2005) The Victorian House Explained. Newbury: Countryside Books ISBN 1-85306-943-4.

  4. The Tower House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tower_House

    The Tower House in 1878. In 1863, William Burges gained his first major architectural commission, Saint Fin Barre's Cathedral, Cork, at the age of 35. [8] In the following twelve years, his architecture, metalwork, jewellery, furniture and stained glass led his biographer, J. Mordaunt Crook to suggest that Burges rivaled Pugin as "the greatest art-architect of the Gothic Revival". [9]

  5. Allerton Castle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allerton_Castle

    Allerton Castle, also known as Allerton Park, [1] is a Grade I listed nineteenth-century Gothic or Victorian Gothic house at Allerton Mauleverer in North Yorkshire, England. It was rebuilt by architect George Martin, of Baker Street, London in 1843–53.

  6. Gingerbread (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gingerbread_(architecture)

    Gingerbread trim on a Victorian-era house in Cape May, New Jersey Gingerbread is an architectural style that consists of elaborately detailed embellishment known as gingerbread trim . [ 1 ] It is more specifically used to describe the detailed decorative work of American designers in the late 1860s and 1870s, [ 2 ] which was associated mostly ...

  7. J. Mora Moss House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Mora_Moss_House

    J. Mora Moss House is a boldly romantic Carpenter Gothic style Victorian home located within Mosswood Park in Oakland, California.It was built in 1864, bought by Oakland in 1912 and documented by the Historic American Buildings Survey in 1960 at which point it was pronounced "One of the finest, if not the finest, existing examples of Gothic architecture of French and English influence as ...

  8. High Victorian Gothic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Victorian_Gothic

    High Victorian Gothic was an eclectic architectural style and movement during the mid-late 19th century. [1] It is seen by architectural historians as either a sub-style of the broader Gothic Revival style, or a separate style in its own right. [2]

  9. Strawberry Hill House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strawberry_Hill_House

    As Rosemary Hill notes, "Strawberry Hill was the first house without any existing medieval fabric to be [re]built from scratch in the Gothic style and the first to be based on actual historic examples, rather than an extrapolation of the Gothic vocabulary first developed by William Kent. As such it has a claim to be the starting point of the ...