Old London: Papers Read at the London Congress, July, 1866J. Murray, 1867 - 376 pages |
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Page 3
... Norman vault and Medieval arch and Byzantine dome to our own time . Our lot , too , has fallen in an age when the passion for adorning and building is as ardent as it was in the age of Herod and Augustus- when the delight in antiquity ...
... Norman vault and Medieval arch and Byzantine dome to our own time . Our lot , too , has fallen in an age when the passion for adorning and building is as ardent as it was in the age of Herod and Augustus- when the delight in antiquity ...
Page 14
... Norman keep is the type , we have less to fear comparison , seeing that castles of this description are confined , or very nearly so , to our own country and to Normandy . Whereas , on the continent of Europe , in Italy , Spain , France ...
... Norman keep is the type , we have less to fear comparison , seeing that castles of this description are confined , or very nearly so , to our own country and to Normandy . Whereas , on the continent of Europe , in Italy , Spain , France ...
Page 15
... Norman , but as an integral and almost typical feature in a Norman castle . It is , however , evident that heavy Norman walls , such as those remaining at Cardiff and Arundel , and known to have crowned many another earthwork , could ...
... Norman , but as an integral and almost typical feature in a Norman castle . It is , however , evident that heavy Norman walls , such as those remaining at Cardiff and Arundel , and known to have crowned many another earthwork , could ...
Page 16
... Norman castle is very rare , if indeed such exists at all . It is , however , certain that the keep had an enceinte defence and ditch , the latter sometimes part of an earlier earthwork ; and in the base court thus formed were stabling ...
... Norman castle is very rare , if indeed such exists at all . It is , however , certain that the keep had an enceinte defence and ditch , the latter sometimes part of an earlier earthwork ; and in the base court thus formed were stabling ...
Page 17
... Norman works , was no doubt in some considerable measure derived from the East , where Coeur de Lion seems to have acquired the skill displayed in the construction of Chateau - Gailliard , and which , in the opinion of M. Le Duc ...
... Norman works , was no doubt in some considerable measure derived from the East , where Coeur de Lion seems to have acquired the skill displayed in the construction of Chateau - Gailliard , and which , in the opinion of M. Le Duc ...
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Abbey ancient angles appears arch architecture beautiful Bishop buildings Byward Catalogue century chamber chapel chapter-house church coloured contained Crown curtain decoration ditch door doubt Duke Earl east Edward Edward III effigy Elizabeth England English Etem a table Exchequer Exhibition exterior Fcap figures floor fortress Gallery gate Gothic Hampton Court Palace Henry III Henry VIII History Holbein Illustrations inner ward Inventory James James's John Julius Cæsar Kensington King Charles King's Lady lodged London loops Lord Mantua Mantua piece Mary ment monument mural Norman opening original outer ward painted picture Pipe Rolls Portrait Post 8vo present Prince probably Queen Raphael recess records reign Richard Richard II royal Salt tower sculpture Second Edition side stone Thames tion Titian tomb turret vaulted Vols Wakefield tower wall well-stair Westminster Abbey Westminster Hall Whitehall Whitehall Palace Windsor Castle Woodcuts
Popular passages
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Page 278 - ... of the popular assent in the election of a king; but it marks the progress of English independence under Henry that London now claimed of itself the right of election. Undismayed by the absence of the hereditary counsellors of the crown, its "Aldermen and wise folk gathered together the folkmoot, and these providing at their own will for the good of the realm, unanimously resolved to choose a king.
Page 5 - More Worlds than One. The Creed of the Philosopher and the Hope of the Christian.
Page 220 - Bracton saith, quod Rex non debet esse sub homine sed sub Deo et lege [that the King ought not to be under man but under God and under the law—BT\.
Page 352 - Mantegna, formerly the Duke of Mantua's ; of the tapestries, I believe the world can show nothing nobler of the kind than the stories of Abraham and Tobit.
Page vii - Then goes he on along by that more beauteous strand, Expressing both the wealth and bravery of the land. (So many sumptuous bowers, within so little space, The all-beholding Sun scarce sees in all his race.) And on by London leads, which like a crescent lies, Whose...