يحاول ذهب - حر
The Englishness of English architecture
October 18, 2023
|Country Life UK
A major new survey of architecture in Britain and Ireland from 1530 to 1880 will be published this autumn. Its author, Steven Brindle, teases out the qualities of one of its most elusive central themes
AN English character pervades our historic buildings, in town and country. This statement can readily be proved by asking any educated British audience—of COUNTRY LIFE readers, as it might be—to distinguish between photographs of an English village, castle, church, high street, farmhouse or country house and their equivalents in France, Spain, Germany, or any other European country. The audience will recognise their own every time. If the Englishness was not real and recognisable, this would hardly be possible. Thus there is no doubt that it is there: defining it, however, is rather more difficult.
There are overarching forces that helped shape this tradition, in particular the influence of the Crown. Our kings and queens have historically tended to employ—and also thereby helped to create—the outstanding craftsmen of every generation. Their taste has also been actively emulated by courtiers, the group before the Industrial Revolution most likely to enjoy the resources to build on the grandest scale. And their work, in turn, informed wider fashions for building. But there is much more to understanding this tradition, which has deep historical roots.
هذه القصة من طبعة October 18, 2023 من Country Life UK.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Country Life UK
Country Life UK
Glazed expressions
Why glass can offer the secret to creating multifunctional spaces
1 mins
January 14, 2026
Country Life UK
Charlotte Mullins comments on Crucifixion Mural
THE Hungarian-Jewish artist George Mayer-Marton spent the interwar years as part of the progressive art group Vienna Hagenbund, before fleeing to Britain in 1938 after the Anschluss, the German annexation of Austria.
1 min
January 14, 2026
Country Life UK
Artificial sweeteners
AI is now reaching into every corner of our lives. We can -and must-very carefully choose how we engage with it
4 mins
January 14, 2026
Country Life UK
Peak performance
Tartiflette is one of the most gloriously indulgent après-ski centrepieces, but you don't need to have spent the day bombing down black runs to enjoy it
3 mins
January 14, 2026
Country Life UK
Setting the cat among the pigeons
LAST summer was one of the best I can remember for all those North American perennials that fill our herbaceous borders with colour.
3 mins
January 14, 2026
Country Life UK
Material success as tweed turns 200
TWEED manufacturer Lovat Mill, renowned for its vibrant colour-mixed yarns, has launched a new collection to celebrate 200 years since the warm woven woollen fabric that is de rigueur for many countryside activities was given its name by accident.
1 min
January 14, 2026
Country Life UK
Tales from an African farm
WEDGED in the front of the dugout, I could not swing my upper body round quickly enough to shoot.
6 mins
January 14, 2026
Country Life UK
The designer's room.
The design of Alice Palmer's kitchen was influenced by her foreign travels
1 mins
January 14, 2026
Country Life UK
Faraway, so close
Ties between Britain and Hawai'i ran deep, so much that the Union Jack was included in the Pacific country's new flag and its coat of arms was designed in London, as a British Museum exhibition highlights
8 mins
January 14, 2026
Country Life UK
A genius of the first class
To mark the tercentenary of Sir John Vanbrugh's death, Charles Saumarez Smith considers the changing reactions to one of his greatest creations, Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire
8 mins
January 14, 2026
Translate
Change font size

