Tudor style architecture Information & Tudor style architecture Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
Punk Hair Styling - Types of Punk Hair Style - Steps involved for Punk...
Punk Hair Styling - Types of Punk Hair Style - Steps involved for Punk...
skin-care-tips.org
 Ham and Swiss-Style Cheese Baguette - Ham and Swiss-Style Cheese Baguette
Ham and Swiss-Style Cheese Baguette - Ham and Swiss-Style Cheese Baguette
virtualgastrocentre.com
  Tudor Physiotherapy
Tudor Physiotherapy
tudorphysiotherapy.com
 Natural Styling Products, Miessence Organic Hair Gels, Natural Styling...
Natural Styling Products, Miessence Organic Hair Gels, Natural Styling...
inspiredliving.com
 
Kings College Chapel outside view

The Tudor style in architecture is the final development of medieval architecture during the Tudor period (1485–1603) and even beyond, for conservative college patrons. It followed the Perpendicular style and, although superseded by Elizabethan architecture in domestic building of any pretensions to fashion, the Tudor style still retained its hold on English taste, portions of the additions to the various colleges of Oxford and Cambridge being still carried out in the Tudor style which overlaps with the first stirrings of the Gothic Revival.

The four-centred arch, now known as the Tudor arch, was a defining feature; some of the most remarkable oriel windows belong to this period; the mouldings are more spread out and the foliage becomes more naturalistic. Nevertheless, "Tudor style" is an awkward style-designation, with its implied suggestions of continuity through the period of the Tudor dynasty and the misleading impression that there was a style break at the accession of Stuart James I in 1603. In the domestic architecture one would find the walls made of wattle and daub.

In church architecture the principal examples are:

In domestic building:

There is also Tudor architecture in Scotland, too, as an example is King's College, Aberdeen.

In the 19th century a free mix of these late Gothic elements and Elizabethan were combined for hotels and railway stations, in revival styles known as Jacobethan and Tudorbethan.

Tudor style buildings have six distinctive features -

roof detail including chimneys - Hampton Court Palace
  • Decorative half-timbering
  • Steeply pitched roof
  • Prominent cross gables
  • Tall, narrow doors and windows
  • Small window panes
  • Large chimneys, often topped with decorative chimney pots

[edit] As a modern term

As a modern residential style, what is usually referred to as Tudor (or sometimes Mock Tudor) is more akin to the rustic Tudorbethan architecture.

[edit] References




Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots